High Isolation and Low Insertion Loss Optical Isolator
20220291535 · 2022-09-15
Inventors
Cpc classification
G02F1/093
PHYSICS
G02B6/002
PHYSICS
G02B6/2746
PHYSICS
International classification
Abstract
An optical isolator has high isolation and low insertion loss in bandwidth. An input fiber collimator, isolator cores, and an output fiber collimator are connected in sequence in an optical path. Acute ends of wedge surfaces of lenses and fiber heads of the collimators are polished to form small platforms. Faraday crystals of the cores are optically active and are different in wavelength; birefringent wedges of the cores are different in wedge angle; and an optical axis of the birefringent wedges at an emitting end of the first core is perpendicular to an optical axis of the birefringent wedges at an incident end of the second core. The two stages of Faraday crystals with different wavelengths are overlaid to extend and widen isolation performance in bandwidth, and a small-spot collimator design is adopted so coupling loss is low, performance is stable, and reliability is high.
Claims
1. An optical isolator, comprising: an input fiber collimator, a dual-stage optical isolator core, and an output fiber collimator connected in sequence in a direction of an optical path; the input and output fiber collimators each having a lens and a fiber head, acute ends of wedge surfaces of the lenses and the fiber heads being polished to form platforms; and the dual-stage optical isolator core at least including a first-stage optical isolation assembly and a second-stage optical isolation assembly, each of the first-stage and second-stage optical isolation assemblies at least including two birefringent wedge pieces, and one Faraday optically active crystal placed between the corresponding two birefringent wedge pieces; the Faraday optically active crystals for the first-stage and second-stage optical isolation assemblies being different in wavelength, the birefringent wedge pieces for the first-stage and second-stage optical isolation assemblies being different in wedge angle, a first optical axis of the birefringent wedge pieces at an emitting end of the first-stage optical isolation assembly being perpendicular to a second optical axis of the birefringent wedge pieces at an incident end of the second-stage optical isolation assembly.
2. The optical isolator of claim 1, wherein the input fiber collimator and the output fiber collimator have the optical path therebetween lacking adhesive.
3. The optical isolator of claim 1, wherein width dimensions of the platforms are not higher than ¼ of diameters of the lenses or the fiber heads.
4. The optical isolator of claim 1, wherein each of the input and output fiber collimators is a small-spot collimator having a spot value smaller than or equal to 300 μm.
5. The optical isolator of claim 1, wherein each of the Faraday optically active crystals is of a type having a magnetic field itself or a type needing an externally applied magnetic field.
6. The optical isolator of claim 1, wherein the wedge angle of each of the birefringent wedge pieces in the first-stage optical isolation assembly is ½ of the wedge angle of each of the birefringent wedge pieces in the second-stage optical isolation assembly.
7. The optical isolator of claim 1, wherein the wedge angle of each of the birefringent wedge pieces in the first-stage optical isolation assembly is 2 times the wedge angle of each of the birefringent wedge pieces in the second-stage optical isolation assembly.
8. The optical isolator of claim 1, wherein the birefringent wedge pieces in the first-stage optical isolation assembly and the second-stage optical isolation assembly are both made of a Yttrium orthovanadate (YVO4) material, the wedge angle of each of the birefringent wedge pieces in the first-stage optical isolation assembly is 4 degrees, and the wedge angle of each of the birefringent wedge pieces in the second-stage optical isolation assembly is 8 degrees.
9. An optical isolator, comprising: a first fiber collimator, a first isolator core, a second isolator core, and a second fiber collimator connected in sequence in a direction of an optical path; the first and second fiber collimators each having a lens and a fiber head, acute ends of wedge surfaces of the lenses and the fiber heads being polished to form platforms; the first isolator core at least including: first birefringent wedges, and a first Faraday crystal, the first Faraday crystal being optically active and being placed between the first birefringent wedges, the first birefringent wedges at an emitting end of the first optical isolator having a first optical axis; the second isolator core at least including: second birefringent wedges, and a second Faraday crystal, the second Faraday crystal being optically active and being placed between the second birefringent wedges, the second Faraday crystal being different in wavelength from the first Faraday crystal, the second birefringent wedges being different in wedge angle from the first birefringent wedges, the second birefringent wedges at an incident end of the second optical isolator having a second optical axis being perpendicular to the first optical axis.
10. The optical isolator of claim 9, wherein the first and second fiber collimators have the optical path therebetween lacking adhesive.
11. The optical isolator of claim 9, wherein width dimensions of the platforms are not higher than ¼ of diameters of the lenses or the fiber heads.
12. The optical isolator of claim 9, wherein each of the first and second fiber collimators comprises a small-spot collimator having a spot value smaller than or equal to 300 μm.
13. The optical isolator of claim 9, wherein each of the first and second Faraday crystals comprises a type having a magnetic field itself, or a type needing an externally applied magnetic field.
14. The optical isolator of claim 9, wherein the wedge angle of each of the first birefringent wedges is ½ of the wedge angle of each of the second birefringent wedges.
15. The optical isolator of claim 9, wherein the wedge angle of each of the first birefringent wedges is 2 times the wedge angle of each of the second birefringent wedges.
16. The optical isolator of claim 9, wherein the first and second birefringent wedges comprise a yttrium orthovanadate (YVO4) material, the wedge angle of each of the first birefringent wedges is 4 degrees, and the wedge angle of each of the second birefringent wedges is 8 degrees.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0018] The following describes the present disclosure in further detail with reference to the accompanying drawings and the detailed description.
[0019]
[0020]
[0021]
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0022] As shown in
[0023] Acute ends of wedge surfaces of lenses and fiber heads of the input fiber collimator 110A and the output fiber collimator 1108 are polished to form “small” platforms, respectively. In other words, the platforms are “small” in the sense that width dimensions of the platforms are not higher than ¼ of diameters of the lenses or the fiber heads.
[0024] The dual-stage optical isolator core includes a first-stage optical isolation assembly 120 and a second-stage optical isolation assembly 130. The first-stage optical isolation assembly 120 and the second-stage optical isolation assembly 130 each include two birefringent wedge pieces 122 and 126, or 132 and 136 and one Faraday optically active crystal 124 or 134. The Faraday optically active crystal 124 or 134 is placed between corresponding two birefringent wedge pieces 122 and 126, or 132 and 136. The Faraday optically active crystals 124 and 134 are of a type with a magnetic field themself or a type needing an externally applied magnetic field.
[0025] The Faraday optically active crystals 124 and 134 adopted by the first-stage optical isolation assembly 120 and the second-stage optical isolation assembly 130 respectively are different in wavelength, and the birefringent wedge pieces 122, 124, 132 and 136 adopted by the first-stage optical isolation assembly 120 and the second-stage optical isolation assembly 130 respectively are different in wedge angle.
[0026] An optical axis of the birefringent wedge pieces 122 and 126 at an emitting end of the first-stage optical isolation assembly 120 is perpendicular to an optical axis of the birefringent wedge pieces 132 and 136 at an incident end of the second-stage optical isolation assembly 130.
[0027] There is no adhesive in the optical paths of the input fiber collimator 110A and output fiber collimator 110B. A polishing method of the small platforms includes: polishing on angled cushion blocks first to obtain the wedge surfaces (the typical angle is 8 degrees), and then polishing the acute ends of the wedge surfaces on a zero-angle plane cushion block. Width dimensions of the obtained small platforms are not higher than ¼ of the diameters of the lenses 114 or the fiber heads 112. In addition, the input fiber collimator 110A and the output fiber collimator 110B are both small-spot collimators with a spot value small than or equal to 300 μm. As shown in
[0028] As shown in
[0029] When the light beams are transmitted in the reverse direction, the collimated light emitted from output fiber collimator 110B enters the dual-stage optical isolator core 120, 130, passes through the birefringent wedge piece 136, and is divided into two beams of o-light and e-light with polarization states being perpendicular. The o-light and e light enters the Faraday optically active crystal 134. Due to non-reciprocity of optically active materials, the polarization states of the o-light and the e-light continue to rotate by 45 degrees in the direction of rotation during forward transmission. That is, when the two beams of light enter the birefringent wedge piece 132, the o-light and the e-light have been converted. A combination of the two parallel birefringent wedge pieces 132, 136 in the same stage is equivalent to a Wollaston prism for the reverse light. The two beams of light deviate from the original direction to produce a certain displacement and angle, and then one stage of reverse isolation spectral lines can be formed. After the light beams are emitted from the birefringent wedge piece 132, similarly, reverse transmission in the next stage of isolator core continues. The Faraday optically active crystals 134 and 124 used in the two stages of the optical isolation assemblies 120, 130 are different in wavelength, which can overlay isolation spectral lines of different wavelengths to achieve the effect of widening the isolation in bandwidth.
[0030] As shown in
[0031] In the present disclosure, the wedge angle of the birefringent wedge pieces 122 and 126 in first-stage optical isolation assembly 120 is ½ of or 2 times the wedge angle of the birefringent wedge pieces 132 and 136 in the second-stage optical isolation assembly 130. If the birefringent wedge pieces 122, 126, 132 and 136 in the first and second-stage optical isolation assemblies 120, 130 are all made of a Yttrium orthovanadate (YVO4) material, typically, the wedge angle of the birefringent wedge pieces 122 and 126 in the first-stage optical isolation assembly 120 is 4 degrees, and the wedge angle of the birefringent wedge pieces 132 and 136 in the second-stage optical isolation assembly is 8 degrees.
[0032] Compared with the prior art, the optical isolator 100 with high isolation and low insertion loss in bandwidth provided by the present disclosure has excellent isolation and insertion loss performance, the process assembly method is simple, and the product is stable in structure and high in reliability.
[0033] The implementation of the present disclosure is described above with reference to the accompanying drawings. However, the present disclosure is not limited to the above-mentioned detailed description. The above-mentioned detailed description is illustrative rather than limiting the present disclosure. Those of ordinary skill in the art should understand that the technical solutions recorded in the foregoing embodiments may be modified, or some of or all the technical features therein may be equivalently replaced; and these modifications or replacements do not cause the essence of the corresponding technical solutions to deviate from the scope of the technical solutions of the embodiments of the present disclosure, and shall be covered in the scope of the claims and specification of the present disclosure.