Diffraction compensation of FBG phase masks for multi-channel sampling applications

Information

  • Patent Grant
  • 6654521
  • Patent Number
    6,654,521
  • Date Filed
    Wednesday, January 23, 2002
    23 years ago
  • Date Issued
    Tuesday, November 25, 2003
    21 years ago
Abstract
The present invention is directed to a system and method for designing efficient multi-channel FBG gratings using a pre-compensated phase mask for diffracting light for side-writing the grating on an optical fiber core. A desired phase function of the FBG is generated, specifically tailored to an effective spacing between the phase mask and the optical fiber core. From the phase function a phase mask is pre-compensated to offset diffraction effects associated with each longitudinal position of the FBG receiving light from two corresponding longitudinal positions of the phase mask substantially symmetrically spaced longitudinally relative to each particular longitudinal position of the FBG. The two corresponding longitudinal positions of the phase mask are spaced longitudinally from each other by a spacing determined by the effective spacing between the phase mask and fiber core and by the first order diffraction angle of light through the phase mask.
Description




STATEMENT REGARDING FEDERALLY SPONSORED RESEARCH OR DEVELOPMENT




Not Applicable




REFERENCE TO A MICROFICHE APPENDIX




Not Applicable




BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION




The complexity of Fiber Bragg Grating (FBG) structures continually increases, for example in non-linear chirped FBGs for tunable dispersion compensation, dispersion-free FBGs in the DWDM networks, multi-channel sampled FBGs, DFB fiber lasers, gain-flattening filters (GFF) in Erbium doped fiber amplifiers (EDFAs), and other FBG applications.




There are applications in which it is desired to make FBGs with multiple bands of reflectivity in the telecommunications band around 1,550 nm, for example a band of reflectivity 1 nanometer wide at 1,550 nm, and then another at 1,552 nm. These periodically extend for example throughout the C-Band from about 1,530 nm to 1,565 nm, in which the erbium doped fiber amplifier has gain. The ITU standard grid either at 100 gigahertz spacing (roughly 0.8 nm), or 50 gigahertz spacing (roughly 0.4 nanometers) is where typical telecommunication laser transmitters operate that send voice and data information over telephone systems today. A standard set of frequencies or wavelengths in this 1,535 nm to 1,565 nm band has been selected by standards committees, and it is therefore of interest to fabricate FBGs which operate at those wavelengths. In such an FBG there is an underlying grating period of about 0.5 micron with slower superimposed modulations that produce effects like chirp and non-linear chirp, which are fundamentally important to particular applications such as dispersion compensation.




The reflectivity peak of a Bragg grating occurs at a wavelength equal to twice the index of refraction of the fiber core times the physical period of the index grating. Typically, the period of the index grating is about 0.5 micron and the index of refraction is about 1.5, such that twice 1.5 times 0.5 microns results in 1.5 microns or reflectivity in the band around 1500-1550 nanometers.




One approach is to make a fiber Bragg grating that, rather than reflecting in a wide continuous wavelength band which can result in a FBG which is impractically long, reflects specifically in multiple channels located at periodically spaced frequencies (or wavelengths). Each channel reflects in a certain bandwidth around its central wavelength, and in this bandwidth the FBG can provide a number of filtering functions, such as tunable dispersion compensation. A method called sampling imposes a periodic superstructure on the underlying 0.5 micron basic Bragg grating period, producing a multiplicity of Bragg reflection peaks in the spectrum surrounding the underlying Bragg reflection wavelength. The superstructure can be understood in terms of a Fourier transform argument. The underlying grating reflects at a certain wavelength, and the imposed superstructure has a Fourier transform which represents a comb function of regularly spaced peaks, one for each channel, and having a certain envelope that determines the spectral distribution or uniformity of the reflectivities of those channels. It is sufficient to understand that the multiplicity of channels is determined by the Fourier spectrum of the periodic superstructure, which can periodically vary the underlying FBG either in phase, i.e. the locations of the index modulations, or amplitude, i.e. the magnitude of the index modulations. The period of such a superstructure can be about a millimeter to generate channels with a 100 gigahertz spacing in the telecommunications band, much longer than the fundamental 0.5 micron structure of the grating.




To write a grating of periodic index variation in the core of a fiber, one way is to propagate UV light into that core. Where the UV light exposes the core, the index of refraction increases slightly, and where it does not, it does not change at all. If the basic exposure pattern has a period of about 0.5 microns, that will create reflectivity in the telecommunications band around 1,500 nanometers.




A phase mask is widely used in manufacturing fiber Bragg gratings (FBG). The side-writing systems using phase masks in close proximity to the fiber are less critical to alignment, vibration and UV beam coherence than are imaging or holographic direct write systems that demand interferometric accuracies. Accordingly, phase masks are particularly suitable for industrial fabrication. In addition, the nanometer scale structures required by the FBG are built into the phase mask, benefiting from high accuracy lithographic mask technology.




In prior art side-writing technology a fiber is placed as close as possible to the mask, which is a slab having a periodically varying surface grooves. When UV light propagates through the mask, it splits into multiple diffraction orders. The mask is manufactured such that the zeroth diffraction order, which ordinarily goes straight through, is suppressed, for example by a standard technique of adjusting the depth of the grooves in the mask. The groove depth is chosen for a particular mask groove period, such that the zeroth order is suppressed. The FBG is formed from the interference between the plus first and minus first orders diffracted from the phase mask. About 35 per cent to 40 per cent of the incident light is diffracted by the mask into each of the plus and minus first orders. Higher diffraction orders typically do not contribute to formation of the relevant Bragg index modulation in the fiber and are thus ignored, and in some circumstances are eliminated by inserting additional optics.




The interference between the two UV beams diffracted from the mask creates an intensity modulation in the core of the fiber, which modulates the index in the photosensitive fiber core. The UV writing beam may have a wavelength of typically around 244 nanometers, although the method may be used at any wavelength at which the fiber exhibits sufficient photosensitivity. For FBGs in the 1550 nm telecommunication band, the period of the mask is selected to be about 1070 nm, which produces an angle of diffraction of the first order beams of roughly +/−13 degrees, so that the two diffracted beams propagate at 26 degrees with respect to each other. When two beams are at 26 degrees to each other, they create an intensity interference pattern with a 535 nm basic period, which then generates a Bragg reflection in the band around 1550 nm. This side writing method is the standard prior art that many FBG manufacturers use, e.g. see U.S. Pat. No. 5,367,588, issued Nov. 22, 1994.




Additionally, prior art U.S. Pat. No. 6,081,640, issued Jun. 27, 2000, describes a periodic superstructure that can be either in phase, amplitude, pitch of the grating, anything that varies periodically and is recognized to create multiple channels, but does not disclose in detail how to incorporate variation of pitch or phase. One method described in U.S. Pat. No. 6,081,640 uses amplitude sampling, in which the mask has a periodic amplitude superstructure. To create a large number of reflective channels using amplitude sampling requires a very small duty factor. That is, for example, a periodic rectangular wave amplitude superstructure pattern where the “on” section is extremely short and the “off” section is very long, generates many channels, but that periodic superstructure is “off” most of the time, such that there is no grating in most of the fiber. That is, a small section of grating is followed by a long section with no grating present, which is then is followed by another small section of grating. To achieve significant reflectivity the light must interact for a reasonably long path length with the grating. The way Bragg reflection works is that each reflection from a single period of index variation is extremely small, on the order of 10


−3


reflection amplitude from each index period, and at the Bragg resonance wavelength they add constructively to generate a high reflectivity band.




Therefore, amplitude sampling is extremely inefficient, since most of the fiber has no grating present. In contrast, phase sampling, i.e., periodically varying either the pitch or equivalently the phase of the grating, creates multiple channels without turning off the grating. Consequently, light is always interacting with the periodic grating modulation along the entire length of the FBG, and it can be more efficient by approximately the square root of the number of channels in using the amplitude of the index grating in the fiber.




Phase-steps are examples of basic structures in a variety of FBGs, which introduce phase shifts in the FBG profile function. To write phase-steps in the FBG, a widely used method is to incorporate phase-steps of the same sizes and at the same locations along the fiber in the phase mask. This approach was first proposed by R. Kashyap et al., “UV written reflection grating structures in photosensitive optical fibers using phase-shifted phase masks,” Electron. Lett. Vol. 30, p. 1977-1978 (1994), followed by many laboratories across the world (see for example R. Kashyap, “Fiber Bragg gratings,” Chapter 6 (Academic Press, San Diego, p. 227-309 (1999)), because the preliminary experiments showed that the phase-step in the phase-shifted phase mask is substantially replicated in the FBG. However, J. A. R. Williams et al. in “The Effects of Phase Steps in E-Beam Written Phase Masks Used for Fiber Grating Fabrication by Near-Field Holography,” ECOC 97, 187-190 (1997), reported experimental results, which showed disparity from those predicted by the phase-step replication model. Using the Fresnel-Kirchoff diffraction equations, they calculated the phase mask interference pattern at the fiber core, and the FBG spectrum. The numerical results showed asymmetry in the FBG spectrum, which is not predicted by the replication model.




Therefore, what is needed in the art are a system and method for writing efficient multi-channel FBG gratings using a phase mask, such that the generated FBG spectrum accurately reproduces the intended design substantially free of asymmetry.




BRIEF SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION




The present invention is directed to a system and method for designing efficient multi-channel FBG gratings using a pre-compensated phase mask for diffracting light for side-writing the grating on an optical fiber core. In accordance with embodiments of the present invention, a desired phase function of the FBG is generated, specifically tailored to an effective spacing between the phase mask and the optical fiber core. From the phase function a phase mask is pre-compensated to offset diffraction effects associated with each longitudinal position of the FBG receiving light primarily from two corresponding longitudinal positions of the phase mask that are substantially symmetrically spaced longitudinally relative to each particular longitudinal position of the FBG. The two corresponding longitudinal positions of the phase mask are spaced apart from each other with a longitudinal spacing determined by the effective spacing between the phase mask and fiber core and by the first order diffraction angle of light through the phase mask. The embodiments of the present invention generate a FBG spectrum that accurately reproduces the intended design, where the effect of the diffraction of the writing beam from the mask to the proximally located fiber is properly accounted for.




In a first embodiment, a continuous phase variation is to be imparted to the FBG. It is disclosed that the phase imparted to the FBG is substantially given by the sum of the phases of the mask corrugation at two separate locations on the mask, symmetrically spaced longitudinally relative to the position in the FBG. Based on this understanding, it is shown that the fraction effects can be accounted for by pre-compensation of the phase function on the mask. In this approach Fourier filtering of the desired FBG phase function with the inverse of the spatial frequency transfer function of diffraction effect, gives a mask function that will generate the desired FBG phase function, after including the effects of diffraction.




In further embodiment, an FBG design approach disclosed in U.S. patent application Ser. No. 09/757,386, the disclosure of which has been incorporated herein by reference, uses a concept called ‘the Dammann grating.’ This type of grating is a periodic sequence of discrete α phase shifts at locations, optimized so that the Fourier spectrum of the pattern is a set of equally spaced channels with a desired overall envelope (see for example J. N. Mait, “Design Of Binary Phase and Multi-Phase Fourier Gratings for Array Generation,” Journal of the Optical Society of America A, Vol. 7, (1990) p. 1514-1528). Phase steps on the phase mask constitute the key structure in this approach to a multichannel sampled FBG. Numerical analysis shows that the phase steps on the phase mask are not replicated in the fiber core in the contact side-writing process, as asserted by Kashyap et al., Electron. Lett. (1994), cited above. Instead, because of free space propagation from phase mask to the fiber core, a phase step on the phase mask becomes divided into two equal phase steps in the FBG, which are separated by a distance proportional to the spacing between phase mask and fiber core. As a consequence of this phase step separation, the envelope of the multiple spectral channels, which are created by the sampling function in the FBG, will be modulated by a cosine envelope, which is shifted by π/4 in phase with respect to the central wavelength of the envelope.




The present invention disclosure demonstrates by using a rigorous Finite Difference in Time Domain (FDTD) method that a phase-step in the phase-shifted phase mask is not replicated in the fiber core, but is split into two equal phase-steps by beam diffraction, generating an asymmetric distortion of the multi-channel FBG spectrum. A theoretical model relates the experimental asymmetry in the FBG spectrum to the splitting of the phase-steps. Alternating the signs of the π/2 phase-steps in the phase mask recovers the symmetry of the FBG structure in spite of the phase-step splitting. A series of new phase mask design methods take into account the splitting of the phase-steps and eliminates the asymmetric distortion of the multi-channel FBG spectra.




Embodiments of the invention disclose a fundamental understanding of diffraction of the phase mask, which can be applied to the most widely used FBG fabrication process and to substantially all designs of phase-shift phase masks used for contact side-writing of superstructure FBGs.











The foregoing has outlined rather broadly the features and technical advantages of the present invention in order that the detailed description of the invention that follows may be better understood. Additional features and advantages of the invention will be described hereinafter which form the subject of the claims of the invention. It should be appreciated by those skilled in the art that the conception and specific embodiment disclosed may be readily utilized as a basis for modifying or designing other structures for carrying out the same purposes of the present invention. It should also be realized by those skilled in the art that such equivalent constructions do not depart from the spirit and scope of the invention as set forth in the appended claims. The novel features which are believed to be characteristic of the invention, both as to its organization and method of operation, together with further objects and advantages will be better understood from the following description when considered in connection with the accompanying figures. It is to be expressly understood, however, that each of the figures is provided for the purpose of illustration and description only and is not intended as a definition of the limits of the present invention.




BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWING




For a more complete understanding of the present invention, reference is now made to the following descriptions taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawing, in which:





FIG. 1

is a schematic diagram illustrating the diffraction geometry of two ultraviolet beams diffracted through a mask and intersecting in a fiber core to write a fiber Bragg grating;





FIG. 2

represents graphically a transfer amplitude filtering function expressed mathematically by Equation (21);





FIG. 3

is a flow diagram depicting a method of designing a precompensated phase mask, in accordance with embodiments of the present invention;





FIGS. 4A-4D

depict simulated results obtained using the method exemplified in

FIG. 3

for a nine-channel advanced sinc phase-only function;





FIGS. 5A-5D

depict simulation results analogous to those of

FIGS. 4A-4D

, but assuming instead a longitudinal shift Δx of 50 μm;





FIG. 6A

is a flow diagram illustrating a method of generating a phase mask design for a multi-channel FBG using an optimization algorithm, according to embodiments of the present invention;





FIG. 6B

is a flow diagram depicting a modified mask design method similar to that shown in

FIG. 6A

, according to embodiments of the present invention;





FIGS. 7A-7C

represent graphically phase functions and associated channel spectra of a 9-channel FBG in accordance with embodiments of the present invention;





FIGS. 8A-8B

depict a Dammann sampling function, consisting of 4 phase shifts of π at the specific locations, and the resulting 7 peaks in the FBG channel spectrum;





FIGS. 9A-9D

show the experimental reflection spectra of sampled FBGs written with phase mask to fiber spacings Δz of 10, 40, 70 and 100 μm, respectively, illustrating increasing asymmetry of multi-channels with spacing Δz;





FIGS. 10A-10H

illustrate computer simulation results of the Fourier transform of deformed sampling functions with additional π/2 and 3π/2 phase shifts showing multiple peaks with roll off asymmetry, for different phase mask to fiber spacings Δz, in good agreement with experimental results shown in

FIGS. 9A-9D

;





FIG. 11

is a graphic representation of the convolution operation expressed mathematically in Equation (31);





FIGS. 12A-12B

represent graphically a design of a phase-only Dammann sampling function according to an embodiment of the present invention, which generates a nine-channel spectral envelope without roll off asymmetry in the FBG;





FIGS. 12C-12E

represent phase shifts of the FBG sampling function, a resulting multiple channel spectral amplitude envelope, and an experimental result of an FBG for a 5 channel design made according to the alternating sign phase-shift embodiment of the present invention; and





FIG. 13

is a flow diagram depicting a solution to the roll off asymmetry problem, in accordance with embodiments of the present invention, in which sampling functions are designed taking into account the propagation diffraction effect.











DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION




The variation of phase of the grating for a multi-channel application can be designed in a variety of ways, as disclosed in U.S. patent application 09/757,386, the disclosure of which has been incorporated herein by reference. The phase can be periodically varied in a continuous fashion, sometimes referred to as varying the chirp, or in a discrete fashion, sometimes referred to as phase steps or phase shifts.





FIG. 1

is a schematic diagram illustrating the diffraction geometry of two ultraviolet beams diffracted through a mask and intersecting in a fiber core to write a fiber Bragg grating. Mask


101


and fiber core


102


are separated by perpendicular distance Δz. Illustratively, the phase θm, the position of the mask corrugations


101


, is gradually varying, for example by a few degrees in each period, where 360 degrees or 2π radians of phase constitutes an entire period or pitch in the FBG or mask. In a sense, a discrete discontinuous phase shift in mask


101


is an extreme example of this gradual phase variation. Beam


1


intercepts mask


101


at z=0 and splits into two diffraction orders separated by an angle 2θ


0


, where diffraction angle θ


0


=sin


−1


λ


UV





m


, Λ


UV


is the ultraviolet wavelength, and Λ


m


is the period of mask


101


, such that beam


1


generates a diffracted plus first order as shown. At mask plane z=0, beam


2


displaced by longitudinal distance Δx relative to beam


1


likewise splits at mask


101


into two diffraction orders separated by angle 2 θ


0


and generates a diffracted minus first order as shown. For most masks intended for telecommunication FBG manufacture, diffraction angle θ


0


is approximately 13°. Illustratively, the plus first order of beam


1


and the minus first order of beam


2


are the only beams that intersect fiber core


102


at position x=


0


, because the incident angle is constrained to diffraction angle θ


0


. Accordingly, the information that reaches fiber core


102


at x=0 comes from two different locations in mask


101


, namely x=+Δx/2 and x=−Δx/2. Whatever happens at fiber core


102


at x=0 is substantially independent of what happens in mask


101


at x=0, for example, because the beam that intercepts mask


101


at x=0 splits and goes into two points in the fiber core


102


that are now separated by distance Δx substantially symmetric about x=0. According to the diffraction geometry illustrated in

FIG. 1

, longitudinal shift πx=2πz tan θ


0


.




Phase φ


g


(0) generated in fiber core


102


at x=0 by the interference pattern of intersecting diffracted beams


1


and


2


is equal to phase θ


m


of mask


101


at location −Δx/2 plus the phase of mask


101


at +Δx/2. Thus, half of the information comes from one location on the mask, and half comes from separate location on the mask. If distance Δz between mask


101


and fiber core


102


becomes zero, then distance Δx also goes to zero, and phase φ


g


of fiber


102


is exactly twice phase θ


m


of mask


101


, because −Δx/2 and +Δx/2 are now the same point. This relationship applies rigorously only if mask


101


and fiber core


102


are in perfect contact, which is physically impossible without imaging optics, because the core is ˜62 μm from the surface of a typical fiber. In the more general case, phase φ


g


at any particular longitudinal position x in fiber core


102


is the sum of phases θ


m


from two different locations in mask


101


that are symmetrically spaced longitudinally about that particular longitudinal position x in fiber core


102


, in accordance with 13° (or another value as determined by the formula θ


0


=sin


1


λ


UV





m


) diffraction angle.




There are circumstances in which it is desired to write a FBG using a rapidly varying phase function, for example to generate multiple reflective channels (wavelengths). As a result of diffraction from mask


101


, the phase information that is written into mask


101


is distorted when it is transferred to a FBG by contact side-writing (“proximity printing”). Mathematical modeling of the transfer of this phase information provides a method to compensate for the resulting distortion. A class of mask designs, in accordance with embodiments of the present invention are able, in spite of the distortion from diffraction, to generate a large number of reflective channels in a FBG, when the mask is used in a proximity printing arrangement.




Mask


101


has a periodic corrugation structure which, when illuminated by the writing beam laser as depicted by beams


1


and


2


in

FIG. 1

(typically UV, but not required to be so), transmits an intensity interference fringe pattern to FBG core


102


. These two beams are shown for illustration only. Typically a single extended beam of width larger than the separation between beams


1


and


2


in

FIG. 1

is used for proximal side writing of FBGs, and beams


1


and


2


can be considered as two light rays of a large single extended beam. Without loss of generality, this corrugation structure is assumed sinusoidal, although typically the corrugation of mask


101


is closer to a square wave, which can be represented as a Fourier superposition of sinusoids. Although this detail impacts the diffraction efficiency into the first diffraction order, it does not affect the arguments made below relating to the phase of the mask or FBG. The height variation h(x) (with peaks of ±d) of the mask surface profile can be expressed as








h


(


x


)=


d


sin(


k




m0




x+θ




m


(


x


)),  (1)






where mask


101


has an underlying period Λ


m


and k-vector k


m0


≡2π/Λ


m


, the phase of mask corrugation function h(x) is θ


m


(x), and x is the longitudinal position along the fiber core and the mask, as illustrated in FIG.


1


. The period Λ


m


of mask


101


is chosen to generate a grating of period Λ


g


in fiber core


102


, which causes a Bragg reflection band at a desired Bragg resonance wavelength λ


B


=2n


eff


Λ


g


, where the period of the grating in fiber


102


is Λ


g





m


/2, and n


eff


is the effective mode index of a single mode fiber. To calculate the diffracted interference pattern of mask


102


in the FBG, the transmittance T(x) of mask


102


is written as








T


(


x


)=exp[


ik




UV0


(n


mask


−1)


h


(


x


)]=exp[







0


sin(


k




m0




x+θ




m


(


x


))],  (2)






where k


UV0


=2π/λ


UV


is the illuminating ultraviolet (writing beam) k-vector, the differential phase transmittance T(x) of the mask corrugation is given by θ


0


=k


UV0


(n


mask


−1)d, and n


mask


is the mask index of refraction at the UV incident wavelength. A plane wave writing beam normally incident on mask


101


has a field E


inc


(x,z) represented as








E




inc


(


x,z


)=exp[


ik




UV0




z].


  (3)






Therefore the transmitted writing beam at z=0 (where z is in the direction normal to mask


101


) has the dependence longitudinally along the fiber axis.








E




out


(


x,z


=0)=exp[







0


sin(


k




m0




x+θ




m


(


x


))].  (4)






Applying the identity






exp[


ia


sin(θ)]=Σ


n









J




n


(


a


)exp[


inθ],


  (5)






where J


n


(a) represents an nth-order Bessel function,




with a=φ


0


and θ=k


m0


x+θ


m


(x) results in








E




out


(


x,z


=0)=Σ


n









J




n





0


)exp[


in


(k


m0




x+θ




m


(


x


))].  (7)






Therefore, considering only the first order diffracted beams (n=±1),








E




out


(


x,z


=0)=


J




1





0


)(exp[


i


(


k




m0




x+θ




m


(


x


))]−exp[−


i


(


k




m0




x+θ




m


(


x


))]).  (8)






Making a slowly varying phase approximation, e.g., dθ


m


/dx<<k


m0


, then each term in Equation (8) is expressed as an approximate plane wave beam originating from a given longitudinal location x on mask


101


. Importantly, each of these beams carries the mask phase information θ


m


(x) (each beam is the conjugate of the other). The z-component of the k-vector of each of these beams is obtained from the requirement that k


UV0




2


=k


x




2


+k


z




2


, and hence for both k


x=±k




m0


beams








k




z




={square root over (k


UV0





2





−k





m0





2


)}.


  (9)






Equation (9) then defines the angle of these diffracted beams relative to the normal of mask


101


,






sin θ


0




=±k




mo




/k




UV0


=±λ


UV0





m


.  (10)






For a typical FBG used in the C-Band of EDFA's, λ


B


˜1550 nm, which for n


eff


=1.45 means that Λ


m


˜1.07 μm, and thus θ


0


˜13.2°. Over the entire C-Band, this diffraction angle changes by only a very small amount, for example Bragg reflections at 1530 and 1565 nm correspond to θ


0


=13.06 and 13.37°, respectively, covering an angular span of only 5.3 mrad. This small potential spread in diffraction angle is ignored in the following analysis, but could be included to first order by noting that for a well behaved continuous mask phase function θ


m


(x), one having ordinary skill in the art can define a locally varying effective k-vector of mask


101










k




eff


(


x


)=


k




m0




+dθ




m




/dx


  (11)






and then can define a locally varying diffraction angle θ


0


(x) defined by Equation (10).




Using the transmitted field, the intensity pattern in the FBG core is calculated. The index grating in the FBG will then substantially replicate this intensity pattern. The variation of the index inside the fiber core can be written as








n


(


x


)=


n




eff




+n




g


(


x


) cos(


k




go




x+φ




g


(


x


))=


n




eff




+Re{n




g


(


x


)exp [


i


(


k




go




x+φ




g


(


x


)]}.  (12)






In a first example, core


102


of the FBG is assumed effectively at the mask surface (z=0, e.g., by imaging). In this case, considering only the ±1 diffracted orders, the intensity at the FBG calculated directly from Equation (8) is






1


FBG


(


x


)=|


E




out


(


x


)|


2


α|exp[


i


(


k




m0




x+θ




m


(


x


))]−exp[−


i


(k


m0




x+θ




m


(x))]|


2


=sin


2


(


k




m0




x+θ




m


(


x


))=1−cos(2


k




m0




x


+2θ


m


(


x


)).  (13)






Comparing Equations (12) and (13), one skilled in the art recognizes in this case that all the phase information of mask


101


is precisely doubled (as well as the k-vector of the underlying grating, thus the underlying FBG period is exactly half of the mask period Λ


g





m


/2), and therefore mask


101


can be designed with exactly half the phase φ


g


desired for the FBG.




The situation in which fiber core


102


is displaced from the mask surface by some perpendicular distance Δz considers the interference which forms the intensity pattern at fiber core


102


at longitudinal position x=0. Because the beams which interfere at position x=0 in the plane Δz propagate substantially at an angle θ


0


away from normal incidence, they do not originate at x=0, but rather come from longitudinally displaced positions x=±Δx/2, where Δx has been defined above in connection with

FIG. 1

in terms of diffraction angle θ


0


as






Δ


x


=2


Δz tanθ




0


.  (14)






For an assumed diffraction angle of 13.2°, Δx=0.47Δz. Since the diffracted beams must travel through the fiber cladding (˜62.5 μm in radius), and refraction reduces the angle inside the fiber cladding to ˜9.1°, the longitudinal shift during propagation through the cladding is ˜0.32×62.5=20 μm. Hence the total longitudinal shift Δx is given by this value plus the amount calculated using Equation (14) for the free space propagation between mask


101


and the cladding of fiber


102


. For simplicity of notation, it is assumed here that the propagation to the core is through free space only. Thus, one skilled in the art can write the intensity in FBG plane Δz using Equation (8), taking into account the shift of the beams per Equation (14). That is, the phase information of each beam comes from the mask phase longitudinally shifted by ±Δx/2, and the field is therefore given by








E




out


(


x,Δz


)∝exp[


ik




z




Δz


]×(exp[


i


(


k




m0




x+θ




m


(


x−Δx


/2))]−exp[


i


(


k




m0




x+θ




m


(


x+Δx


/2))]).  (15)






Conceptually, Equation (15) is consistent with mask illumination by two small collimated beams


1


and


2


separated longitudinally by Δx. These beams diffract at angles ±θ


0


, and the plus first order of beam


1


intersects the minus first order of beam


2


in the fiber core to form the grating. Therefore the phase of the grating in the fiber will result from mask phases θ


m


at the locations separated by Δx where the beams originate, as shown above in FIG.


1


.




To summarize the above analysis thus far, Equation (1) describes the mask profile as a sinusoid rather than a square wave because it is simpler to address mathematically and because any profile can be represented as a Fourier superposition of sinusoids. Essentially phase is equivalent to a positional shift along the coordinate x parallel to the plane of the mask. In Equation (2), transmittance through the mask is essentially a periodic function, and it has a coefficient, h(x) which is essentially the depth of the mask. Z refers to the perpendicular coordinate between the mask and the fiber core. X is the longitudinal coordinate along the fiber or along the mask. θ


m


is the phase of the mask, which determines where these periodic corrugations are as expressed in Equation (1). Through Equation (13), when there is no diffraction from the mask to the fiber core, a key result is that the phase at any longitudinal position x in the fiber is exactly twice the phase in the mask at the same longitudinal position. Equation (15) then expresses the field of the light transmitted through the mask in terms of θ


m


evaluated at x−Δx/2 and x+Δx/2, mathematically establishing that the phase originates from these two different symmetric positions. Equations (16) through (18) below describe the intensity interference pattern at position x in the fiber core, for a particular effective fiber core to mask separation Δz, in terms of the mask phase θ


m


evaluated at x±Δx/2.




To calculate intensity from Equation (15), it is useful to define the average and the difference of mask phase quantities






θ


m−av


(


x


)=[θ


m


(


x−Δx/


2)+θ


m


(


x+Δx


/2)]/2, and  (16)








θ


m−dif


(


x


)=[θ


m


(


x−Δx/


2)+θ


m


(


x+Δx


/2)]/2,  (17)






Substituting Equations (16) and (17) into (15), the intensity I (x,Δz) in the FBG plane z=Δz is given by








I




FBG


(


x,Δz


)∝|exp[


i


(


k




z




Δz+θ




m−dif


(


x


))]|


2


×|exp[


i


(


k




m0




x+θ




m−av


(


x


))]−exp[−


i


(


k




m0




x+θ




m−av


(


x


))]|


2


∝1−cos(2


k




m0




x


+2θ


m−av


(


x


)).  (18)






Comparing Equations (18) and (12) shows that the phase of this intensity distribution, and hence of the index grating in the core of fiber


102


, is given by






φ


g


(


x


)=2θ


m−av


(


x


)=θ


m


(


x−Δx


/2)+θ


m


(


x+Δx


/2).  (19)






Equation (19) shows that phase φ


g


in fiber


102


is the sum of phases θ


m


of mask


101


separated by longitudinal shift Δx, as illustrated in FIG.


1


. For the case when Δx is zero (perfect contact or imaging of the core to the mask), one skilled in the art will recognize that this result reduces to that of Equation (13), namely that φ


g


(x)=2θ


m


(x). Likewise, phase φ


g


of the grating in fiber


102


is just twice phase θ


m


of mask


101


that has a constant phase. Importantly, phase φ


g


of FBG


102


is equal to the sum of the mask phases θ


m


at two points straddling the FBG position and separated by longitudinal shift Δx associated with the ±1 orders of the mask, as illustrated in FIG.


1


and expressed mathematically in Equation (14). If a single beam


1


much smaller than Δx is used to illuminate mask


101


, then the two ± diffraction orders from beam


1


will be longitudinally separated by Δx when they strike fiber


102


, and do not react with each other; hence there is no interference and no FBG is written.




Typically, the periodic superstructure in the FBG needed to generate multichannel gratings requires a rapidly varying phase function, for example, because it contains π phase shifts in the fiber, and thus π/2 phase shifts in the mask. Equation (19) can be applied to describe a discontinuous π/2 shift in the mask at x=0. Considering a scan along the fiber with increasing position x, then for x<−Δx/2 in the fiber, the phase contributed by both beam


1


and beam


2


are from a phase=0 zone, which means the phase φ


g


of the grating is zero. Next, beam


2


contributes a π/2 phase shift in the fiber at x=−Δx/2, and then at x=+Δx/2 beam


1


contributes an additional π/2 shift, bringing the total phase to π. Thus the X phase shift then appears in fiber


102


in two places split into equal parts. That is, beam


2


strikes the π/2 shift in the mask first and creates a n/


2


discrete phase shift in fiber


102


, but because phase φ


g


in the fiber is the sum of two mask phases θ


m


at x=±Δx/2, fiber phase φ


g


then stays constant at π/2 until beam


1


reaches the π/2 shift and generates an additional shift in the fiber. Since both beam


1


and beam


2


are then on a π/2 plateau, the phase shift increases to and stays at π, until the next phase shift in the mask is encountered.




To make a periodic superstructure for a high channel count sampled FBG requires the phase to change on a very fine scale, for example ˜25 microns, which is much smaller than the typical beam width (a few hundred pm) and much smaller than typical scale for masks which are made for applications to a single channel, where the scale sizes are centimeters. The fine scale size can be understood, since sampling with a period of ˜1 mm will generate channels that are separated by ˜100 GHz. To span the entire C-band would require ˜40 such channels, and thus the scale length over which the phase must change is {fraction (1/40)}


th


of a millimeter=25 μm.




A general formalism described below, which addresses a continuous arbitrary phase, automatically includes the case of discrete phase shifts. The basic principle illustrated in

FIG. 1

or equivalently expressed mathematically in Equation (19), is that the phase φ


g


in fiber


102


is the sum of phases θ


m


of two mask locations x=±Δx/2 separated by longitudinal shift Δx, which is geometrically dependent on the angle θ


0


of diffraction and effective separation Δz between phase mask


101


and fiber


102


, as expressed in Equation (14) above.




With the result of Equation (19) one can construct a method to compensate for the diffraction from the mask to the fiber core, so that a desired phase is achieved in the FBG. First, Equation (19) can be written in the form of a convolution




 φ


g


(


x


)=θ


m


(


x


){circle around (


X


)}[δ(


x−Δx


/2)+δ(


x+Δx


/2)],  (20)




e.g., phase φ


g


in grating


102


at a particular position x is phase θ


m


in mask


101


at position x convolved with split delta functions. When the delta function δ (x−Δx/2) is convolved with a function, it shifts that function by Δx/2. Taking the Fourier transform, one obtains the efficiency of the phase transfer {tilde over (φ)}


g


for the mask-to-fiber proximity writing process as a function of the phase spatial frequency f:






{tilde over (φ)}


g


(


f


)=2 cos(π


fΔx


){tilde over (θ)}


m


(


f


),  (21)






where {tilde over (φ)}


g


and {tilde over (θ)}


m


are Fourier transforms of the phase functions of the FBG (φ


g


) and mask (θ


m


), respectively, (and f is the spatial frequency of the mask or FBG phase pattern. For low spatial frequencies (f→0), the result reduces to the exact doubling of the mask phase θ


m


to obtain FBG phase φ


g


, as described in connection with Equation 13. Next, considering period P of sampling in the phase function, for Δv=100 GHz channel spacing is P=c/(2n


group


Δv)˜1.03 mm, where n


group


is the effective group velocity of the optical signal in the fiber. A convenient scale for spatial frequency is then in units of the channel frequency spacing. Thus, for 100 GHz channel spacing a ‘channel’ normalized spatial frequency is defined by








f




c




=f/f




0




=f


×1.03 mm,  (22)






where f


0


=1/P is the spatial frequency corresponding to a single channel spacing, and P=1.3 mm.




In an example, if the longitudinal shift at the fiber core Δx is 25 μm (cladding radius of 62.5 μm and fiber-to-mask spacing Δz˜10 μm), so the effective mask-to-core spacing in Equation (14) is Δz is ˜53 μm), one can then rewrite Equation (21) as














φ
~

g



(
f
)





θ
~

m



(
f
)



=

2


cos


(

π







f
c

/

N
0



)




,




(
23
)













where N


0


=P/Δx≅41 for Δx=25 μm.




Equation 21, which describes the FBG phase spectrum {tilde over (φ)}


g


as essentially a filtered version of the Fourier transform {tilde over (θ)}


m


of mask function θ


m


, contains a factor of 2. If longitudinal shift Δx is zero, then phase φ


g


in grating


102


is twice phase θ


m


in mask


101


. But if longitudinal shift Δx is not equal to zero, the cosine factor in Equation (21) represents a “transfer amplitude” filtering function that filters out high spatial frequencies of the mask phase upon writing into the fiber core. This is a classic low pass filter. For low spatial frequencies (a mask with constant phase, for example), there is no effect at all, whereas high spatial frequency phase variations are not transferred efficiently to fiber


102


, and in fact there is a null for transfer of sinusoidal phase of period 2Δx on the mask. That is, for a mask-to-fiber separation such that Δx=25 μm (a spacing between the mask and fiber cladding of about 10 μm), if mask


101


has a sinusoidal phase variation whose period is 50 microns, then that phase pattern in mask


101


will not transfer at all to fiber


102


; the amplitude of such sinusoidal phase modulation transferred to the fiber will be zero.




This result, for the illustrative case when longitudinal shift Δx=25 μm, is represented graphically in

FIG. 2

by transfer function


20


. It should be noted that transfer amplitude {tilde over (θ)}


m


is zero for spatial frequency f corresponding to a ±20.5 channel shift, e.g., a sinusoidal phase θ


m


on the mask of period 50 μm will not transfer at all to fiber


102


. This follows from the result of Equation (19), since for Δx=25 μm the two phase contributions are exactly one-half period apart and therefore have opposite signs and exactly cancel one another.




The first and second terms on the right side of Equation (19) are exact opposites of each other, such that φ


g


=0, even though θ


m


is sinusoidally varying by large amplitudes. Equation (21) represents the transfer amplitude function for every spatial frequency of phase θ


m


, and that transfer function


20


is represented graphically in

FIG. 2

for the particular case of Δx=25 μm. For example, consider spatial frequencies corresponding to about ±12 channels, which are reduced in amplitude by about a factor of two due to diffraction from mask


101


to fiber


102


. What is needed to obtain the desired phase in the FBG in this example is to design a pre-compensated mask, such that these high spatial frequencies actually have about twice the amplitude as otherwise. Then, after filtering by transfer function


20


, since these high spatial frequencies have been pre-compensated and boosted by the appropriate factor of about two, the desired grating phase function is obtained in fiber


102


. The transfer function


20


of Equation (23) allows one to design mask


101


so that the spatial frequencies of the mask phase θ


m


that are not transferred well are boosted. Taking into account the low pass filtering effect of the transfer process as described in Equations (21) and (23), the transferred phase is actually written as desired into the fiber core.




In a method for designing a mask to pre-compensate for the diffractive propagation effects to the fiber core, in accordance with embodiments of present invention, one solves either Equation (21) or (23) for the mask phase {tilde over (θ)}


m


.






{tilde over (θ)}


m


(


f


)={tilde over (φ)}


g


(


f


)/2 cos(π







x


), or {tilde over (θ)}


m


(


f




c


)={tilde over (φ)}


g


(


f




c


)/2 cos(π


f




c




/N




0


).  (24)







FIG. 3

is a flow diagram depicting a method of designing a pre-compensated phase mask, in accordance with embodiments of the present invention. At step


300


, effective longitudinal shift Δx is determined, based on the effective proximity Δz between mask


101


and fiber core


102


, according to Equation (14). At step


301


, desired FBG phase function φ


g


is calculated. Then at step


302


, one calculates the Fourier transform {tilde over (φ)}


g


of desired FBG phase φ


g


, and at step


303


applies Equation (24) to solve for spatial spectrum {tilde over (θ)}


m


of pre-compensated mask phase θ


m


. At step


304


, spatial spectrum {tilde over (θ)}


m


is transformed back to obtain pre-compensated mask phase function θ


m


itself.




As Equation (24) shows, the pre-compensated mask is designed so that its spatial frequencies are boosted by the reciprocal of the cosine function


20


represented in FIG.


2


. For example, in the region around channel +/−10 to +/−15, transfer amplitude


20


is reduced by about a factor of 0.5. That is, low spatial frequencies are written into fiber


102


twice as efficiently as are these high spatial frequencies. Where transfer amplitude


20


is small or zero, one would be dividing by a near-zero value in Equation (24), which could lead to inaccurate or unphysical results. Therefore the method depicted in

FIG. 3

is limited primarily to regions where the transfer function is not close to zero.





FIGS. 4A-4D

depict simulated results obtained using the method exemplified in

FIG. 3

for a nine-channel phase-only sampling function (see U.S. patent aplication Ser. No. 09/757,386, the disclosure of which has been incorporated herein by reference). Top panel


401


shows mask phase spectrum {tilde over (θ)}


m




402


(central dashed curve), which is the Fourier transform of phase function θ


m


; the effect of diffraction transfer from mask


101


to FBG


102


when longitudinal shift Δx is assumed to be 25 μm reduces the higher spatial frequencies according to Equation (23) (as shown in lower solid curve


403


). Solid top curve


404


shows the spectrum {tilde over (θ)}


m


of phase function θ


m


when precorrected upward according to Equation (24). Second panel


410


shows actual mask phase function θ


m


with (solid curve


412


) and without (dots


413


) precorrection. It is noted that curve


412


and dots


413


are nearly indistinguishable. Third panel


415


shows the effect of diffraction on channel reflection amplitudes


416


, which is given by the Fourier transform of the FBG sampling function FT{S(x)≡exp[iφ


g


(x)]}, when mask phase θ


m


has not been pre-corrected, exhibiting an observable roll off of the outlying channels. Bottom panel


420


shows the channel amplitudes FT{exp[iφ


g


(x)]}


421


, when the precorrection of Equation (24) is applied to mask phase θ


m


. The roll off of high spatial frequencies from diffraction offsets the precorrection boost, resulting in the recovery of a substantially uniform channel spectrum.




This effect is more pronounced in

FIGS. 5A-5D

, which depict simulation results analogous to those of

FIGS. 4A-4D

, but assuming instead a longitudinal shift Δx of 50 μm. Top panel


501


shows spectrum {tilde over (θ)}


m


of phase θ


m


(central dashed curve


502


), including the effect of the roll off from diffraction effects (lower solid curve


503


), and including pre-compensation using Equation (24) (solid upper curve


504


). Panel


510


shows phase θ


m


before (solid curve


512


) and after pre-compensation (dashed curve


513


). Here, solid curve


512


and dashed curve


513


are clearly distinguishable. Panels


515


and


520


show FBG channel spectral amplitudes FT{exp[iφ


g


(x)]}


516


and


521


without and with pre-compensation, respectively.




From Equation (23), it can be recognized that masks designed with low spatial frequency phase functions experience a much smaller distortion effect from diffraction. It is important to note that sampling phase functions θ


m


with low spatial frequency can nevertheless generate high channel counts. Illustratively, a simple sinusoidal grating phase function φ


g


with a period equal to the sampling period P (i.e. f


c


=1) can be written as




 φ


g


=2θ


m


(


x


)=φ


0


sin(2


πx/P


),  (25)




and in the absence of diffraction FBG sampling function S(x)=exp[iφ


g


(x)] can be written as








S


(


x


)=exp[







g


]=exp[







0


sin(2


πx/P


)]=Σ







m=−∞




J




m





0


)exp[


im


2


πx/P],


  (26)






where J


m





0


) are Bessel functions of m order. The spectral envelope of the multiple channels generated by this sampling function S(x) is given by its Fourier transform {tilde over (S)}(f)≡FT{S(x)}=FT{exp[iφ


g


(x)]}. Since Equation (26) is written as a Fourier series, each term in the summation corresponds to a single channel, and thus the amplitude of the m


th


channel is simply given by the coefficient J


m





0


).




The number of grating channels generated by sampling function S(x) is approximately ±φ


0


. Therefore, even though phase function φ


g


has only spatial frequency of 1 channel (normalized frequency f


c


=1, or f=f


0


,) the number of channels generated is 2φ


0


, which can be large if φ


0


>>1. Since the spatial frequency is very low, the distortion effect of diffraction predicted by Equation (23) will be negligible. If Δx=25 μm, diffraction simply reduces the phase variation φ


0


by a factor cos(π/41)=0.997. Essentially the number of channels, approximately twice φ


o


, is determined by Bessel functions coefficients in Equation (26). Although this approach of using a very low spatial frequency can in principal generate a large number of channels with essentially no penalty from diffraction transfer effects, these channels are typically not uniform.




It is desired to achieve a uniform channel spectrum while minimizing the spatial Frequencies required (and thereby minimizing the effect of diffraction). This can be accomplished in accordance with embodiments of the present invention by first writing FBG grating phase function φ


g


as a more general truncated Fourier series:






φ


g


(


x


)=Σ


n=1




M


α


n


cos(2


πnx/P+β




n


)  (27)






where the number M of terms in the series is minimized, and then α


n


and β


n


are optimized such that the channel spectrum is substantially uniform over the band of interest. With M terms in this series, generally at least 2M substantially uniform channels can be achieved, since there are two free parameters α


n


, β


n


, for each term.




In Equation (27), to generate a uniform channel spectrum one includes the harmonics of the fundamental period P in the sampling. These represent higher spatial frequencies. Equation (27) truncated Fourier series contains sines or cosines from n=1 to M, and the periods of these are in fractions of the sampling period P. In Fourier series, Equation (27), the first harmonic has the period P of the sampling itself, which for example is one millimeter, and 2


nd


, 3


rd


, 4


th


, etc. harmonics have periods P/2, P/3, P/4, etc. Therefore the nth harmonic corresponds to the nth channel around the center frequency in the spectral domain. These higher spatial frequencies, because of the transfer diffraction effect, experience increasingly diminished transfer amplitudes. In fact, at N=20.5, or around 20 or 21, there is no transfer, such that if M is close to 20.5, those frequencies are not transferred to the fiber. It is advantageous to minimize number M of channels, because higher M frequencies are harder to transfer into the fiber, based on Equation (23). Boosting high frequency terms having very small transfer amplitude according to Equation (24) reduces accuracy similarly to division by zero. For example, if Δx changes by a small fraction near zero transfer amplitude, the denominator in Equation 24 is near zero and thus the compensation is very sensitive to longitudinal shift Δx, which demands extremely precise control of distance Δz between fiber


102


and mask


101


.




To minimize M, there are available for each of the terms which correspond to harmonics of the Fourier decomposition of phase function φ


g


an amplitude represented by α


n


and a phase represented by β


n


. To evaluate the {α


n





n


} parameter array, one would use a (for example nonlinear) optimization algorithm such as simulated thermal annealing, using as the optimization criteria the uniformity of the desired channels and other desired criteria (such as the minimization of undesired adjacent channels). A variety of such mathematical techniques are available to optimize the sampling function S(x), defined in Equation (26) as S(x)=exp[iφ


g


], where φ


g


is now defined in Equation (27). The Fourier transform of S(x) is {tilde over (S)}(f) and represents an envelope of the FBG reflection channel spectrum similar to those shown in panels 420 and


520


of

FIGS. 4 and 5

respectively. During each iteration of the optimization algorithm, α


n


and β


n


's in Equation (27) are generated, and Fourier transform {tilde over (S)}(f) is evaluated. The algorithm is able to optimize the uniformity of desired channels to some level of approximation. Depending on how large M is, optimization is achieved very well or very poorly. If M=1 for 80 channels for example, optimization is achieved only very poorly. The general principle is that the number of free parameters {α


n,β




n


} must equal or exceed the number of simultaneous equations. Essentially, for each channel in a uniform set, a free variable is needed. To generate N substantially uniform channels, if there are two free variables for each term in expansion Equation (27), typically M must be on the order of N/2.




Once an optimized design for φ


g


has determined the α


n


and β


n


parameters, one can then apply Equation (24) to obtain pre-compensated mask phase












θ
m



(
x
)


=


1
2






M


n
=
1










α
n


cos


(

π






n
/

N
0



)





cos


(


2

π






nx
/
P


+

β
n


)






,




(
28
)













where the value N


0


=P Δx≡41 for the example case of Δx=25 μm. In this case, one recognizes that the 1/cosine correction factor in the denominator causes Equation (28) to diverge for n→N


0


/2=20.5, and thus this approach can be problematic for such phase designs. The above assumption that the channel count N is limited to ˜2M indicates that uniform channel counts approaching 40 would be difficult. However, if one could achieve acceptable uniformity for 40 channels with M less than 20, then the solution of Equation (28) would be practical. It should be noted, however, that for M approaching the singularity at n=20.5 in Equation (28), the sensitivity to mask-fiber spacing becomes quite severe.




One further aspect of the 1/cosine correction factor in Equations (24) and (28) is that for spatial frequencies higher than the singularity at n=N


0


/2, the transfer amplitude recovers from zero, albeit with negative sign. It returns to full amplitude when f


c


=N


0


or f=1/Δx. Physically this occurs, because the phase contributions from locations separated by longitudinal gap Δx, which is now equal to a full period, add constructively. Therefore, such higher spatial frequency terms in Equation (28) could potentially be used to generate large uniform channel counts, since inclusion of these terms would increase the number of degrees of freedom in the optimization algorithm.




Since Equation (28) represents the mask phase θ


m


, the Fourier transform of the nth term is exactly the spatial frequency of nf


0


or the normalized frequency of the nth channel. Substituting the Fourier transform of Equation (28) into Equation (23), one obtains phase φ


g


represented by Equation (27) in the fiber grating for a desired longitudinal shift Δx. Each term in Equation (28) is boosted in mask


101


by substantially the amount that it will be reduced in the transfer process as described by Equations (21) and (23).





FIG. 6A

is a flow diagram illustrating a method of generating a phase mask design for a multi-channel FBG using an optimization algorithm, according to embodiments of the present invention. At step


601


the maximum number M of terms in Fourier series Equation (27) is initialized. The value of M can be determined manually, for example, or by calculation, e.g., M=N/2, where N is the desired number of reflective FBG channels. Alternatively, M can be selected randomly or based on other considerations, or can be indexed such that it is automatically incremented or decremented in the course of the optimization process. At step


602


a parameter T, representing an adjustable “pseudo-temperature” parameter, is set at an initial positive value T=T


0


.




After step


601


, an initial parameter array {α


n





n


}, having array dimension consistent with the value of M, is generated at step


603


. The initial values of the individual parameters {α


n





n


} can be, for example, manually or randomly generated. At step


604


an initial value of FBG phase φ


g


is calculated using the initial values of M and parameter array {α


n





n


} in Equation (27). At step


605


a Fourier transform of S(x)=exp[iφ


g


(x)] using the result φ


g


of step


604


is performed to generate an initial envelope channel reflectivity spectrum {tilde over (S)}(f) of FBG


102


. Optionally steps


604


and


605


may be combined to directly generate channel reflectivity spectrum envelope {tilde over (S)}(f) without explicitly calculating intermediate result φ


g


.




At step


606


an error fiction f[{tilde over (S)}(f, {α


n,β




n


})] is defined and is evaluated for initial channel reflectivity spectrum {tilde over (S)}(f). Error function f[{tilde over (S)}(f, {α


n





n


})] is preferably constructed to attain a minimum absolute value, e.g., zero, when the desired envelope channel reflectivity spectrum {tilde over (S)}(f) is achieved. An example of such an error function is








f


(
x
)


=




m
=

-
M


M








(



I
m



(
x
)


-


κ
m


I


)

2



,










where I is a weighted average channel intensity and the K


m


weights can be ones and zeros, depending on whether a particular channel m is desired or not (see U.S. patent application Ser. No. 09/757,386, the disclosure of which has been incorporated herein by reference), or these weights can take on any desired value.




At step


607


the initial array of parameters {α


n,β




n


} is adjusted to produce a new array of parameters {α′


n


,β′


n


} according to a distribution function, e.g., random variations from the initial values {α


n





n


}. From these new parameter values, a new channel reflectivity spectrum {tilde over (S)}′(f) is generated at step


608


, and a new value of error function f′({tilde over (S)}′) is calculated at step


609


. At step


610


a difference Δf=f′({tilde over (S)}′)−f({tilde over (S)}) between the new and previous error functions is calculated. At step


611


a probability function defined by P(Δf)=exp(−Δf/T) is calculated, where T is the adjustable pseudo-temperature parameter initialized at step


602


.




At step


612




a


, if Δf≦0, the new array of parameter values {α′


n


,β′


n


} are always accepted at step


612




b


to replace the old array of parameter values. At step


613


if Δf>0, then the new array of parameter values will be accepted to replace the old parameter values on a statistical basis with a probability P(Δf), such that in m iterations of the algorithm through step


613


the new array of parameter values would be accepted randomly mP(Δf) times and rejected the other m [1−P(Δf)] times. If the number of iterations N completed at step


614


is less than a preselected iteration number N


F


, then steps


607


through


614


are repeated until preselected iteration number N


F


is reached. Next at step


615


, adjustable pseudo-temperature parameter T is reduced by ΔT, and a new array of initial parameter values are generated based on the results from preceding iterations of steps


607


through


614


. At step


615


, error function f is recalculated based on the new array of parameter values, and the number of iterations is reset to zero.




At step


616


, if error function f′({tilde over (S)}′) is less than an acceptable minimum value, the process is complete, and at step


617


the latest parameter values are used in Equation (28) to solve for pre-compensated phase mask design θ


m


. Alternatively, the value of M is incremented or decremented, and the algorithm is repeated to seek a more optimum solution. If at step


616


error function f′({tilde over (S)}′) is greater than the acceptable minimum value, then the algorithm repeats from step


607


through step


616


, until a set of acceptable parameter values are generated.




Parameter T is analogous to a temperature, and the probability function P(Δf) is analogous to a probability function of a thermal energy for different parameter values. Accordingly, the above algorithm simulates a slow cooling process to reduce thermal energy. The algorithm depicted in

FIG. 6A

can be applied numerically, advantageously using a digital computer.




Both Fresnel-Kirchoff diffraction equations and free space propagation of the angular spectrum, which are based on scalar theory, adopt the Kirchoff boundary condition assuming that the UV beam passing through the phase mask simply receives phase shifts introduced by the phase mask corrugation structure without changing the amplitude. This classical assumption in the scalar theory of diffraction is no longer accurate when the phase mask period is less than 10 times wavelength, which is the case of the FBG mask writing system, where the period of the phase mask is four times the UV wavelength.




It will be noted that the above analysis leading to the results of Equations (21) and (23) is an approximation of the complex diffraction effects which occur between the mask and fiber. For example, it is assumed that the phase variation in the mask design results in pitch variations which are much smaller than the underlying mask pitch (typically about 1 μm). Should such phase variations occur, or if for other reasons the above approximate analysis could be inadequate, then an alternative embodiment of the design procedure could make use of a more complete diffractive analysis method. The simple approximation of the diffraction analysis described above has the advantage of a very rapid calculation method. If the results are not sufficiently accurate, then a more complex and time consuming calculation method also within the scope of the present invention may be necessary.




Also within the scope of the present invention, a few such methods are based in part for example on principles of scalar diffraction such as the angular plane wave spectrum method (see for example J. W. Goodman, “Introduction to Fourier Optics,” Chapter 3, McGraw Hill, N.Y., 1968, p. 38-54), or finite difference in time domain (FDTD) methods (see for example H. Ichikawa, “Electromagnetic Analysis Of Diffraction Gratings By The Finite-Difference Time-Domain Method”, Journal of the Optical Society of America A, Vol. 15, (1998) pp. 152-157.




The Finite Difference in the Time Domain (FDTD) method provides numerical solution of the complete vector set of Maxwell's equations. The method uses no approximation, but can suffer from digital computation errors, such as that in the digitization of the phase mask profile input and optical field output. The positions of the split phase steps can be estimated by the relation Δx=2Δz tan θ


o


, where θ


o


=13.18° is the diffraction angle of the first order and z is the distance from the phase mask, as shown in FIG.


1


. The accurate separation data computed by the rigorous numeric solution are slightly smaller than the approximation of geometric optics.




With such diffractive analysis method, one can calculate both the amplitude and the phase of the intensity fringe pattern generated at the plane of the fiber core by a particular mask trial phase function θ


m


. To apply this alternative approach, the intensity pattern Equation (18) of the light transmitted through the mask in the plane of the fiber core is rewritten as








I




fiber


(


x


)=


I




ave




+I




amp


(


x


)


Re


{exp[


i


(


k




g0




x+φ




I


(


x


))]}  (18A)






where the amplitude and phase of the intensity fringes are given by the quantities I


amp


(x) and φ


I


(x), respectively. Since the index variation in the FBG is proportional to this intensity, Equation (18A) can be compared to Equation (12) to find that FBG amplitude n


g


(x) is proportional to I


amp


(x) and FBG phase φ


g


(x) is given by intensity fringe phase φ


I


(x). Thus the sampling function S(x) without any loss of generality is rewritten as the complex function representing the intensity fringes








S


(


x


)=


I




amp


(


x


)exp[







I


(


x


)]  (26A)






The Fourier transform of the sampling function S(x) then gives the envelope of the multiple channel reflectivity spectrum of the FBG,






{tilde over (


S


)}(


f


)=


FT{I




amp


(


x


)exp[φ


I


(


x


)]}  (26B)






where FT indicates the Fourier transform. Therefore, this result will permit a more accurate calcalation of the effect of mask diffraction on the spectral envelope of the multiple FBG channels. If the result of the procedure depicted in

FIG. 6A

is not sufficiently accurate, then the mask function according to

FIG. 6A

can be used as a starting point for a modified and more accurate optimization, based on iteratively varying the {α


n,β




n


} parameter array as described in connection with FIG.


6


A and then calculating I


fiber


(x) and {tilde over (S)}(f) with a more accurate diffraction method.





FIG. 6B

is a flow diagram depicting a modified mask design embodiment based on the approach described in connection with Equations (18A), (26A), and (26B) similar to that shown in FIG.


6


A. At respective steps


621


,


622


, and


623


, similar to steps


601


,


602


, and


603


of

FIG. 6A

, the initial number of terms M, initial parameter T=T0, and initial parameter array {α


n





n


} are chosen. However, at step


624


, an initial mask phase θ


m


(x) is defined instead of the FBG phase φ


g


(x), based on the initial array of {α


n


β


n


}.






θ


m


(


x


)=Σ


n=1




M


α


n


cos(2


πnx/P+β




n


).  (27A)






In steps


625




a


-


625




d


, the phase design θ


m


(x) is used to calculate the initial spectral envelope {tilde over (


S


)}(f) as follows. First, at step


625




a


, the intensity pattern of the light transmitted through the mask to the fiber core I


fiber


(x) is calculated according to Equation (18A) by a more accurate diffraction method, for example angular spectrum propagation, or FDTD. From the intensity written in the form of Equation (18A) the quantities I


amp


(x) and φ


I


(x) are determined at step


625




b


, and thus the initial spectral envelope {tilde over (S)}(f) can be calculated by applying Equations (26A) and (26B) at steps


625




c


and


625




d


respectively. Alternatively, if necessary an even more accurate calculation of {tilde over (S)}(f) can be obtained from sampling function S(x) at step


625




d


using the transfer matrix method (see for example T. Erdogan, “Fiber Grating Spectra,” Journal of Lightwave Technology, Vol. 15, p. 1277-1294) instead of Fourier transform. This may be advantageous for FBGs designed with very high reflectivity, or when the underlying FBG design incorporates rapidly varying chirps or phase shifts.




In step


626


, f({tilde over (S)}) is evaluated on the basis of desired criteria, such as channel uniformity and minimization of the amplitudes of unwanted channels. Based on this evaluation, parameter array. {α


n





n


} is modified according to an optimization method such as the previously described simulated thermal annealing method. In step


627




a


a new {α


n


β


n


} array is generated, which is used in step


627




b


to calculate new θ′


m


(x). Then in step


628


θ′


m


(x) is used to calculate new I′


fiber


(x)=I′


amp


(x), φ′


I


(x), S′(x) and new spectral envelope {tilde over (S)}′(f) in a manner identical to that used in steps


625




a


-


625




d


. In step


629


, the new spectral envelope is then again evaluated according to desired criteria. The iterative nonlinear optimization process continues analogously with that of

FIG. 6A

, until the criteria for an adequate spectral envelope are met. Note that unlike step


617


in

FIG. 6A

, a calculation is no longer required, since in steps


624


and


627


the trial mask phase design θ


m


(x) is explicitly evaluated. Thus, if the criteria for the spectral envelope are met, then at step


637


the final mask design adopted is simply the most recent trial mask phase function θ


m


(x).




The calculations depicted in

FIGS. 6A and 6B

are performed numerically, preferably using a digital computer.




In an example according to embodiments of the present invention, the method of the above algorithm of

FIG. 6A

can be applied to the design of a 9-channel FBG having a fiber phase φ


g


given by






φ


g


(


x


)=1.41 cos(2


π·x/P


)+1.45 sin(2π·3


x/P


)+0.072 sin(2π·5


x/P),


  (29)






where α


1


=1.41, α


3


=1.45, α


5


=0.072, and all other α


n


and β


n


parameters are zero. Simulated results for this fiber phase φ


g


and the associated channel spectrum {tilde over (S)}(f) are represented graphically in

FIG. 7A

by envelopes


701


and


702


respectively. The nearly ideal amplitude uniformity over the 9 channels is within ˜2 per cent. Including the diffraction effects of propagation, where the assumed longitudinal shift Δx is 25 μm, FBG phase coefficients in Equation (29) are modified according to Equation (23): α


1


=1.406 ,α


3


=1.412, and α


5


=0.067. The resulting phase φ


g


and channel spectrum {tilde over (S)}(f) are represented graphically in

FIG. 7B

by envelopes


703


and


704


respectively, and the uniformity is degraded to ˜5 percent.




Next, Equation (28) is applied to pre-compensate mask phase θ


m


such that Equation (29) is recovered after including the propagation effects. Top panel


710


of

FIG. 7C

represents graphically channel spectrum {tilde over (S)}(f) having envelope


711


, using a pre-compensated mask, where longitudinal shift Δx=25 μm is assumed (grating phase coefficients α


1


=1.414, α


3


=1.489, and α


5


=0.078), but without the diffraction effect of propagation. Lower panel


715


of

FIG. 7C

graphically represents in envelope


716


that the ideal channel spectrum {tilde over (S)}(f) (envelope


702


of


7


A) is recovered using the pre-compensated phase coefficients when diffraction effects are included. The results of

FIGS. 7A-7C

will differ for differing mask-to-fiber spacing Δz, for example a longitudinal shift Δx of 50 μm, but the same design method applies. For example at envelope


716


of

FIG. 7C

, pre-compensation again recovers the ideal channel spectrum {tilde over (S)}(f) of envelope


702


in FIG.


7


A.




In the embodiments of both

FIGS. 6A and 6B

, the optimization procedure is essentially the minimization of a nonlinear error function by variation of the parameter array {α


n


β


n


}. The example of the nonlinear optimization procedure given in

FIGS. 6A and 6B

is that of the simulated annealing method, which is generally a good approach to finding the global minimum of an error function, and does not easily get trapped in local minima. However, there are a number of other numerical optimization procedures which may be more rapid or easier to implement. These include methods such as the simplex method, Powell's method, conjugate gradient method, variable metric method, and linear programming methods. A summary of these methods can be found, for example, in “Numerical Recipes in C, the Art of Scientific Computing,” by W. H. Press et al., Cambridge University Press, New York, pp. 394-444, 1988. Such optimization methods are also applicable to the further embodiment described below.




In a further embodiment, a design based on discrete π phase shifts in the FBG is used. To make a phase shift of π in the FBG, the change in index of refraction in the grating varies sinusoidally positive and negative and then positive and then negative, but with a π phase shift at a zero crossing, the sinusoid goes negative and then instead of going positive, it goes negative again, producing a mirror image index around the π shift. A π phase step can occur anywhere in the sinusoid. If a π phase shift occurs at the maximum or the minimum, there is a discontinuous change in the amplitude. When the it phase shift occurs where the sinusoid crosses through the average index, the sinusoid amplitude is unchanged, but the slope changes discontinuously.





FIG. 8A

shows a Dammann sampling function, as disclosed in above cited U.S. patent application Ser. No. 09/757,386, which consists of 4 phase steps of π at specifically designed locations. This design generates 7 channels in the spectral domain, and the it shift locations are chosen to produce ideally five uniform and two outside brighter channels as shown in FIG.


8


B. However, diffraction from the mask to the FBG of light transmitted through the binary phase shifts results in spectral asymmetry of the actual channel envelope that appears as lower reflectivities of the channels on the shorter wavelength side, instead of the desired equal and symmetric channel reflectivities.

FIGS. 9A-9D

show the experimental reflection spectra of the sampled FBGs written with phase mask-to-fiber spacing Δz of 10, 40, 70 and 100 μm, respectively in curves


901


,


902


,


903


, and


904


, which show that the asymmetry of the channel envelope increases with spacing Δz. Other spectral structure (e.g., the grouping of bands of channels which shift as a function of Δz) shown in

FIGS. 9A-9D

suggests that significant sources of this behavior are diffraction effects related to the separation between the mask and the fiber.




As described above in connection with

FIG. 1

, the experimentally observed spectral asymmetry can be understood by the fact that the phase shift in the phase mask is split into two diffraction orders. The multi-channel FBG spectrum is given by the Fourier transform of the sampling function, S(x). The sampling function as designed is the Dammann grating that is intended to consist of a set of (four in the example of

FIG. 8A

) π phase shifts (0,π) or equivalently S(x)=(1,−1) in one sampling period. The FBG phase thus alternates discretely between π and 0 (which is equivalent to 2π) as illustrated in Dammann sampling function d(x)


1101


of FIG.


11


. The locations of the phase steps are optimized in such a way to have the maximum reflectivity distributed among diffracted orders of the desired intensities.




Where each π phase shift is desired in the FBG, the mask is designed with a π/2 phase shift. In other words, at this location the corrugation of the mask is shifted so that one period is enlarged by an extra ¼ of a period (¼ period=¼(2π)=π/2 phase shift in the mask). In propagating from phase mask to the fiber core, in accordance with Equation (19), such phase shifts in the phase mask are split into two equal phase shifts, which are separated longitudinally by Δx. Then, the actual sampling function in the fiber core would contain two phase shifts of π/2 for each desired π phase shift. However, it is important to note that if a positive π/2 shift is incorporated into the mask, at each location the FBG sees two positive π/2 phase shifts separated by Δx. Thus, the sampling function in the FBG reaches a π phase level after the sum of the first pair of positive π/2 phase shifts. After the initial π phase level, the first of the next pair of positive π/2 phase shift raises the phase level to 3π/2. Only after the addition of the second part of the positive π/2 phase shift of π/2 does the phase level reach the designed value of 2π, which is equivalent to zero, as illustrated graphically in distorted sampling function S(x)


1103


of FIG.


11


. This phase shift behavior continues periodically along the FBG, resulting in the asymmetrically distorted phase-only sampling function


1103


as shown in FIG.


11


.




The Fourier transform of such distorted sampling functions with the additional π/2 and 3π/2 levels reveals that the channel spectrum exhibits the asymmetry, as illustrated by the computer simulation results in

FIGS. 10A-10H

for different phase mask-to-fiber spacing Δz, in good agreement with experimental results, for example as shown in

FIGS. 9A-9D

. In the simulation results of

FIGS. 10A-10H

, the phase of sampling function


1001


with a mask-to-fiber separation Δz=10 μm produces FBG spectrum


1002


, sampling function


1003


at Δz=40 μm produces FBG spectrum


1004


, sampling function


1005


at Δz=70 μm produces FBG spectrum


1006


, and sampling function


1007


at Δz=100 μm produces FBG spectrum


1008


.




The asymmetry reported in Williams et al., ECOC, (1997), cited above, of the reflection spectrum of a uniform FBG with a single π phase shift in the middle of the grating, when the FBG is written by a phase mask with a single π/2 phase shift at that location, can be explained by the fact disclosed in accordance with the present invention, that the phase shift is split into two π/2 shifts separated by a distance Δx, as given by Equation (14).




Mathematically, the distorted phase-only sampling functions shown in

FIGS. 10A-10H

that are written into the FBG, can be described by a convolution between the desired binary phase Dammann sampling function d(x)


1101


, as illustrated in

FIG. 11

, which has values of only ±1 and a function p(x)


1102


representing the phase splitting, a combination of two delta functions, each having a complex constant scale value








p


(


x


)=(½)(1


−e




iπ/2


)δ(


x−Δx




/


2




)+(½)(1


+e




iπ/2


)δ(


x+Δx


/2).  (30)






Thus, the distorted sampling function is given by S(x)=p(x){circle around (X)}d(x)


1103


in FIG.


11


. In the convolution operation, in the sections where d(x)=1 at both of the split locations (x=±Δx/2) of the δ-functions in p(x) the result is








S


(


x


)=


p


(


x


)


{circle around (X)}d


(


x


)=(½)(1


−e




iπ/2


+1+


e




iπ/2


)=1


=e




i0


  (31)







FIG. 11

is a graphic representation of the convolution process. When the first peak in right-hand side of p(x)


1102


moves across the π/2 phase shift of Dammann function d(x)


1101


, its value is multiplied by −1. Then, the convolution becomes







S


(


x


)=


p


(


x


)


{circle around (X)}d


(


x


)=(½)(−1


+e




iπ/2


+1+


e




iπ/2


)=


e




iπ/2


  (32)




and the convolution remains at that value until the second peak of p(x)


1102


moves across the phase shift of d(x)


1101


. When both peaks in p(x)


1102


stay in the region where d(x)=−1 the convolution value is equal to








S


(


x


)=


p


(


x


)


{circle around (X)}d


(


x


)=(½)(−1


+e




iπ/2


−1−


e




iπ/2


)=−1


=e







  (33)






Thus, the convolution of p(x) with d(x) generates an additional phase shift


1105


of amplitude π/2 and of length Δx. In the next step of the convolution, once the right peak of p(x)


1102


passes the phase shift in d(x)


1101


from π to 0 (the real value from −1 to 1), the convolution value becomes








S


(


x


)=


p


(


x


)


{circle around (X)}d


(


x


)=(½)(1


−e




iπ/2


−1−


e




iπ/2


)=−


e




iπ/2




=e




i3π/2


  (34)






that results in a phase shift


1107


of amplitude 3π/2 and of length Δx, as represented in FIG.


11


. The entire convolution function S(x)


1103


is shifted by Δx/2 relative to original Dammann sampling function d(x)


1101


. This constant spatial shift, however, produces no effect on the reflection spectrum of FBG.




The Fourier transform of the deformed phase sampling function S(x)


1103


shown in

FIG. 11

is








{tilde over (S)}


(


f


)=


FT{d


(


x


)


{circle around (X)}p


(


x


)}=


{tilde over (D)}


(


f


)


{tilde over (P)}


(


f


)  (35)






where {tilde over (D)}(f) and {tilde over (P)}(f) are the Fourier transforms of d(x)


1101


and p(x)


1102


respectively. The Dammann spectrum {tilde over (D)}(f) consists of multiple equally spaced peaks of symmetric intensities, as previously shown in FIG.


8


B. The Fourier transform of p(x)


1102


is then a function that represents the asymmetric distorting effect of the split phases {tilde over (P)}(f), which multiplies {tilde over (D)}(f) to obtain the envelope of the multiple channel spectrum {tilde over (S)}(f).




The spectral distortion function {tilde over (P)}(f) is calculated using identities as follows.




 (½)(1+


e




iπ/2


)=


e




iπ/4


/{square root over (2)}




and






(½)(1−


e




iπ/2


)=


e




−iπ/4


/{square root over (2)}.






Hence,








{tilde over (P)}


(


f


)=(1/{square root over (2)}(


e




i(π/4−πΔx)




+e




−i(π/4−πΔxf)


)={square root over (2)} cos(πΔ


xf


−π/4).  (36)






Therefore, the spectral distortion function {tilde over (P)}(f) has width of about 1/Δx, where Δx is the longitudinal separation along the fiber core between the two split phase steps, proportional to the diffraction distance Δz from phase mask


101


to fiber core


102


. The larger the spacing between the phase mask and fiber, the longer the diffraction distance, the larger separation of the phase shifts and the narrower the bandwidth of the spectral distortion envelope {tilde over (P)}(f).




Importantly, according to Equation (36), envelope {tilde over (P)}(f) is shifted by or π/4 relative to the center of the undistorted Dammann spectral envelope {tilde over (D)}(f), causing asymmetry in the multi-channel spectrum, such that the larger the spacing Δz between phase mask


101


and fiber


102


, the more severe the asymmetry, as shown by experimental data in

FIGS. 9A-9D

.




Importantly, rigorous diffraction analysis shows that a phase shift on the phase mask is not simply replicated into the FBG, but is split into two equal phase shifts by the diffracted beam propagation. This observation explains the asymmetry of the Dammann sampling multiple channel spectral envelope, in agreement with experiment. This fundamental understanding of the FBG side-writing process can be applied to design of any phase mask which contains phase shifts.




According to embodiments of the present invention, a new phase mask, which generates multi-channel FBGs substantially free of asymmetry, is designed using a phase-only Dammann sampling function. Since a positive π/2 phase shift in the phase mask is split into two positive or π/2 phase shifts separated in the FBG by Δx, and because the total phase of the FBG index modulation is determined by the accumulation of these phase shifts, the desired Dammann sampling function, for example as shown in

FIG. 8A

, is distorted as shown in FIG.


11


. As a result, the consecutive phase shifts of positive π/2 introduce asymmetry in the reflection spectral envelope of the multiple channel FBG. To eliminate this asymmetry, the Dammann sampling function design is changed from the set of all positive π/2 phase shifts to a set of alternating positive π/2 and negative π/2 shifts. Ideally (if Δx=0) this does not alter the Dammann sampling function profile, but when Δx #


0


this changes the cumulative phase levels in the FBG from the asymmetric sequence [0, π/2, π, 3π/2, 2π] to the symmetric sequence [0, π/2, π, π/2, 0], where the first two phase levels are introduced by the +π/2 phase shift in phase mask


101


and the two last phase levels are introduced by the −π/2 phase shift in phase mask


101


, as depicted in FIG.


12


A. The alternation of phase shifts breaks the asymmetric phase structure in the FBG and thereby removes the associated asymmetry in the FBG spectrum.




A simulated thermal annealing nonlinear optimization procedure similar to that described in connection with

FIGS. 6A and 6B

is used to determine the positions of the phase shifts, taking into account the splitting of the shifts from diffraction effects.

FIGS. 12A-12B

represent graphically a design of phase-only Dammann sampling function


1201


according to embodiments of the present invention, which generates a nine-channel spectral envelope


1205


without asymmetry in the FBG. Sampling function


1201


contains symmetric π/2 phase shifts of width Δx, for example phase shifts which are associated with the fact that the ±π/2 phase shifts in the phase mask are split into two equal phase shifts in the FBG spaced by Δx.





FIGS. 12C and 12D

represent phase shifts


1211


-


1218


of the FBG sampling function in phase versus position and resulting multiple channel spectral amplitude envelope


1220


in arbitrary units for a 5 channel design using the alternating sign phase-shift embodiment.

FIG. 12E

displays an experimental result of an FBG made with this mask design. The spectrum shows five adjacent channels


1251


-


1255


of substantially equal measured reflectivity on a vertical reflectivity scale along the left-hand side of the diagram. The spectral asymmetry has been eliminated, and the 5 channels all have equal reflectivity. In

FIG. 12E

is also shown the measured group delay


1261


-


1265


in psec along the right-hand vertical scale for the respective five adjacent channels. Group delay, which determines FBG dispersive properties, is also substantially identical in the five channels, but is less sensitive than reflectivity to spectral asymmetry.




Referring again to

FIG. 1

, numerical analysis shows that the phase shift on the phase mask introduces two equal phase shifts, which are separated longitudinally by a distance Δx proportional to spacing Δz between phase mask


101


and fiber core


102


, as described by Equation (14). The actual optical field can be modeled as the Dammann sampling function being convolved by a distortion kernel. As a result, the Dammann multiple channels in the FBG reflection spectrum are modulated by a cosine envelope, as described in Equation (36), which is shifted by or π/4 phase from the center of the spectrum, resulting in the observed spectral asymmetry.




By this analysis the asymmetry is inherent to FBGs made using the contact side-writing method and a phase mask with discrete phase shifts.

FIG. 13

is a flow diagram depicting a mask design solution to the asymmetry problem, in accordance with embodiments of the present invention, in which sampling functions are designed taking into account the propagation and diffraction effects. In the design, a preliminary phase mask with discrete π/2 phase shifts, for example a Dammann grating sampling function, is generated at step


1301


. Then at step


1302


, the π/2 phase shifts are replaced with alternating +π/2 and −π/2 phase shift pairs. At step


1303


, each π/2 phase shift on the phase mask is replaced by a pair of two π/2 phase shifts in the FBG, which are separated by predetermined distance Δx according to effective phase mask-fiber core spacing Δz and Equation (14). Thus the sequence {+π/2, −π/2}, is replaced by the sequence {(+π/2,+π/2), (−π/2, −π/2)}.




At step


1304


, the positions of these ±π/2 phase shifts are optionally adjusted by an optimization procedure, for example by a simulated annealing (Dammann optimization) or other nonlinear optimization procedure as described above in connection with

FIGS. 6A and 6B

, and the location of each phase shift pair then determines the optimized position of the generating single phase shift on the masks, according to the spatial separation ±Δx/2 and Equation (14). That is, each pair of ±π/2 phase shifts in the FBG is generated by a single ±π/2 phase shift in the mask located longitudinally half-way between the two FBG shifts, which are separated by the distance Δx. Thus, in step


1305


the optimized FBG design will determine the position of the phase shifts on the mask, such that upon contact side writing of the FBG at the specified effective separation from the mask to the fiber core Δz, the split phase shifts will be located optimally at ±Δx/2 in the FBG relative to the longitudinal position of the corresponding mask phase shift, and the desired multiple channel reflection spectrum envelope will be obtained. That is, each pair of ±π/2 phase shifts in the FBG is replaced by a single ±π/2 phase shift in the mask located at the midpoint longitudinally between the corresponding pair of phase shifts in the FBG. Note that the above approach also enables designing and fabricating more sophisticated FBGs with arbitrary phase shifts, and continuous phase shifted FBGs, which may be approximated by a large number of small, discrete phase shifts.




In an alternative to embodiments of the present invention, an imaging system can project the near field into fiber core, substantially reducing the phase shift separation Δx near zero, thus widening the bandwidth of the envelope function and, thereby reducing any asymmetry. In this approach an uncompensated phase mask can be used. However, the approach is critically dependent on the fiber alignment and additionally introduces uncertainties relating to how precisely and stably phase shifts of the order of 0.25 μm can be imaged by existing imaging systems.




Although the present invention and its advantages have been described in detail, it should be understood that various changes, substitutions and alterations can be made herein without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention as defined by the appended claims. Moreover, the scope of the present application is not intended to be limited to the particular embodiments of the process, machine, manufacture, composition of matter, means, methods and steps described in the specification. As one of ordinary skill in the art will readily appreciate from the disclosure of the present invention, processes, machines, manufacture, compositions of matter, means, methods, or steps, presently existing or later to be developed that perform substantially the same function or achieve substantially the same result as the corresponding embodiments described herein may be utilized according to the present invention. Accordingly, the appended claims are intended to include within their scope such processes, machines, manufacture, compositions of matter, means, methods, or steps.



Claims
  • 1. A method of designing a pre-compensated phase mask for side-writing a fiber Bragg grating (FBG) on an optical fiber core, said method comprising the steps of:determining an effective spacing between said phase mask and said optical fiber core for said side-writing; and calculating a phase mask design, such that a desired FBG phase function is written on said fiber core by a pattern of light diffracting from said designed phase mask through said effective spacing, said designed phase mask being pre-compensated to offset diffraction effects associated with each longitudinal position on said FBG receiving light from two corresponding longitudinal positions on said phase mask, said two corresponding longitudinal positions on said phase mask being substantially symmetrically spaced longitudinally relative to each said longitudinal position on said FBG.
  • 2. The method of claim 1 wherein said two corresponding longitudinal positions on said phase mask are spaced longitudinally relative to each said longitudinal position on said FBG at a longitudinal shift determined by said effective spacing and a first order diffraction angle of light from said phase mask.
  • 3. The method of claim 1 wherein said desired FBG phase function produces a multi-channel reflectance spectra having an arbitrarily selectable set of channel amplitudes.
  • 4. The method of claim 3 wherein said multi-channel reflectance spectra contains a selectable plurality of channels having substantially uniform reflectance amplitudes.
  • 5. The method of claim 3 wherein said multi-channel reflectance spectra contains a selectable plurality of channels having substantially zero reflectance amplitudes.
  • 6. The method of claim 1, further comprising the step of generating said desired FBG phase function.
  • 7. The method of claim 1 wherein the phase at said each longitudinal position on said FBG is substantially the sum of phases at said two corresponding longitudinal positions on said phase mask being substantially symmetrically spaced longitudinally relative to each said longitudinal position on said FBG.
  • 8. The method of claim 6 wherein said step of calculating further comprises the steps of:performing a Fourier transform of said desired FBG phase function, said Fourier transform having spatial frequency components; multiplying each said spatial frequency component of said Fourier transform by a predetermined transfer function to obtain a phase mask phase function spectrum for said pre-compensated phase mask; and performing an inverse Fourier transform of said phase mask phase function spectrum to obtain said designed pre-compensated phase mask phase function.
  • 9. The method of claim 8 wherein said step of multiplying by said predetermined transfer function increases high spatial frequency components of said Fourier transform relative to low spatial frequency components of said Fourier transform.
  • 10. The method of claim 9 wherein said predetermined transfer function has an inverse cosine spatial frequency dependence.
  • 11. The method of claim 10 wherein said spatial frequency components are limited to frequencies appreciably below those at which said predetermined transfer function has a singularity.
  • 12. The method of claim 10 wherein said spatial frequency components include frequencies appreciably above and below those at which said predetermined transfer function has a singularity and are limited to exclude only frequencies closely adjacent those frequencies at which said predetermined transfer function has a singularity.
  • 13. The method of claim 6 wherein said desired FBG phase function is generated in the form of a truncated Fourier series expansion having a preselected number of terms and representing a preselected number of spatial frequency components.
  • 14. The method of claim 13 wherein each said term of said truncated Fourier series expansion contains at least one free parameter.
  • 15. The method of claim 14 wherein each said term of said truncated Fourier series expansion contains two free parameters.
  • 16. The method of claim 14 further comprising the steps of:applying an optimization algorithm to said truncated Fourier series expansion to evaluate said at least one free parameter, such that said truncated Fourier series expansion is optimized; evaluating said truncated Fourier series expansion for the value of said at least one free parameter that results from applying said optimization algorithm; and multiplying each term of said evaluated truncated Fourier series expansion by a predetermined transfer function to obtain an optimized phase function for said pre-compensated phase mask.
  • 17. The method of claim 16 wherein said step of multiplying by said predetermined transfer function increases high spatial frequency components of said truncated Fourier series expansion relative to low spatial frequency components of said truncated Fourier series expansion.
  • 18. The method of claim 17 wherein said predetermined transfer function has an inverse cosine spatial frequency dependence.
  • 19. The method of claim 16 further comprising the step of varying said preselected number of terms of said truncated Fourier series expansion.
  • 20. The method of claim 16 wherein said optimization algorithm is a nonlinear optimization procedure.
  • 21. The method of claim 20 wherein said nonlinear optimization procedure is selected from the group consisting of simulated thermal annealing nonlinear optimization procedures, simplex method, Powell's method, conjugate gradient method, variable metric method, linear programming methods, and Dammann optimization procedures.
  • 22. The method of claim 1 further comprising the steps of:generating an initial mask phase function in the form of a truncated Fourier series expansion having a preselected number of terms containing at least one free parameter and representing at least one spatial frequency component; calculating an initial FBG index variation from the intensity of said pattern of light diffracted from said designed phase mask; performing a transform of said FBG index variation to obtain an initial spectral reflectivity envelope; and applying an optimization algorithm to said transformed FBG index variation to evaluate said at least one free parameter, such that said FBG spectral reflectivity envelope is optimized.
  • 23. The method of claim 22 wherein said step of calculating is performed using a procedure selected from the group consisting of angular plane wave spectrum, scalar diffraction, and finite difference in time domain vector diffraction.
  • 24. The method of claim 22 wherein said step of performing a transform is performed using a procedure selected from the group consisting of Fourier transforms and transfer matrices.
  • 25. The method of claim 22 wherein said optimization algorithm is a nonlinear optimization procedure.
  • 26. The method of claim 25 wherein said nonlinear optimization procedure is selected from the group consisting of simulated thermal annealing nonlinear optimization procedures, simplex method, Powell's method, conjugate gradient method, variable metric method, linear programming methods, and Dammann optimization procedures.
  • 27. The method of claim 2 wherein said step of calculating further comprises the step of generating said desired FBG phase function, wherein a preliminary phase mask design includes at least one discontinuous π/2 phase shift.
  • 28. The method of claim 27 wherein said step of calculating further comprises:replacing each of said at least one discontinuous π/2 phase shift in said phase mask design with a pair of π/2 phase shifts in said FBG design, said pair of π/2 phase shifts having a longitudinal separation equal to said longitudinal shift; replacing consecutive +π/2 phase shift pairs in said FBG design with alternating +π/2 and −π/2 phase shift pairs in said FBG design; and generating a channel spectrum of said desired FBG phase function incorporating said replacement phase shift pairs.
  • 29. The method of claim 28 further comprising the step of applying an optimization algorithm to said channel spectrum to determine the optimum longitudinal positioning of said replacement phase shift pairs, such that said longitudinal separation between said phase shifts within a pair is maintained and such that said channel spectrum is optimized.
  • 30. The method of claim 29 further comprising the step of calculating said designed mask phase function from the location of said ±π/2 phase shift pairs of said optimized FBG phase function, such that each said ±π/2 FBG phase shift pair having said longitudinal separation is incorporated in said designed mask phase function as a single ±π/2 phase shift, said single ±π/2 phase shift being located symmetrically half-way between said paired ±π/2 FBG phase shifts.
  • 31. The method of claim 30 wherein said optimization algorithm is a nonlinear optimization procedure.
  • 32. The method of claim 31 wherein said nonlinear optimization procedure is selected from the group consisting of simulated thermal annealing nonlinear optimization procedures, simplex method, Powell's method, conjugate gradient method, variable metric method, linear programming methods, and Dammann optimization procedures.
  • 33. A phase mask operable to side-write a fiber Bragg grating (FBG) on an optical fiber core by a pattern of light diffracting from said phase mask through an effective spacing to said fiber core, said phase mask being pre-compensated to offset diffraction effects associated with each longitudinal position of said FBG receiving said light in said pattern from two corresponding positions of said phase mask, said two corresponding longitudinal positions of said phase mask being substantially symmetrically spaced longitudinally relative to each said longitudinal position of said FBG, wherein said FBG is operable to generate a channel spectrum.
  • 34. The phase mask of claim 33 wherein said pre-compensation includes increasing high spatial frequency components relative to low spatial frequency components in the phase function of said phase mask using a predetermined transfer function.
  • 35. The phase mask of claim 34 wherein said predetermined transfer function has an inverse cosine spatial frequency dependence.
  • 36. The phase mask of claim 35 wherein said spatial frequency components in said predetermined transfer function are limited to frequencies appreciably below those at which said predetermined transfer function has a singularity.
  • 37. The phase mask of claim 35 wherein said spatial frequency components in said predetermined transfer function include frequencies appreciably above and below those at which said predetermined transfer function has a singularity and are limited to exclude only frequencies closely adjacent those frequencies at which said predetermined transfer function has a singularity.
  • 38. The phase mask of claim 33 wherein said two corresponding longitudinal positions of said phase mask are spaced longitudinally relative to each said longitudinal position of said FBG with a longitudinal spacing determined by said effective spacing and by a first order diffraction angle of light through said phase mask.
  • 39. The phase mask of claim 38 wherein a preliminary design of said phase mask comprises at least one discontinuous π/2 phase shift.
  • 40. The phase mask of claim 39 wherein said at least one discontinuous π/2 phase shift in said preliminary phase mask design is replaced in said FBG with a π/2 phase shift pair, each said π/2 phase shift pair maintaining a longitudinal separation equal to said longitudinal shift, and wherein consecutive +π/2 phase shift pairs are replaced with alternating +π/2 and −π/2 phase shift pairs.
  • 41. The phase mask of claim 40 wherein the longitudinal positioning of said replacement phase shifts is optimized, such that said channel spectrum is optimized.
  • 42. The phase mask of claim 41 wherein each of said optimized ±π/2 FBG phase shift pairs separated by said longitudinal shift is incorporated in said phase mask phase function as a single ±π/2 phase shift, said π/2 phase shift in said phase mask located symmetrically half-way between said pair of said ±π/2 FBG phase shifts.
  • 43. The phase mask of claim 33 further operable to generate a multi-channel FBG reflectance spectra.
  • 44. A method of side-writing a fiber Bragg grating (FBG) on an optical fiber core, said method comprising the steps of:positioning a phase mask substantially parallel to and at an effective spacing relative to said optical fiber core; and diffracting light from said phase mask through said effective spacing to said optical fiber core to create a desired FBG phase function, such that each longitudinal position of said fiber core receives light from two corresponding longitudinal positions of said phase mask, said two corresponding positions of said phase mask being substantially symmetrically spaced longitudinally relative to each said longitudinal position of said fiber core, said phase mask being pre-compensated to offset diffraction effects associated with each longitudinal position of said FBG receiving said light in said pattern from two corresponding longitudinal positions of said phase mask, said two corresponding longitudinal positions of said phase mask being substantially symmetrically spaced longitudinally relative to each said longitudinal position of said fiber core.
  • 45. The method of claim 44 wherein said two corresponding longitudinal positions of said phase mask are spaced longitudinally relative to each said longitudinal position of said FBG with a longitudinal shift determined by said effective spacing and a first order diffraction angle of light from said phase mask.
  • 46. The method of claim 44 wherein said desired FBG phase function produces a multi-channel reflectance spectra having an arbitrarily selectable set of channel amplitudes.
  • 47. The method of claim 46 wherein said multi-channel reflectance spectra contains a selectable plurality of channels having substantially uniform reflectance amplitudes.
  • 48. The method of claim 46 wherein said multi-channel reflectance spectra contains a selectable plurality of channels having substantially zero reflectance amplitudes.
  • 49. The method of claim 44 wherein the phase at said each longitudinal position on said FBG is substantially the sum of phases at said two corresponding longitudinal positions on said phase mask being substantially symmetrically spaced longitudinally relative to each said longitudinal position on said FBG.
  • 50. The method of claim 44 wherein said pre-compensating of said phase mask comprises the steps of:performing a Fourier transform of said desired FBG phase function; multiplying each spatial frequency component of said Fourier transform by a predetermined transfer function to obtain a spectrum of phase mask phase function for said pre-compensated phase mask; and performing an inverse Fourier transform of said phase mask phase function spectrum to obtain said pre-compensated phase mask phase function design.
  • 51. The method of claim 50 wherein said step of multiplying by said predetermined transfer function increases high spatial frequency components of said Fourier transform relative to low spatial frequency components of said Fourier transform.
  • 52. The method of claim 51 wherein said predetermined transfer function has an inverse cosine spatial frequency dependence.
  • 53. The method of claim 52 wherein said spatial frequency components are limited to frequencies appreciably below those at which said predetermined transfer function has a singularity.
  • 54. The method of claim 52 wherein said spatial frequency components include frequencies appreciably above and below those at which said predetermined transfer function has a singularity and are limited to exclude only frequencies closely adjacent those frequencies at which said predetermined transfer function has a singularity.
  • 55. The method of claim 44 wherein said desired phase function is generated in the form of a truncated Fourier series expansion having a preselected number of terms.
  • 56. The method of claim 55 wherein each term of said truncated Fourier series expansion contains at least one free parameter.
  • 57. The method of claim 56 wherein each said term of said truncated Fourier series expansion contains two free parameters.
  • 58. The method of claim 56 further comprising the steps of:performing a Fourier transform of said truncated Fourier series expansion to generate a channel spectrum, said channel spectrum containing a plurality of free parameters; applying an optimization algorithm to said channel spectrum to evaluate said plurality of free parameters, such that said channel spectrum is optimized; evaluating said truncated Fourier series expansion for values of said plurality of free parameters that result from applying said optimization algorithm; and multiplying each term of said evaluated Fourier series expansion by a predetermined transfer function to obtain an optimized phase function for said pre-compensated phase mask.
  • 59. The method of claim 58 wherein said step of multiplying by said predetermined transfer function increases high spatial frequency components of said truncated Fourier series expansion relative to low spatial frequency components of said evaluated Fourier series expansion.
  • 60. The method of claim 59 wherein said predetermined transfer function has an inverse cosine spatial frequency dependence.
  • 61. The method of claim 58 further comprising the step of varying said preselected number of terms of said truncated Fourier series expansion.
  • 62. The method of claim 58 wherein said optimization algorithm is a nonlinear optimization procedure.
  • 63. The method of claim 62 wherein said nonlinear optimization procedure is selected from the group consisting of simulated thermal annealing nonlinear optimization procedures, simplex method, Powell's method, conjugate gradient method, variable metric method, linear programming methods, and Dammann optimization procedures.
  • 64. The method of claim 45 wherein said desired FBG phase function is calculated from a preliminary phase mask design that includes at least one discontinuous π/2 phase shift.
  • 65. The method of claim 64 further comprising the steps of:replacing each of said at least one discontinuous π/2 phase shift in said preliminary phase mask design with two π/2 phase shifts in said FBG design, with said two π/2 phase shifts having a longitudinal separation equal to said longitudinal shift; replacing consecutive +π/2 phase shift pairs in said FBG design with alternating +π/2 and −π/2 phase shift pairs in said FBG design; generating a channel spectrum of said desired FBG phase function incorporating said replacement phase shift pairs; and applying an optimization algorithm to said channel spectrum to determine the longitudinal positioning of said replacement phase shift pairs, such that said longitudinal separation between said phase shifts within said phase shift pair is maintained and such that said channel spectrum is optimized.
  • 66. The method of claim 65 further comprising the step of calculating said designed mask phase function from the location of said ±π/2 phase shift pairs of said optimized FBG phase function, such that each said ±π/2 FBG phase shift pair having said longitudinal separation between said phase shifts within said pair is incorporated in said designed mask phase function as a single ±π/2 phase shift, said single ±n/2 phase shift being located symmetrically half-way between said paired ±π/2 FBG phase shifts.
  • 67. The method of claim 65 wherein said optimization algorithm is a nonlinear optimization procedure.
  • 68. The method of claim 67 wherein said nonlinear optimization procedure is selected from the group consisting of simulated thermal annealing nonlinear optimization procedures, simplex method, Powell's method, conjugate gradient method, variable metric method, linear programming methods, and Dammann optimization procedures.
  • 69. The method of claim 44 wherein said pre-compensating of said phase mask comprises the steps of:generating an initial mask phase function in the form of a truncated Fourier series expansion having a preselected number of terms containing at least one free parameter and representing at least one spatial frequency component; calculating an initial FBG index variation from the diffracted intensity of said phase mask; performing a transform of said FBG index variation to obtain a spectral reflectivity envelope; and applying an optimization algorithm to said transformed FBG index variation to evaluate said at least one free parameter, such that said FBG spectral reflectivity envelope is optimized.
  • 70. The method of claim 69 wherein said step of calculating is performed using a procedure selected from the group consisting of angular plane wave spectrum, scalar diffraction, and finite difference in time domain vector diffraction.
  • 71. The method of claim 69 wherein said step of performing a transform is performed using a procedure selected from the group consisting of Fourier transforms and transfer matrices.
  • 72. The method of claim 69 wherein said optimization algorithm is a nonlinear optimization procedure.
  • 73. The method of claim 72 wherein said nonlinear optimization procedure is selected from the group consisting of simulated thermal annealing nonlinear optimization procedures, simplex method, Powell's method, conjugate gradient method, variable metric method, linear programming methods, and Dammann optimization procedures.
CROSS-REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS

The present application is related to commonly assigned U.S. patent application Ser. No. 09/757,386, entitled “Efficient Sampled Gratings for WDM Aplications,” filed Jan. 8, 2001, the disclosure of which is hereby incorporated herein by reference.

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