COUPLING DEVICE FOR COUPLING HOLLOW-CORE OPTICAL FIBRES COMPRISING A COUPLING ELEMENT
20240319445 ยท 2024-09-26
Inventors
- Abdelfatah BENABID (LIMOGES, FR)
- Beno?t DEBORD (LIMOGES, FR)
- Beno?t BEAUDOU (LIMOGES, FR)
- Gilles Feugnet (Palaiseau, FR)
- Bertrand MORBIEU (TOURS, FR)
Cpc classification
G02B6/02361
PHYSICS
G02B6/2821
PHYSICS
International classification
Abstract
A device for coupling optical fibers, includes a first coupling-inhibited hollow-core optical fiber comprising a first microstructured cladding comprising a plurality of first confining tubular features distributed in a ring and encircling, at least partially, a first core so as to confine at least radiation at a wavelength ?op to the first core, a second coupling-inhibited hollow-core optical fiber comprising a second microstructured cladding comprising a plurality of second confining tubular features distributed in a ring and encircling, at least partially, a second core so as to confine the light radiation to the second core, a coupling element arranged between the first and second cores, the coupling element comprising at least one coupling tubular feature comprised at least partially in the first microstructured cladding and/or the second microstructured cladding and having a wall thickness tcp called the coupling thickness and a material index ncp called the coupling index, an arrangement of the coupling element, the coupling thickness tcp and the coupling index ncp being configured so as to create a leakage channel at the wavelength ?op allowing the radiation guided by the first optical fiber to be coupled to the second optical fiber and/or the radiation guided by the second optical fiber to be coupled to the first optical fiber.
Claims
1. A device (D) for coupling optical fibers, comprising: a first coupling-inhibited hollow-core optical fiber (FO1) comprising a first microstructured cladding (SCF1) comprising a plurality of first confining tubular features (MCF1) having a first thickness, called the confining thickness t.sub.cf1, said features being distributed in a ring and encircling, at least partially, a first core (C1) so as to confine at least radiation at a wavelength ?.sub.op to said first core, a second coupling-inhibited hollow-core optical fiber (FO2) comprising a second microstructured cladding (SCF2) comprising a plurality of second confining tubular features (MCF2) having a second thickness, called the confining thickness t.sub.cf2, said features being distributed in a ring and encircling, at least partially, a second core (C2) so as to confine said light radiation to said second core, a coupling element (SCP) arranged between the first and second cores, said coupling element comprising at least one coupling tubular feature (MCP, MCP1, MCP2, MTa) comprised at least partially in said first microstructured cladding and/or said second microstructured cladding and having a wall thickness t.sub.cp called the coupling thickness and a material index n.sub.cp called the coupling index, said coupling thickness t.sub.cp being different from said first and second confining thicknesses t.sub.cf1, t.sub.cf2, an arrangement of the coupling element, the coupling thickness t.sub.cp and the coupling index n.sub.cp being configured depending on said wavelength ?.sub.op so as to create a leakage channel at said wavelength ?.sub.op allowing the radiation guided by the first optical fiber to be coupled to the second optical fiber and/or the radiation guided by the second optical fiber to be coupled to the first optical fiber.
2. The device as claimed in claim 1, wherein each coupling tubular feature i?[1, N] has a coupling thickness t.sub.cp,i and a coupling index n.sub.cp,i such that *.
3. The device as claimed in claim 1, wherein the coupling tubular features are arranged so that a distance (D.sub.12) between the center of a coupling tubular feature and an adjacent coupling tubular feature is less than said wavelength ?.sub.op.
4. The device as claimed in claim 1, wherein said coupling element comprises at least a first (MCP1) and a second (MCP2) coupling tubular feature.
5. The device as claimed in claim 4, wherein the plurality of first and second confining tubular features partially encircle said first and second cores, respectively, said first coupling tubular feature (MCP1) being arranged within the first optical fiber, facing a segment of the first core that is not encircled by the plurality of first confining tubular features, said second coupling tubular feature (MCP2) being arranged within the second optical fiber facing a segment of the second core that is not encircled by the plurality of second confining tubular features, the first and second coupling tubular features being arranged facing each other.
6. The device as claimed in claim 4, wherein the plurality of first and second confining tubular features completely encircle the first and second cores, respectively, said first and second coupling tubular features (MCP1, MCP2) are nested in one of said first and second confining tubular features, respectively, and the first and second coupling tubular features are arranged facing each other.
7. The device as claimed in claim 4, wherein said first coupling tubular feature (MCP1) is arranged within the first optical fiber, facing a segment of the first core that is not encircled by the plurality of first confining tubular features, and wherein the plurality of second confining tubular features completely encircles the second core, said second coupling tubular feature (MCP2) being nested in one of said second confining tubular features and arranged opposite said first coupling tubular feature.
8. The device as claimed in claim 4, wherein the coupling element comprises at least one additional tubular feature (MTa) forming one of the coupling tubular features, which feature is arranged between the first and second coupling tubular features.
9. The device as claimed in claim 1, wherein said coupling element comprises a single coupling tubular feature (MCP).
10. The device as claimed in claim 9, wherein the coupling tubular feature (MCP) is arranged facing a segment of the first core that is not encircled by the plurality of first confining tubular features and facing a segment of the second core that is not encircled by the plurality of first confining tubular features, said tubular feature being placed substantially between said segments.
11. The device as claimed in claim 9, wherein the plurality of first confining tubular features completely encircles the first core and the plurality of second confining tubular features partially encircles the second core, said coupling tubular feature (MCP) being arranged within the second optical fiber, facing a segment of the second core that is not encircled by the plurality of second confining tubular features, an azimuthal orientation of the first and second optical fibers within the device being configured to maximize an overlap of said leakage channel with a leakage profile of said first microstructured cladding.
12. The device as claimed in claim 1, wherein the coupling thickness or thicknesses t.sub.cp and the coupling index or indices n.sub.cp are configured so that said radiation is guided from the first optical fiber to the second optical fiber by exciting a spatial mode different from a spatial mode of said radiation guided by said first optical fiber.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0025] Other features, details and advantages of the invention will become apparent on reading the description given with reference to the appended drawings, which are given by way of example and which show, respectively:
[0026]
[0027]
[0028]
[0029]
[0030]
[0031]
[0032]
[0033]
[0034]
[0035] References to the figures, when they are identical, correspond to the same elements.
[0036]
[0037] In the figures, the elements are not to scale unless indicated otherwise.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0038]
[0039] Likewise, the device comprises a second IC-HC optical fiber FO2 comprising a second microstructured cladding SCF2. This second microstructured cladding comprises a plurality of second confining tubular features MCF2, distributed in a ring and encircling, at least partially, the core C2 of the fiber FO2, which is called the second core, so as to confine light radiation to the second core at the wavelength ?.sub.op.
[0040] The fibers FO1, FO2 respectively comprise a first and a second outer cladding GE1, GE2 encircling and protecting the microstructured claddings SCF1, SCF2.
[0041] In a manner known per se, in order to achieve confinement of the radiation at ?.sub.op to the first and second cores C1, C2, the first and second confining tubular features MCF1, MCF2 respectively have a first and a second thickness, called the confining thickness t.sub.cf1, t.sub.cf2, and a first and a second index, called the confining index n.sub.cf1, n.sub.cf2, such that:
with m?*. Preferably, the first confining features have an identical first wall thickness t.sub.cf,1 in order to minimize transmission losses. Likewise, the second confining features have an identical wall thickness t.sub.cf,2 in order to minimize transmission losses. By way of non-limiting example, for confining features made of silica, for radiation at ?.sub.op=1550 nm, t.sub.cf ?[843 nm, 1181 nm], or t.sub.cf ? [1610 nm, 1968 nm] or indeed t.sub.cf ? [2362 nm, 2725 nm].
[0042] The confining tubular features MCF1, MCF2 may for example be circular cylindrical tubes or indeed features of nested structure, i.e. various concentric tubes with increasingly small diameters are placed inside one another. Alternatively, these tubular features may be tubes of elliptical shape, the major axis of the ellipses being oriented radially, toward the center of the fiber, or indeed of any shape known to those skilled in the art. It will be understood that the structure of the first and the structure of the second microstructured cladding may or may not be identical without departing from the scope of the invention.
[0043] As mentioned above, it is known to make a coupler with IC-HF optical fibers by polishing the external claddings of the two fibers, thus obtaining a polished face for each fiber. The coupler is then formed by bringing the two fibers together so that the interstitial distance is less than the wavelength and then splicing the two polished faces of the two fibers, the azimuthal orientations of the two fibers in the coupler being adjusted so that the overlap of the leakage profiles of the two fibers is maximized. In this particular case, in order to ensure optimum guidance of the radiation, the tubular features of the microstructured claddings have an identical wall thickness. The overlap of the leakage profiles makes it possible to ensure a good coupling efficiency is obtained even though limited by the interstitial distance.
[0044] The invention differs from the prior art in that the coupling between the two fibers is achieved by means of a coupling element SCP that is resonant with the mode guided at the wavelength ?.sub.op in the first core C1 and/or with the mode guided at the wavelength ?.sub.op in the second core C2. As will be explained below, this coupling element makes it possible to create a leakage channel from the first core C1 to the second core C2 and/or from the second core C2 to the first core C1. This coupling element makes it possible to obtain a high coupling efficiency, without introducing excessively high transmission losses. Specifically, use of such a coupling element makes it possible to ensure a high coupling and guiding efficiency is obtained, while avoiding the need to polish a large section of the microstructured cladding of the two fibers to bring the cores closer together and maximize the overlap of the leakage profiles as in the prior art, this step potentially greatly degrading the performance of the optical fibers.
[0045] The coupling element SCP is arranged between the first and second cores and comprises at least one coupling tubular feature MCP. By way of non-limiting example, the device D illustrated in
[0046] Specifically, via simulations and experimental tests, the inventors have realized that using coupling tubular features MCP having a specifically configured wall thickness t.sub.cp, called the coupling thickness, a specifically configured material index n.sub.tcp, called the coupling index, and a specifically configured arrangement of the coupling element, makes it possible to create a leakage channel at the wavelength lop through this coupling element, thus allowing radiation guided by the first optical fiber to be coupled to the second optical fiber and/or radiation guided by the second optical fiber to be coupled to the first optical fiber. More precisely, the coupling tubular features MCP have a coupling thickness t.sub.cp different from the confining thickness t.sub.cf1, t.sub.cf2 of the first and second confining tubular features in order to create a break in symmetry in the first and/or second microstructured cladding(s) SCF1, SCF2. This break in symmetry induces a leakage channel for radiation through the coupling tubular features and therefore allows a mode of the core C1, C2 to couple to the cladding SCF1, SCF2. This leakage channel thus allows coupling between the two fibers FO1, FO2 of the device.
[0047] The inventors have determined that, to create this leakage channel, it is necessary for each coupling tubular feature i?[1, N] to have a coupling thickness t.sub.cp,i and a coupling index n.sub.cp,i such that,
with m(i)?*. This condition makes it possible for the effective index n.sub.eff,cp of the coupling element to be substantially equal to an effective index n.sub.eff,c1 of the first core and/or an effective index of the second core at the wavelength ?.sub.op and thus for the coupling element to be resonant with the first and/or the second core(s). Advantageously, leakage of the radiation guided in the core C1 and/or C2 occurs very predominantly through the coupling tubular feature. This thus allows a good coupling efficiency to be obtained while keeping propagation losses low.
[0048] The shape of the cross section of the coupling tubular features MCP may be circular or even elliptical, the major axis of the ellipses being oriented radially, toward the center of the fiber, or indeed any feature known for HC-PCF-IC fibers by those skilled in the art may be used. The coupling tubular features MCP may be of a shape identical to that of the confining tubular features or of a different shape without departing from the scope of the invention.
[0049] As mentioned above, in order to obtain good coupling efficiency, it is not necessary for the distance between the cores C1 and C2 to be less than the wavelength. However, when the coupling element comprises a plurality of coupling tubular features MCP, it is then necessary for a distance D.sub.12 between two adjacent coupling tubular features to be less than 100 times said wavelength ?.sub.op, preferably less than 10?.sub.op, and more preferably less than ?.sub.op in order to ensure that the coupling efficiency is sufficiently high. This distance D.sub.12 is illustrated in
[0050] As mentioned above, it is known that HC-PCF-IC fibers such as the fibers FO1, FO2 have leakage fields with a particular radial distribution that depends on the exact structure of the microstructured claddings SCF1, SCF2. Thus, within the device D, the fibers FO1, FO2 possess a respective azimuthal orientation configured so that there is a maximum overlap of the leakage fields of the fibers, in order to maximize coupling efficiency.
[0051] Up to here, the device D of the invention has been described for two HC-PCF-IC fibers FO1, FO2 without precisely describing the arrangement between the structure of the microstructured claddings SCF1, SCF2 and the structure of the one or more tubular features of the coupling element.
[0052] In a first variant of the invention, illustrated in
[0053]
with m?* in order to confine radiation at the wavelength ?.sub.op. In addition, the first and second coupling tubular features have first and second coupling thicknesses t.sub.cp,1, t.sub.cp,2 and first and second coupling indices n.sub.cp1, n.sub.cp2 such that
with m?* in order to create a leakage channel.
[0054] In order to maximize coupling efficiency, the first and second coupling tubular features are arranged facing each other and so that a distance D.sub.12 between the external wall of two adjacent coupling tubular features MCP1, MCP2 is smaller than 100 times the wavelength ?.sub.op, preferably smaller than 10?.sub.op, and more preferably smaller than ?.sub.op.
[0055] In the device of the invention, the fibers FO1, FO2 may be held at a fixed distance by means of a housing in order to form a coupler. Alternatively, the fibers are spliced together via their external claddings GE1, GE2 encircling the microstructured claddings SCF1, SCF2.
[0056]
[0057] Study of
[0058] Regarding the radial distribution of the leakage field, the leakage occurs through the coupling element SCP via the first and second coupling tubular features MCP1, MCP2. The radial field of the Poynting vector of the fiber of the embodiment of
[0059] As mentioned above, there is a compromise between the strength of the leakage channel LP (and therefore coupling efficiency) and propagation losses. In
[0060] Likewise, by adjusting the thickness of the coupling tubular features MCP1, MPC2, it is possible to adjust the strength of the leakage channel to the wavelength ?.sub.op. More precisely, within the range G1 specified above, the closer the thickness of the coupling tubular features is to the central value of the range G1
the higher the propagation losses within the fiber and the strength of the leakage channel. Conversely, the closer the thickness of the coupling tubular features is to the bounds of the range G1
the lower the propagation losses and the strength of the coupling leakage channel. There is therefore a compromise to be found between sufficient coupling and a correct level of losses at the wavelength ?.sub.op.
[0061]
with m?*. In order to obtain a good coupling efficiency, the additional coupling feature MTa is arranged so that the additional coupling feature MTa is at a distance from the first and second features MCP1, MCP2 smaller than 100?.sub.op and so that the coupling features MCP1, MCP2, MTa are aligned on an axis connecting the cores C1, C2. The additional coupling feature MTa allows coupling between the fibers FO1, FO2 to be facilitated, this being achieved without the need to splice the external cladding of the fibers (which cladding is not shown in
[0062] By way of non-limiting example, the embodiment illustrated in
[0063]
[0064] It will be understood that the coupling element SCP of this embodiment may comprise one or more additional tubular features MTa between the first and second coupling tubular features MCP1, MCP2, as in the embodiment of
[0065]
[0066] It will be noted that the embodiment of
[0067] In a second variant of the invention, illustrated in
[0068]
[0069] In order to allow the first core to be coupled to the second core and the second core to be coupled to the first core through the coupling tubular feature MCP, the tubular feature is placed substantially between the segments that are not encircled by the microstructured claddings SCF1, SCF2, halfway between the cores C1, C2. In addition, it is necessary for a distance between the first core and the coupling tubular feature and between the second core and the coupling tubular feature to be typically smaller than 100?.sub.op, otherwise the maximum overlap of the leakage fields will be too small.
[0070]
[0071] In the embodiment illustrated in
[0072] According to another embodiment of
[0073] According to one embodiment, the coupling thickness or thicknesses t.sub.cp and the coupling index or indices n.sub.cp are configured so that the radiation is guided from the first optical fiber to the second optical fiber by exciting a spatial mode (called M2) different from a spatial mode (M1) of the radiation guided by said first optical fiber. To achieve this, it is essential that the effective index of the mode M1 of the core C1 be equal to the effective index of the mode M2 of the core C2, at the wavelength ?.sub.op. In addition, as specified above, these effective indices must also be equal to the effective index of the coupling element SCP. In order to control the effective index of the coupling element, in a manner known per se, it is possible to adjust the size of the cores C1, C2 and/or the shape of the cores C1, C2 and/or the index of the microstructured claddings SCF1, SCF2. It is also possible to modify the index of the cores C1, C2, for example by filling them with a particular gas and by finely adjusting the pressure of the latter within the cores C1, C2.