The present invention relates to the field of optical fiber amplifiers and lasers.
The problem of coupling multimode radiation (such as pump radiation) into double clad optical fiber amplifiers or lasers becomes of increasing significance with demands for increased output power. There are at present several techniques for coupling of radiation into a double clad fiber. These include tapered bundles in which a central fiber and multiple surrounding fibers are tapered down to a single port which is butt-coupled to a double clad fiber of the same diameter. The central fiber can be a single mode fiber that can serve as a seed source in an amplifier configuration, or all fibers might carry pump light used to pump the gain fiber. These tapered-bundle devices can be placed at intervals along the gain fiber for increased power.
Another technique employs “notches” on the double clad fiber so that external diode radiation can be sent into the double clad fiber core from the side via the notches. Another technique is a side coupling technique developed by IPG Photonics. In this case the fiber connected diode outputs are tapered and fused around the double clad fiber so that light is efficiently coupled into the first cladding. Yet another technique has been proposed as the LG Wave Technique of University of Southampton. In this, technique, preforms of individual double clad fibers and diode-pump fibers are drawn together in a large number of configurations such that the pump light can ultimately be transferred into the first cladding of the double clad fibers.
In U.S. Pat. No. 6,826,335 of Grudinin et al., an optical fiber arrangement has at least two optical fiber sections, each optical fiber section defining an outside longitudinally extending surface. The outside longitudinally extending surfaces are in optical contact with each other. An amplifying optical device has such an optical fiber arrangement and a pump source, and is configured such that the pump source illuminates the amplifying optical fiber. An amplifying optical device comprises a plurality of pump optical fibers 221 and a plurality of amplifying optical fibers 222, in which at least one end of the pump optical fibers 221 are connected to a pump source 302 supplying pump energy, and in which the optical fiber arrangement 70 is configured such that a portion of the optical energy guided by each of the pump optical fibers 221 is coupled into at least one of the amplifying optical fibers 222, and in which at least two amplifying optical fibers 222 are connected together.
An apparatus that may be used as part of an optical amplifier or laser includes a pump fiber that carries pump light from a pump source and a gain fiber which includes a number of coils arranged with the pump fiber to form a pump coupler for coupling the pump light into the gain fiber. Specifically, the pump coupler includes (i) a coupling section of the pump fiber, (ii) a coupling section of each of the coils of the gain fiber immediately adjacent to the coupling section of the pump fiber, (iii) an index-matching material disposed between the coupling section of the pump fiber and the coupling sections of the gain fiber to provide a high degree of coupling of the pump light from the coupling section of the pump fiber to the coupling sections of the gain fiber, and (iv) a low-index material at outward-facing surfaces of the coupling sections of the gain fiber. The coupling sections of the pump fiber and of the coils of the gain fiber along with the index-matching material form a waveguide exhibiting an oscillating characteristic of coupling efficiency versus coupling length. The lengths of the coupling sections are selected to correspond to a selected maximum of the oscillating characteristic for high-efficiency coupling of the pump light from the pump fiber to the gain fiber in the pump coupler. Alternative embodiments exhibiting different ways of realizing the pump coupler are disclosed.
The foregoing and other objects, features and advantages will be apparent from the following description of particular embodiments of the invention, as illustrated in the accompanying drawings in which like reference characters refer to the same parts throughout the different views. The drawings are not necessarily to scale, emphasis instead being placed upon illustrating the principles of various embodiments of the invention.
a) is a diagram of a 7×7 optical coupler that can be used to realize a pump coupler in the fiber laser of
b) is a diagram showing how the 7×7 coupler of
The arrangement in
It will also be appreciated that the fibers 30 and 32 of
It will be observed that each of the outer fiber sections 36-1 through 36-3 and 36-5 through 36-7 has a core 44 surrounded by a cladding 46. In the embodiment of
With the exception of the cores 44, the fibers 36 and index-matching material 38 have substantially the same index of refraction. Thus, the illustrated arrangement can be modeled, in the lowest order, as a cylinder in which radiation is injected in a central region. Simulation software can be used to calculate the distance required for the radiation to couple radially from the central region (corresponding to the inner fiber section 36-4) to the outer region (corresponding to the outer fiber sections 36-1 through 36-3 and 36-5 through 36-7). Calculations show that at about 5 cm (for a typical case), approximately 90% of the centrally injected radiation has been coupled to the outer region. Since the path of the single mode core is a helix passing through the coupler 18 multiple times, pump radiation is being introduced in a more distributed manner along the gain fiber 10, which can serve to mitigate thermal problems.
In applications of fiber amplifiers and fiber lasers which involve end-coupling of pump light from a pump fiber into a gain fiber, one concern is to protect the pump diodes in the pump source from back-coupled optical radiation from the gain fiber. Pump diodes are expensive and can be damaged at high power levels. It is known to use separate optical isolators disposed between the pump diodes and the gain fiber to provide the desired protection, but such isolators add to the cost of the system. In the arrangement described herein, the signal radiation developed in the core of the gain fiber 10 is inherently isolated from the pump fiber leading to the pump diodes, so there is little or no possibility of diode damage. As an added measure, it may be desirable to employ a special fiber as the pump fiber, one that is transmissive at the wavelength of the pump light and absorptive at the wavelength of the laser or amplifier light. For example, the pump fiber may a samarium-doped (Sm-doped) glass fiber that transmits at a pump wavelength of 980 nm. and absorbs at a lasing wavelength of 1060 nm.
While various embodiments of the invention have been particularly shown and described, it will be understood by those skilled in the art that various changes in form and details may be made therein without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention as defined by the appended claims. For example, the pump coupler is disclosed as part of a laser which serves as the source of an emitted optical signal, but in alternative embodiments the pump coupler may form part of an optical amplifier that amplifies a separately generated optical signal. Although in the illustrated embodiment there is shown a central fiber surrounded by six fibers of the same diameter, the disclosed technique applies to systems in which the central pump fiber has a different diameter from the coiled gain fiber. There may be a different number of outer fiber sections in the coupler (and thus a different number of coils of the gain fiber) in alternative embodiments, and this number might be influenced in part based on the ratio of the diameter of the central pump fiber to the diameters of the outer pump fibers.
In another aspect, the index-matching material 38 may be an optical epoxy. Alternatively, the index-matching material may actually be the material of the cladding 46 (
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/US07/15978 | 7/13/2007 | WO | 00 | 1/13/2009 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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60830901 | Jul 2006 | US |