Polarization-maintaining fiber device supporting propagation in large mode field diameters
10261246 ยท 2019-04-16
Assignee
Inventors
- Raja A Ahmad (South Bound Brook, NJ, US)
- Man F Yan (Berkeley Heights, NJ, US)
- David J DiGiovanni (Mountain Lakes, NJ)
Cpc classification
H01S3/094007
ELECTRICITY
G02B6/02023
PHYSICS
International classification
Abstract
A higher-order mode (HOM) fiber is configured as a polarization-maintaining fiber by including a pair of stress rods at a location within the cladding layer that provides for a sufficient degree of birefringence without unduly comprising the spatial mode profile of the propagating higher-order modes. Long-period gratings are used as mode couplers at the input and output of the PM-HOM fiber, where the gratings are formed by exposing areas of the core region orthogonal to the position of the stress rods. The diameter of the stress rods (D) and displacement of the rods from the center of the core region (R1) are controlled to yield a configuration with an acceptable birefringence and polarization extinction ratio (PER) within the HOM fiber, even in situations where the fiber is bent (a bend radius less than 50 cm).
Claims
1. A polarization-maintaining optical fiber comprising an inner core, having a first refractive index value and size; an outer core disposed to surround the inner core, the outer core having a second refractive index value different from the first refractive index value and a diameter sufficient to support the propagation of selected higher-order modes (HOMs) of the propagating optical signal; a cladding layer disposed to surround the outer core, the cladding layer having a predetermined refractive index value, the combination of the inner core, outer core, and cladding layer configured such that the inner core supports the propagation of a fundamental LP.sub.01 mode of a propagating optical signal and the outer core supports the propagation of and one or more defined higher-order LP.sub.nm modes of the propagating optical signal; and a pair of stress rods disposed substantially within the cladding layer on either side of the outer core and arranged along a common axis, defining a slow polarization axis, the pair of stress rods formed of a material having a coefficient of thermal expansion (CTE) different from the cladding layer CTE, where each stress rod exhibits a like diameter D and a like separation R1 between a center of the inner core and an inner edge of a stress rod, the values of D and R1 selected to provide a predetermined stress-induced birefringence for the one or more defined higher-order LP.sub.nm modes.
2. The polarization-maintaining optical fiber as defined in claim 1 wherein the first refractive index value is greater than the second refractive index value, so as to support the propagation of LOMs in the inner core, and support the propagation of higher-order LP.sub.nm modes in the outer core and cladding layer.
3. The polarization-maintaining optical fiber as defined in claim 1 wherein the optical fiber further comprises a depressed-index trench disposed between the inner core and the outer core, the trench having a refractive index value less than both the first and second refractive index values, wherein the trench is configured to have a width selected to guide higher-order LP.sub.nm modes substantially within the outer core.
4. The polarization-maintaining optical fiber as defined in claim 1 wherein the cladding layer comprises an inner cladding layer disposed adjacent to the outer core, the inner cladding layer having a refractive index value less than the second refractive index value; and an outer cladding layer disposed to surround the inner cladding layer.
5. The polarization-maintaining optical fiber as defined in claim 4 wherein the outer cladding layer has a refractive index value different from the refractive index value of the inner cladding layer.
6. The polarization-maintaining optical fiber as defined in claim 1, wherein the optical fiber further comprises a trench region disposed between the outer core and the cladding layer, the trench layer having a refractive index value substantially less than the second refractive index value, providing substantial confinement of the defined higher-order LP.sub.nm modes within the inner core and the outer core.
7. The polarization-maintaining optical fiber as defined in claim 1 wherein the pair of stress rods are formed of a material having a different coefficient of thermal expansion (CTE) than the cladding layer.
8. The polarization-maintaining optical fiber as defined in claim 7 wherein the difference in CTE between the pair of stress rods and the cladding layer is in the range of about 0.510.sup.6/K to about 7.510.sup.6/K.
9. The polarization-maintaining optical fiber as defined in claim 7 wherein the stress rods comprise boron-doped silica.
10. The polarization-maintaining optical fiber as defined in claim 9 wherein the boron dopant concentration is in the range of about 10 mole % to about 30 mole %.
11. The polarization-maintaining optical fiber as defined in claim 7 wherein the stress rods comprise boron-doped and phosphorous-doped silica.
12. The polarization-maintaining optical fiber as defined in claim 11 wherein the boron dopant concentration is in the range of about 10 mole % to about 30 mole %, and the phosphorous dopant concentration is in the range of about 0 mole % to about 20 mole %.
13. The polarization-maintaining optical fiber as defined in claim 1 wherein the stress rods exhibit a circular cross-sectional shape.
14. The polarization-maintaining optical fiber as defined in claim 1 wherein the stress rod exhibits a non-circular cross-sectional shape.
15. The polarization-maintaining optical fiber as defined in claim 14 wherein the non-circular cross-sectional shape is selected from the group consisting of: elliptical shaped, bow-tie shaped, and D-shaped cross-section geometry.
16. The polarization-maintaining optical fiber as defined in claim 1 wherein each stress rod has a diameter D in the range of about 50 m to about 150 m.
17. The polarization-maintaining optical fiber as defined in claim 1 wherein each stress rod is separated from a center of the inner core by a distance in the range of about 40 m to about 200 m.
18. The polarization-maintaining optical fiber as defined in claim 1 wherein the optical fiber is configured to provide optical gain, in the presence of an optical pump wave in either one or both of the inner core and outer core, the optical fiber comprising one or more rare-earth dopant within either one or both of the inner core and outer core.
19. The polarization-maintaining optical fiber as defined in claim 18 wherein the rare-earth dopant is selected from the group consisting of: Tm, Er, Yb, Ho and Nd.
20. The polarization-maintaining optical fiber as defined in claim 1 wherein for higher-order LP.sub.nm modes, n<3 and m>1.
21. The polarization-maintaining optical fiber as defined in claim 20 where n=0.
22. A polarization-maintaining optical system comprising an optical signal input configuration for supporting the propagation of an incoming lower-order mode optical signal; an input mode converter disposed at an output termination of the optical signal input configuration for converting the lower-order mode to a selected, higher-order LP.sub.nm mode; and a polarization-maintaining higher-order mode (PM-HOM) optical fiber coupled to the input mode converter, the PM-HOM optical fiber for supporting the propagation of the selected higher-order LP.sub.nm mode and including an inner core sized to support propagation of at least the lower-order mode of the input signal; an outer core disposed to surround the inner core, the outer core having a diameter selected to support propagation of the selected, higher-order LP.sub.nm modes; a cladding layer disposed to surround the outer core; and a pair of stress rods disposed substantially within the cladding layer on either side of the outer core and arranged along a common axis, defining a slow polarization axis, the pair of stress rods formed of a material having a coefficient of thermal expansion (CTE) different from the cladding layer CTE, where each stress rod exhibits a like diameter D and a like separation R1 between a center of the inner core and an inner edge of a stress rod, the values of D and R1 selected to provide a predetermined stress-induced birefringence for the one or more defined higher-order LP.sub.nm modes.
23. The polarization-maintaining optical system as defined in claim 22 wherein the optical signal input configuration comprises a section of polarization-maintaining single mode fiber.
24. The polarization-maintaining optical system as defined in claim 22 wherein the optical signal input configuration comprises a section of single mode optical fiber; and a polarization controller component coupled to an end termination of the section of single mode optical fiber.
25. The polarization-maintaining optical system as defined in claim 22 wherein the optical signal input configuration comprises a section of PM-HOM optical fiber.
26. The polarization-maintaining optical system as defined in claim 22 wherein the optical signal input configuration comprises a free space optical link.
27. The polarization-maintaining optical system as defined in claim 22 wherein the input mode converter comprises an optical lens.
28. The polarization-maintaining optical system as defined in claim 22 wherein the input mode converter comprises a long period grating (LPG) created within either one or both of the inner core and outer core of an input portion of the PM-HOM optical fiber.
29. The polarization-maintaining optical system as defined in claim 28 wherein the LPG is formed in the PM-HOM fiber using UV radiation.
30. The polarization-maintaining optical system as defined in claim 29 wherein the UV radiation exposure is directed along the fast axis of the PM-HOM fiber, separate from the location of the pair of stress rods.
31. The polarization-maintaining optical system as defined in claim 22 wherein the system further comprises an output mode converter coupled to the output of the PM-HOM optical fiber and configured to transition the propagating higher-order LP.sub.nm signal back into a lower-order mode output signal.
32. The polarization-maintaining optical system as defined in claim 22 wherein the system further comprises a mode converted formed within a portion of the PM-HOM fiber to perform mode conversion for separate polarization states.
33. The polarization-maintaining optical system as defined in claim 32 wherein the mode converter provides mode conversion for separate polarization states by choosing an appropriate resonance wavelength between different modes.
34. The polarization-maintaining optical system as defined in claim 31 wherein the output mode converter comprises an LPG created within the inner core of an output portion of the PM-HOM optical fiber.
35. The polarization-maintaining optical system as defined in claim 31 wherein the output mode converter comprises an LPG created within the outer core of an output portion of the PM-HOM optical fiber.
36. The polarization-maintaining optical system as defined in claim 31 wherein the output mode converter comprises an optical lens.
37. The polarization-maintaining optical system as defined in claim 36 wherein the optical lens comprises an axicon lens.
38. The polarization-maintaining optical system as defined in claim 37 wherein for the selected, higher order LP.sub.nm mode, n<3 and m>1.
39. The polarization-maintaining optical system as defined in claim 38 wherein n=0.
40. The polarization-maintaining optical fiber as defined in claim 1 wherein for an optical signal propagating at a defined wavelength of a normalized effective area of A.sub.eff/.sup.2 greater than 1000 is provided.
41. The polarization-maintaining optical fiber as defined in claim 1 wherein for selected values of D and R1, a polarization extinction ratio greater than 10 dB is provided.
42. The polarization-maintaining optical fiber as defined in claim 1 wherein for selected values of D and R1, a birefringence greater than 1*10.sup.4 is provided.
43. The polarization-maintaining optical fiber as defined in claim 1 wherein the first refractive index value, the second refractive index value, and the third refractive index, in combination with the diameter of the inner core, outer core, and cladding layer are configured to provide excitation of higher-order modes of various polarizations and orientations, including radially polarized and azimuthally polarized, and hybrid modes.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1) Referring now to the drawings,
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
(16) We have discovered that for certain ranges of stress rod diameter D and stress rod displacement R1 (displacement defined as the separation between a center of the optical fiber and an interior edge of stress rod), it is possible to configure a PM-HOM optical fiber that satisfactorily performs in various high power applications (e.g., lasers, amplifiers, or the like). A birefringence of at least 10.sup.4 has been obtained for an optical fiber having a normalized effective area (A.sub.eff/.sup.2) greater than 1000. By understanding the trade-offs between the diameter of the stress rods and the displacement between the stress rods and the center of the core, it is been found possible to position the stress rods at a specific location where sufficient birefringence is achieved without unduly distorting the spatial electric field distribution of the various propagating optical modes, even when subjected to bending (maintaining a bend radius less than 50 cm).
(17)
(18) A cladding layer 18 is disposed to surround outer core 14. A pair of stress rods 20 formed of a material having a coefficient of thermal expansion (CTE) that is significantly different from the CTE of cladding layer 18. As shown in
(19) The core structure as shown in
(20) During the fabrication process as the fiber is drawn down from an optical preform, the presence of large CTE stress rods 20 creates a non-uniform radial stress distribution across the fiber cross section, where this non-uniform stress remains frozen in the final form of the fiber. As a result, optical signals thereafter propagating within the fiber experience stress-induced birefringence that splits the signal into orthogonally polarized modes, denoted as the orthogonal fast and slow axes of the fiber.
(21) As mentioned above and discussed in detail below, the diameter D of the stress rods, as well as their displacement R1 from the center of inner core 12 (as shown in
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(24) Yet another exemplary embodiment of the present invention, also using non-circular stress rods, is shown in
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(26) An exemplary polarization-maintaining, high-power optical system utilizing a section of PM-HOM optical fiber 10 is shown in
(27) As shown in
(28) In various embodiments, LPG 32 may be are formed within only inner core 12 of fiber 10. In other embodiments, outer core 14 may also be photosensitized and, therefore, LPG 32 can be inscribed within only outer core 14. In other words, the gratings are preferably formed within the inner/outer core regions (in accordance with one or more embodiments of the present invention) such that the overlap factor of electric field distribution for the interacting lower-order and higher-order modes is non-zero across the fiber cross-section, which allows energy exchange (conversion) among the interacting modes.
(29) Referring back to
(30) It is to be understood that the configuration as shown in
(31) As mentioned above, one exemplary embodiment of the present invention is associated with the formation of polarization maintaining fiber-based amplifier arrangements.
(32) In the exemplary embodiment shown in
(33) The polarized version of the signal and the pump are thereafter passed through an input mode converter 72 (for example, an LPG), which transfers the energy propagating in a lower-order mode into the higher-order mode supported by PM-HOM 60. The presence of the pump wave within the doped fiber of PM-HOM 60 results in generating optical amplification within the polarized optical signal S.
(34) The amplified, polarized output signal form PM-HOM 60 is shown in
(35) Based on waveguide analyses performed on an exemplary configuration of PM-HOM optical fiber 10, the electric fields E(,r) of different LP.sub.0m modes has been determined, as a function of the fiber radial position (as measured outward from the center of inner core 12). The results of this analysis are shown in
(36)
(37) The integrating birefringence of the various higher order modes LP.sub.0m does not change significantly from that of the fundamental (LP.sub.01) mode, as shown in Table 1, below.
(38) TABLE-US-00001 TABLE I Integrated Birefringence Mode (values in 10.sup.4) LP.sub.01 2.011 LP.sub.02 2.034 LP.sub.03 2.035 LP.sub.04 2.034 LP.sub.05 2.034 LP.sub.06 2.033 LP.sub.07 2.033 LP.sub.08 2.033 LP.sub.09 2.035 LP.sub.0.Math.10 2.047
(39) It is useful to note that while the stress-induced birefringence B(r,) has an azimuthal (), angular dependence, the electrical fields of the radially symmetric LP.sub.0m modes do not. Therefore, the stress birefringence term that contains the cos(2) dependence can be ignored since an integration over cos(2) from 0 to 360 degrees will be zero. While other HOMs LP.sub.nm) do exhibit a stress birefringence having a cos(2) dependence, its effects are minimal when the mode electrical field extends substantially less than the stress rod center (e.g., about 112.5 m in one example). Thus, it has been found that birefringence can be introduced into other radially non-symmetric HOMs, LP.sub.nm, where n<3 and m>1.
(40) The effects of different stress rod locations R1 on birefringence are shown in the plot of
(41) In reviewing the information presented in the plots of
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(43) It is interesting to observe from the results shown in
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(45) It is useful to note that the mode conversion resonance wavelength associated with an LPG of a specific period is distinct for the two orthogonal polarization states. In the example of mode conversion between the LP.sub.01 and LP.sub.08 modes by an LPG of period .sub.LPG, the resonance wavelengths for the fast and slow polarization states are related to the effective indices of these modes at different polarization states. In particular, the resonance wavelengths are given as
.sup.s=.sub.LPG.Math.(n.sub.01.sup.sn.sub.om.sup.s),
.sup.f=.sub.LPG.Math.(n.sub.01.sup.fn.sub.0m.sup.f)
where the superscripts, s and f, indicate the slow and fast polarization states respectively; n.sub.01 and n.sub.0m are the effective indices of the LP.sub.01 and LP.sub.0m modes respectively. Within the current wavelength range of operation (i.e., around 1070 nm), the difference in LPG resonance wavelengths between the two polarization states of LP.sub.01 and LP.sub.08 modes in the PM-HOM fiber are related to the birefringence value of these modes and it is given as
.sup.s.sup.f=.sub.LPG.Math.((n.sub.01.sup.sn.sub.01.sup.f)(n.sub.08.sup.sn.sub.08.sup.f)).sub.LPG.Math.[B.sub.01B.sub.08]
where B.sub.01 and B.sub.08 are the birefringence for the LP.sub.01 and LP.sub.08 modes, respectively.
(46) This shows that LPGs made in PM-HOM fibers can be used for HOM generation at distinct polarization states. Furthermore, LPGs made in PM-HOM fibers can also be used to perform mode conversion for separate polarization states by choosing the appropriate resonance wavelength, as illustrated in
(47) Summarizing, when configuring a PM-HOM optical fiber in accordance with an exemplary embodiment of the present invention, the separation R1 between inner core 12 and the stress rods 20 is dictated by the maximum allowed value of birefringence B that maintains the integrity of the higher-order LP.sub.om mode-field-distribution (i.e., avoiding mode distortion and mode crossing), thus maintaining a substantially consistent mode-field-area.
(48) Thus, the two parameters D and R1 may be chosen subject to two opposing constraints:
(49) 1) The birefringence B is desired to remain above a certain value; and
(50) 2) The normalized effective area is desired to be above a certain value which is very close to the unperturbed HOM configuration. That is, it is one goal to minimize any distortion to the mode from a non-uniform stress distribution attributed to the presence of stress rods. Such non-uniformity would distort the mode profile, reducing the A.sub.eff value.
(51) Various exemplary embodiments of the present invention comprise silica-based glass, with selected dopants used to control the refractive indicies in the inner core, outer core, and cladding (as well as the trench, when present). The fiber birefringence is induced by dual stress rods located on either side of the fiber core such that their centers (the core and the pair of stress rods) are essentially collinear. The stress rods are formed of a glass having a thermal expansion coefficient significantly different from the material forming the cladding layer, thus inducing the desired stress properties and low refractive index, thus minimizing disturbance on the spatial modes. Exemplary embodiments of the present invention may be embodied within the following dimensional and compositional ranges:
(52) 1) overall PM-HOM optical fiber diameter as measured across the cladding layer being in the range of 180 m to 800 m;
(53) 2) stress rods are formed of a material that exhibits a CTE that is significantly different from that of the glass material of the cladding (e.g., a CTE in the range of about 0.510.sup.6/K to 7.510.sup.6/K, when comparing the CTE of the cladding to the CTE of the stress rods);
(54) 3) stress rod diameters (D) range from about 50 m to 150 m (stress rods may be circular or non-circular);
(55) 4) displacement (R1) between the center of the core and a stress rod is the range of about 40 m to about 200 m.
(56) These values are exemplary only, and for the purpose of illustrating several different specific embodiments that are considered to fall within the scope of the present invention.
(57) More generally, it is to be noted that these examples and embodiments are merely selected illustrations of the principles of the present invention and do not limit its scope. Additions, omissions, substitutions, and other modifications can be made within a range not departing from the scope of the present invention. Accordingly, the present invention is not limited by the above description and is only limited by the claims appended hereto.