Method of and apparartus for inscription of fiber gratings from multiple azimuthal angles and fiber so inscribed
09592644 ยท 2017-03-14
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
B29D11/00721
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
Abstract
A method of, and apparatus for, inscribing a grating in an optical waveguide so as to reduce transverse inscription variations, are provided. The waveguide is exposed to multiple beams or interference patterns of actinic radiation from multiple azimuthal directions. The beams of actinic radiation are preferably split into a plurality of beams that have wave vectors with different longitudinal components, e.g., via gratings such as phase masks. The periods and phases of the interference patterns of the beams of actinic radiation are preferably matched. A control beam may be provided that does not hit the waveguide. A control loop optionally controls at least one of the position or orientation of at least one of the beams of actinic radiation. The gratings are, for example, Bragg gratings.
Claims
1. A method of inscribing a grating in an optical fiber having at least one core and at least one cladding comprising the steps of: a) exposing the fiber to at least a first beam of actinic radiation from a first azimuthal direction around the longitudinal axis of the fiber; and b) exposing the fiber to at least a second beam of actinic radiation from at least a second azimuthal direction around the longitudinal axis of the fiber.
2. A method of inscribing a grating in an optical waveguide according to claim 1, further comprises the steps of: providing a first source to generate the first beam of actinic radiation from the first azimuthal direction; and providing a second source to generate the second beam of actinic radiation from the second azimuthal direction.
3. A method of inscribing a grating in an optical waveguide according to claim 1, further comprising the step of providing a common source to generate both the first and second beams of actinic radiation from the first and second azimuthal directions.
4. A method of inscribing a grating in an optical waveguide according to claim 1, further comprising the step of c) splitting the first and second beams of actinic radiation of steps a) and b) into a plurality of beams with different longitudinal components of their wave vectors so as to form interference patterns that inscribe one or more gratings.
5. A method of inscribing a grating in an optical waveguide according to claim 4, wherein said step c) further comprises the steps of providing gratings or phase masks to split the first and second beams of actinic radiation into a plurality of beams with different longitudinal components of their wave vectors so as to form interference patterns that can inscribe gratings.
6. A method of inscribing a grating in an optical waveguide according to claim 5, further comprising the step of d) matching the periods and phases of the interference patterns of the first and second beams of actinic radiation.
7. A method of inscribing a grating in an optical waveguide according to claim 6, step d) further comprising the steps of: providing a control beam that does not hit the waveguide; and providing a control loop that controls at least one of the position or orientation of at least one of the first and second interference patterns of actinic radiation.
8. A method of inscribing a grating in an optical waveguide according to claim 7, wherein the control loop controls at least one of the position or orientation of the phase mask in the beam path to control the position or orientation of at least one of the first and second interference patterns.
9. A method of inscribing a grating in an optical waveguide according to claim 1, wherein the inscription being performed on the waveguide comprises Bragg gratings.
10. A method of inscribing a grating in an optical waveguide according to claim 1, wherein the second beam irradiates regions of the waveguide that are affected by shadowing and lensing of the first beam.
11. An apparatus for inscribing a grating in an optical fiber having at least one core and at least one cladding comprising the steps of: at least a first beam of actinic radiation at a first azimuthal direction around the longitudinal axis of the fiber; and at least a second beam of actinic radiation from at least a second azimuthal direction around the longitudinal axis of the fiber.
12. An apparatus for inscribing a grating in an optical waveguide according to claim 11, further comprising: a first source generating said first beam of actinic radiation from said first azimuthal direction; and a second source generating said second beam of actinic radiation from said second azimuthal direction.
13. An apparatus for inscribing a grating in an optical waveguide according to claim 11, further comprising a common source generating both the first and second beams of actinic radiation from the first and second azimuthal directions.
14. An apparatus for inscribing a grating in an optical waveguide according to claim 11, further comprising first and second gratings or phase masks adapted to split said first and second beams of actinic radiation each into a plurality of beams with different longitudinal components of their wave vectors so as to form interference patterns that can inscribe gratings.
15. An apparatus for inscribing a grating in an optical waveguide according to claim 14, wherein the periods and phases of the interference patterns of said first and second beams of actinic radiation are matched.
16. An apparatus for inscribing a grating in an optical waveguide according to claim 15, further comprising: a control beam that does not hit the waveguide; and a control loop that controls at least one of the position or orientation of at least one of said first and second interference patterns of actinic radiation.
17. An apparatus for inscribing a grating in an optical waveguide according to claim 11, wherein the inscription being performed on the waveguide comprises Bragg gratings.
18. An apparatus for inscribing a grating in an optical waveguide according to claim 11, wherein said second beam irradiates regions of the waveguide that are affected by shadowing and lensing of said first beam.
19. An optical fiber, comprising at least one core and at least one cladding and a grating inscribed on said core via exposure to at least a first beam of actinic radiation from a first azimuthal direction around the longitudinal axis of the fiber and at least a second beam of actinic radiation from at least a second azimuthal direction around the longitudinal axis of the fiber, wherein the second beam irradiates a region of said fiber that are affected by shadowing and lensing of the first beam.
20. An optical waveguide according to claim 19, wherein said grating comprises a Bragg grating.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION AND DRAWINGS
(9) Description will now be given with reference to the attached
(10) To counteract the abovementioned defects in gratings inscription caused by lensing, shadowing, and the like, we expose the fiber to radiation from at least two azimuthal directions, see
(11) In the case of multicore fibers, the variance of the grating strength in the different cores within each transverse plane can be reduced by this multidirectional exposure. Graphically, this corresponds to summing up at least two translated copies of the curve in
(12) For any (multicore, single core, microstructured, etc., twisted or untwisted) fiber, the multidirectional exposure can also reduce the transverse dependence (within the transverse plane) of the refractive index change within each core. This can reduce the coupling between different modes and it can therefore reduce the cladding mode loss.
(13) In
(14) To avoid destructive interference that would dramatically impair the grating strength across the fiber transverse dimension, it is important that the periods and phases of the longitudinal interference patterns are the same for all the incident actinic beams from the different azimuthal directions as they propagate through the fiber transverse dimension. Since there are offset cores, this matching must be maintained across the fiber diameter. This can be achieved, e.g., by a suitable control loop that controls the positions and orientation of one or several beams or phase masks, e.g., using piezos. An example is shown in
(15) To achieve the interference pattern shown on the right of the right grating in
(16) The azimuthal angle is defined in the coordinate system in
(17) In a Bragg grating, the effective index
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of the Bragg grating then equals the difference between the spatial frequencies
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and
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of the forward and backward propagating eigenmodes.
(21) A Bragg grating can be fabricated, e.g., by exposing the waveguide to the interference pattern of two actinic beams with wave vectors that have different longitudinal components (i.e., in the direction of the fiber axis). An example is shown in
(22) Instead of using a single incident beam and a grating to split the beam into two directions, an interference pattern can also be generated by superposing two or any multiple of two beams from different sources, so long as the phase of each beam are sufficiently constant with respect to each other (same frequency and sufficient temporal and spatial coherence). In this case, the gratings (e.g., phase or amplitude masks) shown in
(23) If the beam is actinic, the fiber that is exposed to this interference pattern experiences a modulation of its refractive index distribution, depending on the local intensity, exposure time and local photosensitivity inside the fiber, which itself depends on the chemical composition of the fiber. Our invention can be applied to any fiber geometry (e.g., single core fibers, multicore fibers, microstructured or photonic crystal fibers, large mode area fibers, single mode fibers, multimode fibers, higher-order-mode fibers, etc.) with any photosensitivity distribution, and both stripped (coating removed) and unstripped (coated) fiber, as long as the coating is sufficiently transparent to the actinic radiation. In particular, the Bragg grating (refractive index modulation) does not have to be restricted to one or several cores of the fiber. Instead, the grating can also extend partially or exclusively to the cladding or parts thereof, because our invention in general lowers the usually unwanted transverse variations of the index change that is caused by diffraction and refraction effects from inhomogeneities of the fiber itself.
(24) Having described certain embodiments of the invention, it should be understood that the invention is not limited to the above description or the attached exemplary drawings. Rather, the scope of the invention is defined by the claims appearing hereinbelow and includes any equivalents thereof as would be appreciated by one of ordinary skill in the art.