VERY LARGE MODE AREA SINGLE-MODE AMPLIFYING OPTICAL FIBER AND FIBER AMPLIFIER OR LASER INCORPORATING THE SAME
20240097396 ยท 2024-03-21
Inventors
Cpc classification
H01S3/094007
ELECTRICITY
H01S3/0675
ELECTRICITY
H01S3/09415
ELECTRICITY
H01S3/094011
ELECTRICITY
H01S3/06741
ELECTRICITY
International classification
Abstract
Disclosed is a very large mode area single-mode amplifying optical fiber including a doped core having a core diameter larger than 20 micrometers, surrounded by at least a first cladding including a solid matrix made of a first glass and two stress applying parts arranged symmetrically with respect to the core, the two stress applying parts being aligned along an alignment axis, the cladding including two flat surfaces extending parallel to the longitudinal axis and transverse to the alignment axis, the two flat surfaces being joined by two rounded surfaces and wherein the optical fiber is suitable for being bent with a bending diameter less than 30 cm in a plane forming an angle of less than 15 degrees with the alignment axis while having bending losses below 0.5 dB/m.
Claims
1. Very large mode area single-mode amplifying optical fiber comprising: a core extending along a longitudinal axis of the optical fiber, the core being solid and doped with elements presenting at least one emission band, the core having a core diameter larger than 30 micrometers, said core being surrounded by at least one glassy cladding comprising a first cladding, the first cladding comprising a solid matrix made of a first glass and two stress applying parts arranged symmetrically with respect to the core, the first glass having a lower refractive index than the core, the core and the two stress applying parts being aligned along an alignment axis transverse to the longitudinal axis, wherein the at least one glassy cladding comprises, on its outer periphery, two flat surfaces extending parallel to the longitudinal axis and transverse to the alignment axis, the two flat surfaces being arranged symmetrically with respect to the core and being joined by two rounded surfaces and wherein the optical fiber is suitable for being bent with a bending diameter below 30 cm in a plane comprising the longitudinal axis of the fiber and said plane forming an angle of less than 15 degrees with the alignment axis while having bending losses for the fundamental mode less than 0.5 dB/m.
2. The very large mode area single-mode amplifying optical fiber according to claim 1, wherein the bending diameter is comprised between 10 cm and 20 cm, with bending losses for the fundamental mode less than 0.5 dB/m.
3. The very Very-large mode area single-mode amplifying optical fiber according to claim 1, wherein the optical fiber is bent in a plane forming an angle of less than 10 degrees with the alignment axis.
4. The very large mode area single-mode amplifying optical fiber amplifier according to at claim 1, wherein said very large mode area single-mode amplifying optical fiber presents an effective area greater than 450 ?m.sup.2.
5. The very large mode area single-mode amplifying optical fiber according to claim 1, wherein the core and first glass are based on silica glass or on fluoride glass or on chalcogenide glass or on phosphate glass.
6. The very large mode area single-mode amplifying optical fiber according to claim 1, wherein the core is doped with rare earth ions or with chromium ions.
7. The very large mode area amplifying optical fiber according to claim 1, wherein the core presents a flat-top or a parabolic refractive index profile, or wherein the core comprises a pedestal surrounding a central part of the core, the pedestal having a refractive index lower than the central part of the core and higher than the first glass.
8. The very large mode area single-mode amplifying optical fiber according to claim 1, wherein the at least one glassy cladding consists of the first cladding, the first cladding comprising, on its outer periphery, the two flat surfaces.
9. The very large mode area single-mode amplifying optical fiber according to claim 1, wherein the at least one glassy cladding comprises a second cladding arranged around the first cladding, the second cladding having a lower refractive index than the first glass.
10. The very large mode area single-mode amplifying optical fiber according to claim 9 wherein the second cladding is selected from an all solid cladding made of a second glass or an air cladding and a solid cladding made of a second glass, the air cladding being arranged between the first cladding and the solid cladding made of the second glass.
11. The very large mode area single-mode amplifying optical fiber according to claim 1, further comprising a polymer or metal cladding around said at least one glassy cladding.
12. Fiber amplifier comprising a very large mode area single-mode amplifying optical fiber according to claim 1, said very large mode area single-mode amplifying optical fiber being spooled with a bending diameter less than 30 cm.
13. The fiber amplifier according to claim 12, wherein said very large mode area single-mode amplifying optical fiber has a length comprised between 50 cm and 20 m.
14. The fiber amplifier according to claim 12, comprising a pump source generating a pumping beam and an optical beam combiner adapted for injecting said pumping beam into the core and/or into the first cladding.
15. The fiber Fiber-laser comprising a very large mode area single-mode amplifying optical fiber according to claim 1, said very large mode area single-mode amplifying optical fiber being spooled with a bending diameter less than 30 cm and the fiber laser further comprising a light source generating a source beam to be amplified, a first mirror at a first end of the very large mode area single-mode amplifying optical fiber and a second mirror at a second end of the very large mode area single-mode amplifying optical fiber.
16. The fiber amplifier according to claim 13 comprising a pump source generating a pumping beam and an optical beam combiner adapted for injecting said pumping beam into the core and/or into the first cladding.
Description
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF EXAMPLE(S)
[0047] The following description with reference to the accompanying drawings will make it clear what the invention consists of and how it can be achieved. The invention is not limited to the embodiment/s illustrated in the drawings. Accordingly, it should be understood that where features mentioned in the claims are followed by reference signs, such signs are included solely for the purpose of enhancing the intelligibility of the claims and are in no way limiting on the scope of the claims.
[0048] In the accompanying drawings:
[0049]
[0050]
[0051]
[0052]
[0053]
[0054]
[0055]
[0056]
[0057]
[0058]
[0059]
DEVICE
[0060] We propose a very large mode area fiber 100 of the step-index type having a core 1 doped with ions presenting at least one emission band and at least one first cladding 2 surrounding the core 1. The core 1 extends along a longitudinal axis 10 of the optical fiber. Generally, the core 1 is doped with rare earth ions. For example, the rare earth ions are selected among any lanthanide ion. Preferably, the rare earth ions are selected among ytterbium, erbium, thulium and holmium or any combination thereof, such as erbium-ytterbium co-doping. Alternatively, the core 1 is doped with chromium or bismuth ions. In the following example, the core 1 is based on a silica matrix doped with ytterbium ions.
[0061] The core 1 is solid. The core 1 has generally a step-index profile relatively to the first cladding. For example, the core 1 has a flat-top or parabolic refractive index profile. The core has generally a cylindrical shape with a circular cross-section. The core center is merged with the longitudinal axis 10 of the optical fiber.
[0062] The first cladding 2 comprises a solid matrix made of a first glass and including two stress applying parts (or SAPs) 21, 22. The two stress applying parts 21, 22 are arranged symmetrically with respect to the core 1 inside the solid matrix of the first cladding 2. In a cross-section plane (the plane of
[0063] In the first embodiment illustrated on
[0064] Alternatively, the SAPs have another shape, such as a sector shape and are placed symmetrically with respect to the core 1, so as to form a polarization-maintaining fiber of bow-tie type.
[0065] In the first embodiment illustrated on
[0066] The geometry of the glass cladding with the two flat surfaces 4, 14 combined with the two rounded surfaces and the stiffness of the cladding material provide the optical fiber with the property of preferential coiling in a plane transverse to the two flat surfaces 4, 14 and more precisely in a plane comprising the alignment axis 20 of the two stress applying parts 21, 22 and the longitudinal axis 10 of the fiber. Thus bent, the radius of curvature of the fiber is transverse to the flat surfaces 4, 14. In the present document, the expression plane transverse to the flat surfaces means that the plane is inclined by an angle ? less than 20 degrees, and preferably less than 15 degrees, with respect to the alignment axis 20. More precisely, each turn of the fiber 100 generally lies in a plane forming an angle below 20 degrees with respect to the alignment axis 20.
[0067] In an example, the first cladding 2 is made of a silica glass (or quartz glass), for example based on a pure silica (SiO.sub.2) matrix. Alternatively, the first cladding 2 is made of a non-silicon oxide glass. For example, the first cladding 2 is made of a fluoride glass (for example ZBLAN). In another example, the first cladding 2 is made of a chalcogenide glass, i.e. a glass containing one or more chalcogens such as sulfur, selenium and/or tellurium but excluding oxygen. And in another example the first cladding 2 is made of phosphate glass. The core 1 is made of the same type of glass as the first cladding 2, either based on a silicon oxide glass, a fluoride glass, a chalcogenide glass or a phosphate glass, the core 1 further comprising active dopants.
[0068] The two stress applying parts 21, 22 are made of doped glass bars. For example, the two stress applying parts 21, 22 are made of silica glass bars doped with boron trioxide (B.sub.2O.sub.3). Alternatively, the stress applying parts 21, 22 are made of glass bars co-doped with aluminium oxide and boron trioxide (Al.sub.2O.sub.3B.sub.2O.sub.3) or co-doped with aluminium oxide and phosphorus pentoxide (Al.sub.2O.sub.3P.sub.2O.sub.5) or doped with any combination of dopants suitable for forming a stress applying part having a negative refractive index difference with respect to the first glass of the first cladding 2. As an example, the refractive index difference between the stress applying parts 21, 22 and the first glass of the cladding 2 is of the order of ?10.Math.10.sup.?3. The optical fiber 100 is a polarization-maintaining fiber.
[0069]
[0070] For fiber laser and amplifiers based on single mode VLMAs working in the 1000 nm spectral range, the refractive index difference between the core 1 and the matrix of the first cladding 2 is greater than 5.Math.10.sup.?4, and generally comprised in a range between 5.Math.10.sup.?4 and 1.Math.10.sup.?3. Such a small refractive index difference requires a tight control of the dopants during the manufacture of the fiber preform. This range of refractive index difference enables the core to provide a numerical aperture comprised between 0.038 and 0.054. For fiber laser and amplifiers based on single-mode VLMAs working in the 2000 nm spectral range, the maximum refractive index difference is on the order of 2?10.sup.?3.
[0071]
[0072] According to a variant of the refractive index profile as illustrated on
[0073] The first cladding may be uncoated. Alternatively, the first cladding is coated with an outer cladding 8 (see
[0074] According to a second embodiment, the first cladding 2 is surrounded by a second cladding 3 comprising a matrix made of a second glass whose index is lower than the first glass of the first cladding 2 (see
[0075] According to a variant of the second embodiment, the second cladding 3 includes an air cladding 7 surrounding the first cladding 2. The air cladding 7 is embedded in a solid matrix 13 made of a second glass (see
[0076] When the second cladding 3 is made of a second glass whose index is lower than the first cladding 2 (
[0077] Thus, the fiber may be all-solid (when there is no air cladding) or of the holey fiber type (when there is an air cladding 7 between the first cladding 2 and the solid matrix 13 of the second cladding 3).
[0078] As an option, a low index polymer cladding 8 is placed around the second cladding 3.
[0079] In an example according to the first embodiment, the fiber has flat-top refractive index profile as illustrated on
[0080] According to the present disclosure, the optical fiber 100 is bent in a bending plane 30 inclined by an angle ? with respect to the alignment axis 20 of the SAPs. The trace of the bending plane in the cross-section plane of the fiber is also denoted the curvature axis or bending axis of the fiber coil.
[0081]
[0082] When the angle ? is less than 10 degrees, the losses of the LP.sub.01x mode decrease to less than 0.1 dB/m and become negligible when the bending axis is aligned with the alignment axis 20 (in other words, when the angle ? is zero).
[0083] The single-mode operation of the optical fiber is optimal when the angle ? is less than 5 degrees: the losses of the higher order modes (HOM, here LP.sub.11) are more than 10 dB/m while the losses of the x-polarized fundamental mode (LP.sub.01x) are less 0.05 dB/m.
[0084]
[0085] On
[0086] In contrast, as illustrated on
[0087] The boron doped stress applying parts 21, 22 produce two technical effects when the fiber is bent in a plane inclined by an angle lower than 15 degrees with respect to the alignment axis of the stress applying parts. First, the fundamental mode presents a higher confinement due to the two boron doped stress applying parts. Thus, the losses of the fundamental mode (LP.sub.01x) are negligible when the fiber is coiled or bent in a plane parallel to the alignment axis 20. Second, a part of the electromagnetic field of the higher order modes extends in the boron doped stress applying parts, which induce high losses. Thus, the higher order modes do not present the same confinement as the LP.sub.01x fundamental mode. The optical fiber of the present disclosure, when bent in a plane transverse to the flat surfaces, enables single-mode operation with limited losses (less than 0.5 dB/m) for the fundamental mode.
[0088] In the present document, a confinement degree refers to a proportion of the mode considered to be contained in a given radius relatively to the center of the fiber, and thus to the center of the core. A mode properly confined in the core presents a confinement degree close to 1 or about 100%.
[0089] Moreover, the orientation of the two flat surfaces 4, 14 induces preferential bending of the fiber with a curvature radius parallel to the alignment axis 20 or x-axis, when the fiber is placed on a plane. For example, the fiber is placed between two flat planes and the two ends of the fiber are maintained so that its flat surfaces 4, 14 are oriented perpendicular to the flat planes. Then, when coiling the fiber, the fiber bends naturally so that the alignment axis of the stress applying parts remains parallel to the two flat planes.
[0090] Another example of a very large mode area fiber according to the present disclosure has the following features. The core diameter is 35 ?m. The core is made of a silica matrix doped with ytterbium ions. The refractive index difference between core and first glass is about 7.3?10.sup.?4 The first cladding includes two boron doped stress applying parts, each having a diameter of 48 ?m. The center-to-center distance between the core and each of the stress applying part is 62.5 ?m. The fiber diameter is 220 ?m. The length of the flat surfaces in the cross-section plane is 110 ?m. The flat surfaces 4, 14 are oriented in a plane transverse to the bending radius of the fiber. The bending diameter is between 15 cm and 18 cm. When operating at a wavelength of 1064 nm, the effective area of this fiber is 615 ?m.sup.2 which corresponds to a mode field diameter of 28 ?m. The losses for the high order modes are higher than 10 dB/m while the losses for the LP.sub.01x fundamental mode remain lower than 0.1 dB/m.
[0091] The amplifying fiber 100 generates amplified light at a wavelength depending on the doping elements in the core. When doped with ytterbium ions, the VLMA single mode amplifying fiber 100 is adapted for amplifying light in the wavelength range from 950 nm to 1150 nm. When doped with erbium ions, the VLMA single mode amplifying fiber 100 is adapted for amplifying light in the wavelength range from 1530 nm to 1610 nm. When doped with thulium ions, the VLMA single mode amplifying fiber 100 is adapted for amplifying light in the wavelength range from 1900 nm to 2100 nm. When doped with holmium ions, the VLMA single mode amplifying fiber 100 is adapted for amplifying light in the wavelength range from 1950 nm to 2160 nm. Those skilled in the art will easily select the appropriate doping composition of the core depending on the desired operating wavelength range. Of course, the seed light source and the pump source(s) are adapted accordingly.
[0092] The present disclosure thus proposes a very large mode area polarization-maintaining and amplifying fiber, operating in single-mode regime which provides negligible losses for the fundamental mode. For example, the polarization-maintaining fiber is of Panda-type. Preferably, the fiber core is rare earth doped.
[0093] Such a VLMA fiber finds applications in both high power continuous wave or pulse of high peak power fiber amplifiers or fiber lasers while providing strictly single-mode operation.
[0094] The fiber is bent with bending diameter comprised between 10 cm and 30 cm, which enables the use of a fiber having a length comprised between 50 cm and a few meters or tens of meters, while providing a compact footprint with a low loss single-mode regime. Moreover, when the fiber is of the step-index type, it is easy to manufacture at low cost. The fiber is also easy to cleave and splice to another fiber, which enables industrial manufacture of an all-fiber laser system.
[0095]
[0096]
[0097] The VLMA single-mode amplifying optical fiber 100 can also be used in a fiber laser.
[0098] The VLMA single-mode amplifying optical fiber 100 can also be core-pumped.
[0099] Although representative examples of VLMA single amplifying optical fibers, fiber amplifiers and fiber lasers have been described in detail herein, those skilled in the art will recognize that various substitutions and modifications may be made without departing from the scope of the present disclosure and defined in the appended claims.