DEVICE COMPRISING AN OPTICAL FIBER HAVING A HIGH BRILLOUIN THRESHOLD AND METHOD FOR MANUFACTURING SUCH A DEVICE
20170012401 · 2017-01-12
Assignee
Inventors
- Guillaume Canat (Villebon sur Yvette, FR)
- William Renard (Paris, FR)
- Laurent LOMBARD (Paris, FR)
- Didier Fleury (Clamart, FR)
Cpc classification
H01S2301/03
ELECTRICITY
International classification
Abstract
According to one aspect, the invention relates to a device comprising an optical fibre having a high Brillouin threshold, said device including an optical fibre (101) suitable for propagating a high-power optical signal beam, means (11) for coupling a signal beam to an entrance end of the optical fibre (101) and a tubular structure (10) comprising at least one first tube (103) and at least one first adhesive material (102). According to the present description, at least one portion of the optical fibre is immobilized in the tubular structure (10) by means of the first adhesive material (102), which adheres both to the internal surface of the first tube (103) and to the external surface of the optical fibre (101). Furthermore, at room temperature and with no other external stresses on the device, the immobilized portion of the optical fibre (101) is maintained in a compressive state by the tubular structure, the compressive state being such that the relative deformation of the optical fibre is negative or zero in its portion immobilized in the tubular structure, the maximum value of the relative deformation of the immobilized portion of the optical fibre being higher in absolute value than 0.3%.
Claims
1. A fiber-optic device having a high Brillouin threshold comprising: an optical fiber suitable for the propagation of a signal beam of high optical power and having an external surface; means for coupling a signal beam into an entry end of the optical fiber; and a tubular structure comprising at least one first tube with an internal surface and at least one first adhesive material, such that: at least one portion of the optical fiber is immobilized in the tubular structure by the first adhesive material, adhering to the internal surface of the first tube and to the external surface of the optical fiber, and at room temperature and with no other external stresses on the device, the immobilized portion of the optical fiber is maintained in a compressive state by the tubular structure, such that the strain of the optical fiber is negative or zero in its portion immobilized in the tubular structure, the maximum absolute value of the strain of the immobilized portion of the optical fiber being greater than 0.3%.
2. The fiber-optic device as claimed in claim 1, wherein the immobilized portion of the optical fiber has a compressive state with a strain profile that is variable along said immobilized portion.
3. The fiber-optic device as claimed in claim 2, wherein the strain profile of the optical fiber is such that the strain of the immobilized portion of the optical fiber is comprised between 0.3% and 0.3% in the vicinity of each end of the optical fiber.
4. The fiber-optic device as claimed in claim 1, wherein the Young's modulus of the first adhesive material is greater than or equal to 200 MPa.
5. The fiber-optic device as claimed in claim 1, wherein the material forming the first tube belongs to the family of polycarbonates or polyamides.
6. The fiber-optic device as claimed in claim 1, wherein the first adhesive material is polymerized by light radiation of given activation wavelength and the first tube is at least partially transparent at said activation wavelength.
7. The fiber-optic device as claimed in claim 1, wherein, E.sub.1 being the equivalent Young's modulus of the optical fiber, E.sub.2 and E.sub.3 being the respective Young's moduli of the first adhesive material and the first tube, S.sub.1 being the section of the optical fiber, S.sub.2 and S.sub.3 being the respective sections of the first adhesive material and the first tube, the condition E.sub.1S.sub.1+E.sub.2S.sub.2<E.sub.3S.sub.3 is complied with.
8. The fiber-optic device as claimed in claim 1, wherein the tubular structure comprises at least one second tube and at least one second adhesive material, wherein: the first tube is immobilized in the second tube by the second adhesive material adhering to the internal surface of the second tube and to the external surface of the first tube, and at room temperature and with no other exterior stresses on the device, the first tube is maintained in a compressive state by at least said second tube.
9. The fiber-optic device as claimed in claim 1, wherein the tubular structure further comprises reinforcing elements contributing to maintaining the optical fiber in said compressive state, the reinforcing elements being positioned in the internal space formed between the external surface of the optical fiber and the internal surface of the tube and immobilized by means of said first adhesive material.
10. The fiber-optic device as claimed in claim 1, wherein the bending stiffness of the tubular structure is less than 10000 N.Math.mm.sup.2.
11. The fiber-optic device as claimed in claim 1, wherein, the optical fiber being an amplifying optical fiber of given length L, comprising a core and a cladding, and being adapted to amplify a signal beam being propagated in said core, the device further comprises means for coupling a pump beam for pumping said amplifying optical fiber.
12. The fiber-optic device as claimed in claim 11, wherein: the pump beam coupling means are adapted to pump the amplifying optical fiber in a copropagative configuration in the cladding, and the compressive state of the amplifying optical fiber has a triangular profile with a maximum absolute value at a point situated at a position L.sub.1=x.Math.L where 0.4x0.6.
13. The fiber-optic device as claimed in claim 11, wherein: the pump beam coupling means are adapted to pump the amplifying optical fiber in a contrapropagative configuration in the cladding or to pump the amplifying optical fiber in a copropagative or contrapropagative configuration in the core, and the compressive state of the amplifying optical fiber has a triangular profile with a maximum absolute value at a point situated at a position L.sub.1=x.Math.L where 0.5x0.9.
14. An amplified master oscillator system comprising: a laser emission source of a signal beam; a laser emission source of a pump beam; and a fiber-optic device as claimed in claim 11 for amplifying said signal beam wherein said pump beam is coupled to the amplifying optical fiber of the device.
15. A method of manufacturing a fiber-optic device having a high Brillouin threshold comprising: placing at least a portion of an optical fiber in an internal space of a first tube of a tubular structure; stretching at least a portion of the tubular structure; filling the internal space of the first tube with a polymerizable first adhesive material; polymerizing the first adhesive material; and releasing the stretched portion of the tubular structure, leading to compression of the optical fiber.
16. The method of manufacture as claimed in claim 15, wherein the first adhesive material is polymerized area by area and said stretched portion of the tubular structure is released as the area of polymerization of the first adhesive material moves.
17. The method of manufacture as claimed in claim 15, wherein the internal space of the tubular structure is filled with the first adhesive material before stretching the tubular structure, the first adhesive material is polymerized area by area and the tubular structure is stretched as the area of polymerization of the first adhesive material is moved.
18. The method of manufacture as claimed in claim 15, wherein the stretching of at least a portion of the tubular structure comprises stretching the first tube.
19. The method of manufacture as claimed in claim 18, further comprising, after polymerizing the first adhesive material and releasing the stretched first tube: placing the first tube in an internal space of a second tube of the tubular structure; stretching the second tube; filling the internal space of the second tube with a polymerizable second adhesive material; polymerizing the second adhesive material; and releasing the stretched second tube, leading to compression of the first tube.
20. The method of manufacture as claimed in claim 15, further comprising placing in the internal space of the first tube at least one reinforcing element, the stretching at least a portion of the tubular structure comprising stretching the reinforcing element or elements.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0049] Other advantages and features of the invention will become apparent on reading the description illustrated by the following figures:
[0050]
[0051]
[0052]
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0062] In accordance with a first aspect, the present description relates to a fiber-optic device having a high Brillouin threshold. The device comprises an optical fiber suitable for the propagation of a signal beam of high optical power, for example a single-frequency signal beam or a signal beam having a spectral width less than 100 GHz, and means for coupling a signal beam into an entry end of the optical fiber. The device further comprises a tubular structure making it possible to maintain the optical fiber in a compressive state at room temperature and without other external stresses. To be more precise, the tubular structure includes at least one first tube and at least one first adhesive material, at least a portion of the optical fiber being immobilized in the tubular structure by means of the first adhesive material, adhering to the internal surface of the first tube and to the external surface of the optical fiber. This original structure makes it possible to maintain the optical fiber in a compressive state over all the length immobilized in the tubular structure and with no risk of buckling, the strain of the optical fiber having a maximum absolute value greater than 0.3%.
[0063]
[0064] The optical fiber 101 comprises a core 111 with refractive index n.sub.1 and cladding 112 with refractive index n.sub.2, for example silica cladding. The optical fiber 101 may also comprise a protective jacket, for example a polymer material jacket, having a refractive index n.sub.3 (not shown in
[0065] In the above equation, the possible contribution of the polymer material protective jacket is negligible.
[0066]
[0067]
[0068]
[0069]
[0070] In these embodiments, the optical fiber of total length L comprises at least two runs, a first run 10.sub.A of length L.sub.1 that is not compressed and a second run of length LL.sub.1 that is compressed by means of a tubular structure 10.sub.B, for example of the type described by means of the foregoing examples.
[0071] In the
[0072] In the
[0073] A longitudinal variation of the stress along a run of fiber placed in a tube can be produced by using a tube the characteristics of which vary longitudinally along the latter. For example, the inside or outside diameter of the tube or the Young's modulus or the eccentricity of the interior hole of the tube 103 (defined as the distance between the center of the internal hole of the tube and the center of the external circumference of the tube) may vary along the latter.
[0074]
[0075] In accordance with a second aspect, the present description relates to a method of manufacturing a fiber-optic device having a high Brillouin threshold.
[0076]
[0077] In a first step illustrated in
[0078] The initial strain .sub.s of the tube is defined as follows:
[0079] Ignoring the effects of shear, the strain .sub.f applied to the optical fiber in compression has the value:
[0080] Accordingly, to generate a high .sub.f (in terms of absolute value), the requirement is therefore to utilize a tube such that the product E.sub.3S.sub.3 is large compared to the sum of the products E.sub.2S.sub.2+E.sub.1S.sub.1.
[0081] Moreover, the tube must also have a high elastic limit so that after application of the deformation .sub.s the tube returns into place. In order to determine the appropriate materials, the equation (1) may be used and the elastic limit of the material used for the tube taken for .sub.s. We have found that materials such as polyamides or polycarbonates are particularly appropriate. In fact their elastic limit is greater than 1% and their Young's modulus is greater than 1 GPa.
[0082] An appropriate material for the tube should have a high elastic limit but also allow the complete assembly formed of the tube, the optical fiber and the adhesive material to have a low modulus of stiffness in bending (typically less than 10000 N.Math.mm.sup.2). This property in fact enables the tubular structure to be curved easily. It can therefore be coiled with a diameter compatible with devices of reasonable size (radius of curvature less than 25 cm) or enable connection between two points without being constrained to a straight line path. The modulus of stiffness in bending may be calculated for a structure in which the tube and the fiber are concentric, for example, and in which the space between the fiber and the internal boundary of the tube is completely filled with adhesive material, in accordance with the expression:
[0083] in which E.sub.3 designates the Young's modulus of the tube, E.sub.2 the Young's modulus of the adhesive material, E.sub.1 the equivalent Young's modulus of the silica fiber, and d.sub.3 designates the outside diameter of the tube, d.sub.2 the diameter of the glued portion and thus the inside diameter of the tube, and d.sub.1 the diameter of the silica fiber portion.
[0084]
[0085] It is advantageous to choose the section of the tube (and thus the inside and outside diameters in the case of a cylindrical tube) to maximize the absolute value of .sub.f in equation (1). The section of the tube should not be too large, however, in order to enable the tube to adopt a radius of curvature of the order of 25 cm, for example. The minimum radius of curvature of a tube of outside diameter d.sub.3 made from a material with Young's modulus E that can tolerate a maximum stress .sub.max has the approximate value R.sub.c=s E d.sub.3/2/.sub.max where s is a safety margin. Depending on the applications and the service life concerned, there could be adopted for .sub.max the elastic limit or the yield strength and a safety factor s between 1 and 10. There could typically be imposed a minimum radius of curvature equal to 10 times (for polycarbonates) to 100 times (for glass) the outside diameter of the tube.
[0086] Moreover, the adhesive material is advantageously characterized by a high modulus E.sub.2 in order to oppose buckling of the fiber. An adhesive material will typically be chosen such that E.sub.2200 MPa, advantageously E.sub.2500 MPa, advantageously E.sub.21 GPa. The adhesive material may advantageously be charged with fibers of glass or other materials intended to increase its Young's modulus. Similarly, the material constituting the tube could be charged in order to increase its elastic limit.
[0087] As indicated above, it is advantageous to use a device in accordance with the invention in which the compressive stresses applied to the fiber vary along the device.
[0088] In accordance with an embodiment, a technique that may be utilized to generate compressive stresses that vary along the tube 103 consists in polymerizing the adhesive material situated in different areas of the tube by applying different elongations .sub.s in those different areas.
[0089]
[0090] Numerous embodiments are possible for the method of manufacturing a device in accordance with the present description.
[0091] In particular, the steps consisting in filling the tube with adhesive material and stretching the tube when the optical fiber has been placed in the tube, may be carried out in any chronological order.
[0092] Moreover, in the case of stretching the tube in a manner that is variable run by run, as illustrated by means of
[0093] In accordance with an embodiment, it is possible to produce a tubular structure adapted to compress an optical fiber placed in the internal space of a first tube by the means described above and then to position that first tube in a second tube and to reproduce the operations of stretching the second tube, filling the internal space of the second tube with a second adhesive material, polymerizing the second adhesive material and releasing the second tube so that the second tube confers a compression on the first tube. A device of the type represented in
[0094] In accordance with an embodiment, it is possible to produce a tubular structure in which reinforcing elements (106,
[0095] In the fiber-optic device produced by means of the method in accordance with the present description, a number of layers characterized by different mechanical properties are in adhesive contact. As their Young's moduli have significantly different values here, stresses may exist near the interfaces. For example, in the case of an optical fiber including a polymer jacket, the polymer jacket could be chosen so that the adhesion of the polymer to the fiber is greater than the shear stresses exerted at the polymer/fiber interface. Ormocer polyamide typically has adequate properties for the polymer protective jacket. In the case of using polymers with a low index, which are known to be generally less strong than polymers with a high index, it would be beneficial to take as small as possible a thickness of low-index polymer. This low-index polymer may itself be covered with a polymer of higher modulus and higher index. Similarly, the adhesive material used to assemble the fiber and the tube is advantageously selected for its good properties of adhesion to the polymer of the fiber and the material forming the tube.
[0096] In accordance with an embodiment of the invention that contributes to reducing further the risks of delamination, the stress .sub.f imposed on the optical fiber by the tube may be chosen to be zero or less than 0.3% in the vicinity of each of the two ends of the fiber. It then increases over a characteristic length greater than a few centimeters and then decreases toward the end of the fiber to become less than 0.3% again at the other end. This embodiment makes it possible to reduce the shear forces that are exerted at the interfaces between the various layers. This reduces the risk of delamination.
[0097]
[0098] In the case of a fiber-optic amplifier, for example, if the maximum of the triangular envelope is reached at L.sub.1=xL, it can be shown that when the power of the signal beam increases in accordance with a distribution P(z) 0zL that approximates an affine distribution, it is advantageous to choose x close to 0.5, for example 0.4x0.6. This situation is often produced for copropagative pumping in the cladding. If the power increases in accordance with a distribution P(z) that approximates an exponential distribution, it is advantageous to choose x close to 0.8, for example 0.5x0.9. This situation is often produced for contrapropagative pumping in the cladding or pumping in the core.
[0099]
TABLE-US-00001 TABLE 1 Definition of the various configurations. Config. Fiber .sub.core .sub.coating Tube .sub.inside Tube .sub.outside 1 Passive 10 m 250 m 1 mm 2 mm 2 Active Er/Yb 7.5 m 250 m 1 mm 2 mm 3 Passive 10 m 250 m 500 m 900 m
[0100]
[0101] The optical fiber is a standard polarization maintaining 1550 nm monomode fiber. The diameter of the core is approximately .sub.core=10 m, that of the cladding is 125 m and that of the protective polymer is .sub.coating=250 m. This 2.3 m long optical fiber is placed in a PA11 nylon tube with an inside diameter of 1 mm and an outside diameter of 2 mm. The Young's modulus E.sub.3 of this tube is between 1 and 5 GPa inclusive. The 2 m long tube is stretched by 1.5%. The adhesive material injected into the tube is a UV polymerizable adhesive material characterized by a Young's modulus E.sub.2=1100 MPa. Once the tube is released, the fiber is in a compressive state, which may be characterized by heterodyne detection by causing the backscattered Stokes wave to beat with the signal to be amplified. This characterization is effected in a continuous regime (the wavelength of the signal beam is 1545.3 nm).
[0102]
[0103] It is apparent that the Brillouin spectrum is not purely and simply shifted in frequency by the compression. The spectrum tends more to be spread. This is explained by the imperfections of the tube (characterized by large fluctuations in the position of the center of the interior hole relative to the position of the center of its exterior circumference curve) and local creep of the tube when it is stretched. This spreading has an advantage for the present invention. The maximum shift observed is 300 MHz, i.e. ten times the mid-height width of the Brillouin gain. We have measured that in this configuration the Brillouin threshold was raised by 5.7 dB.
[0104]
[0105] In this second configuration, the fiber is an erbium/ytterbium co-doped fiber. Here it is a question of showing the situation of the amplification of a pulsed signal beam of narrow spectral width. The active fiber used measures 3.5 m and its core diameter is 7.5 m. The signal beam (wavelength 1545.3 nm) and the pump beam (wavelength 975 nm) are respectively coupled into the core and the cladding of this fiber using a fiber pump combiner (in accordance with an arrangement similar to the amplifiers shown in
[0106]
[0107] The same remark applies as for the first configuration, the Brillouin spectrum is not purely and simply shifted in frequency. The portion centered around 10.39 GHz essentially corresponds to the Brillouin spectrum of the unstressed fiber portion (1.25 m). A frequency shift greater than 300 MHz is observed.
[0108] In a pulsed (output pulse duration 420 ns and repetition rate 10 kHz) and single-frequency regime, a peak power of 66 W has been achieved. Without this stress applied to the fiber, the maximum peak power achieved is 17.5 W (for pulses of output duration 770 ns and a repetition rate of 10 kHz), which represents a peak power gain of 5.7 dB. The pulses 134 emitted by an unstressed fiber amplifier and the pulses 133 emitted by a compressed fiber amplifier are shown in
[0109]
[0110] In this third configuration the optical fiber is again a standard polarization maintaining 1550 nm passive fiber. The core diameter is approximately 10 m, that of the cladding is 125 m and that of the protective polymer is 250 m. This 2 m long optical fiber is placed in a PA11 nylon tube having an inside diameter of 0.5 mm and an outside diameter of 0.9 mm. The Young's modulus E.sub.3 of this tube is between 1 and 5 GPa inclusive. The 1.8 m long tube is stretched by 1%. The adhesive material injected into the tube is a UV polymerized adhesive material characterized by a Young's modulus E.sub.2 of 1.4 GPa. Once the tube is released, the fiber is in a compressive state, which may be characterized by heterodyne detection by causing the backscattered Stokes wave to beat with the signal to be amplified. This characterization is effected in a continuous regime (the wavelength of the signal beam is 1545.3 nm).
[0111]
[0112] In the present case, the Brillouin spectrum is frequency shifted by the compression. The maximum shift observed is 180 MHz, i.e. more than five times the mid-height width of the Brillouin gain.
[0113] In the
[0114] The use of tubes characterized by fluctuations of the centre of the inside and outside diameters and/or an internal hole having an inside diameter greater than 1.5 times the outside diameter of the fiber is therefore of benefit for obtaining a variable stress along the tube and therefore a widened Brillouin spectrum and a raised Brillouin threshold.
[0115] In all the configurations described, the tubular structure retains a small overall size and can be connected easily, making it possible to preserve the flexibility of use of the optical fibers. The device in accordance with the present invention therefore represents a great benefit for the amplification of signals or for producing connectors or providing fiber inputs or outputs for components intended to transport signals of high power and narrow spectral width.
[0116] Although described by way of a certain number of detailed embodiments, the structure of and the method of manufacturing the fiber-optic device in accordance with the invention encompass different embodiments, modifications and improvements that will be obvious to the person skilled in the art, it being understood that these various embodiments, modifications and improvements are within the scope of the invention as defined by the following claims.