The present invention is directed to an optical device having an optical fiber and more particularly to such a device in which the fiber is heated and drawn to control at least one of loss, gain, dispersion and nonlinearity. The invention is further directed to a method of making such a fiber.
It is well known that optical fibers can be heated and drawn down to sizes much smaller than a typical single-mode fiber. Heating techniques using an electric arc, flame, and CO2 laser absorption have all been shown.
A system for carrying out the CO2 laser absorption technique is shown in
As shown in
In the taper regions 304, coupling can be lost. Also, in the long-wavelength band (near 1550 nm) where telecommunication is normally carried out, dispersion is anomalous, leading to soliton formation. In a conventional doped optical fiber laser, complex external optical elements are needed to compensate for the normal dispersion of the fiber, thus increasing the size, expense, and complexity of the system. Fiber lasers can be built using separate gain, dispersion and mode-locking elements. It would be desirable to simplify these laser designs by integrating these functions together.
It will be seen from the above that a need exists in the art for a technique to taper the fiber such that it has the requisite properties regarding loss, gain, dispersion, nonlinearity, or any combination thereof.
It is thus an object of the invention to taper the fiber so that the fiber has the desired dispersion properties and so that external dispersion-correcting elements are not needed.
It is a further object of the invention to taper the fiber to minimize coupling loss in the transition zones.
It is yet a further object of the invention to taper the fiber to cause the fiber to be highly nonlinear.
It is a still further object of the invention to use such a fiber in an optical device that achieves ultrashort pulse generation.
To achieve the above and other objects, the present invention is directed to a method of tapering the fiber in which the formation of the transition regions and of the taper waist is controlled to achieve the desired effects. To minimize loss, the tapering in the transition regions must be adiabatic. That is, the rate of change of the fiber diameter in the axial direction must be small enough that the energy of existing modes is reflected back as little as possible and is coupled as little as possible into other order modes. The criterion for adiabaticity is that the taper angle in the transition regions, namely, the angle between the direction of propagation and the outer surface of each transition region, must be less than the local diffraction angle. To achieve the desired dispersion property, the diameter of the taper waist is selected such that the total dispersion (normal plus anomalous) at a desired wavelength is either zero or the appropriate value for providing zero overall dispersion in the device in which the fiber will be used.
The coefficient of nonlinearity varies inversely with the effective area of the fiber. Thus, a large decrease in the effective area provides high nonlinearity. Experiments have confirmed that the nonlinearity is increased by a factor of approximately twenty relative to a non-tapered fiber.
An important application of the present invention is the use of these tapered structures with doped optical fiber to enable a new class of compact, inexpensive modelocked fiber lasers. In a conventional doped optical fiber laser, complex external optical elements are needed to compensate for the normal dispersion of the fiber. In one variation of the present invention, tapered structures are built into the doped fiber itself, with the taper chosen for optimal net “anomalous” to compensate for the “normal” dispersion of the fiber. This will provide for stable modelocking at a lasing wavelength to create a simple, compact light source, with the loss in the fiber lower than the gain of the laser. A mode-locking device can be introduced into the cavity to cause the formation of short pulses. If a doped PM (polarizing maintaining) fiber is tapered, one can create a PM mode-locked fiber laser. That design offers an advantage over alternative solutions such as intra-cavity prism pairs, because it is an integrated structure which can be fusion spliced at both ends.
The concept can also be applied in an optical amplifier, in which the doped fiber is tapered to provide the dispersion compensation and the laser is pumped in an un-tapered region of the fiber or by using pump light from each end. Such a dispersion-compensated optical amplifier has been reduced to practice using Yb:FIBER with untapered gain of 40 db/m from INO.
Secondary applications of the general concept of a tapered structure in un-doped single mode optical fiber include:
The concept has been experimentally verified. In a demonstration device, the loss was as low as 2.3 db.
A benefit from the present invention for dispersion compensation in a doped fiber laser is to replace external optics (typically a pair of diffraction gratings), which would be required for a conventional fiber laser. The laser then becomes much more compact and inexpensive by eliminating the large components and the labor required to align them. A significant cost reduction should be expected. Ultra short optical pulses (<1 pico-second) are being used to cut metals, transparent solids and biological tissue, to fabricate structures by absorption in photopolymers, and importantly to repair lithographic masks in semiconductor manufacturing. If the costs can be reduced, femtosecond lasers could compete with other methods of micro- and nanofabrication, because of improved hole size, reduced heat affected zone and precision.
The following publications relate to the invention and are hereby incorporated by reference in their entireties into the present disclosure:
A preferred embodiment of the present invention will be set forth with reference to the drawings, in which:
A preferred embodiment and variations thereon will be disclosed in detail with reference to the drawings, in which like reference numerals refer to like elements or steps throughout.
The design parameters distinguishing the fiber 400 of
Each transition region 404 has a taper angle Θtaper, which is defined as the angle between the outer surface 408 of the transition region 404 and the propagation direction P in the fiber. As noted above, the tapering of the transition regions 404 is adiabatic. Adiabaticity is obtained when the change of fiber diameter is slow enough in the axial direction so that the energy of existing modes reflected back is minimized and is coupled as little as possible to other order modes. The criterion for adiabaticity is that the taper angle must be less than the angle of diffraction, Θtaper<Θdiff. The angle of diffraction Θdiff is given by
where λ is the wavelength of the laser light and d is the diameter of the mode size inside the fiber. In order to realize adiabatic tapering, the tapering angle should be much smaller than the diffraction angle.
The relevance of the diameter D to dispersion will be explained with reference to
where:
κ2+γ2=(n12−n22)k02 (3)
The second derivative of β is the group velocity dispersion β2.
The results of such dispersion calculations for two fiber diameters are shown in
From a set of dispersion curves such as those of
Another significant result of creating a tapered region or regions within a fiber device is to increase the effective nonlinearity. The degree of that increase can be determined from the nonlinearity coefficient, which is
γ=n2ωo/CAeff, (5)
where Aeff, the effective area decrease, is large in these tapered fibers. While nonlinearity is about 4 (1/W*km) in ordinary 125 μm fiber, in a tapered fiber of 2.7 μm diameter, γ is 80 (1/W*km). Thus, non-linearity is increased by about a factor of 20.
Some applications of the fiber tapered in accordance with the preferred embodiment will now be disclosed.
The dispersion compensators 704 can be passive optical elements. Alternatively, as explained below, the dispersion compensators 704 can be made from doped optical fibers and can be pumped to operate as active optical elements such as amplifiers or lasers.
The dispersion compensator 704 compensates for dispersion in other elements, including the gain fiber 804. The loss caused by the taper is lower than the gain from the gain fiber. A mode-locking device (not shown) can be introduced into the laser cavity 814 to form short pulses.
Thus, traditional dispersion compensation elements, such as pairs of prisms or of diffraction gratings inside the laser cavity, are not required. Thus, the laser 800 offers advantages in terms of reduced complexity, size and cost. Also, since the laser 800 is an integrated device and can be fusion-spliced at both ends, it exhibits very low PMD and PDL.
Alternatively, the tapered optical fiber 400 of
In the generic fiber optic system 700 of
A tapered doped fiber has a large absorption band or bands. The advantages of tapering a doped optical fiber were not realized until the present invention.
Furthermore, the laser 800 of
Still other modifications can be implemented. For example, the fiber 400 of
The present invention has particular utility in achieving ultrashort pulse generation. In a system such as that of
Yet another utility of a system such as that of
In the art, the use of tapered optical fibers has introduced losses into optical logic elements. In particular, in a cascaded optical logic element, such losses are also cascaded. Thus, the overall loss may well be excessive.
The present invention allows a solution to that problem. The tapered optical fibers of the present invention permit loss to be minimized. If the optical fibers are doped and pumped, they can cause a gain that cancels out the loss or even exceeds the loss to permit a net gain.
While a preferred embodiment of the present invention and certain variations and uses thereof have been set forth in detail above, those skilled in the art who have reviewed the present disclosure will readily appreciate that other embodiments can be realized within the scope of the present invention. For example, numerical examples are illustrative rather than limiting, as are examples of specific materials. Also, any suitable technique for tapering the fiber can be used, provided that it can be controlled to achieve the desired parameters for the tapered fiber. Therefore, the present invention should be construed as limited only by the appended claims.
The present application claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 60/516;299, filed Nov. 3, 2003, whose disclosure is hereby incorporated by reference in its entirety into the present disclosure.
Number | Date | Country | |
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60516299 | Nov 2003 | US |