The invention is related to the field of systems employing optical fibers, including optical communications, optical lasers, and non-linear optical devices for example.
An optical fiber system is disclosed that exploits a principle of topological confinement for guided higher-order modes, in contrast to more conventional total-internal-reflection (TIR) confinement. The optical fiber has a geometry and index profile defining a cutoff wavelength for a predetermined L-mode of optical signal propagation in the optical fiber, where L is azimuthal mode index. An optical source subsystem is coupled to the optical fiber to establish an optical signal propagating in the optical fiber, wherein the optical signal has the predetermined L-mode and a wavelength being either (1) at least 15% above the cutoff wavelength such that the optical beam propagates as a topologically confined mode, or (2) sufficiently above the cutoff wavelength that, based on the L-mode of the optical beam, the optical beam propagates as a topologically confined mode having propagation loss less than 3 dB/meter.
One particular use of the disclosed technique is in systems such as multiplexed communications that can use distinct modes as corresponding channels. The disclosed technique can be used in a manner to exploit a feature termed “frustrated coupling” to reduce cross-channel coupling and distortion. In these systems, the optical source subsystem is configured to generate a plurality of optical beams having corresponding (L, m) modes at corresponding beam wavelengths and direct the optical beams into the optical fiber to propagate as topologically confined modes, where m is radial mode index. The beam wavelengths and L values of the (L, m) modes are selected to result in frustrated coupling between the (L, m) modes and the other-m modes, with correspondingly low mode-mixing distortion.
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.
Brief Overview
Systems and apparatus are disclosed in which light is guided in higher azimuthal order (L) modes with negligible loss over 10s of meters to km lengths of fiber at wavelengths 100 to 200 nm past their cutoff wavelengths (the wavelength at which no light guidance is conventionally assumed to be possible). The attenuation of cutoff modes decreases dramatically with mode order L. This topological protection effect points to exciting new approaches for the fiber design of device and short-haul communications length applications, both for achieving desired nonlinear and dispersive properties, as well as for scaling mode count for applications such as multiplexed communications or increasing the security or dimensionality of quantum links.
1. Topological Confinement and TCMs
Background—TIR in Planar Waveguide
Convention waveguiding is based on total internal reflection (TIR) as well-known knowledge. The incident angle needs to be smaller than the TIR critical angle for the light to be bound and guided, otherwise the light would leak out. Instead of the analysis of the incident angle, the waveguiding can be understood easier with the help of k-vector and effective index.
where λ is the free-space wavelength of the light.
As shown in
Skew Rays, Mode Indices and TCM
The transverse k-vector kT in skew rays are not pointed only in the radial direction, but they can be decomposed into azimuthal and radial k-vectors, kφ and kr. The components exhibit respective mode orders with indices L, m respectively.
This effect can be understood by considering the kT distribution of modes. Generally, higher L makes kT to be more azimuthally oriented (large kφ), leading to higher confinement even beyond cutoff, resembling whispering gallery modes with light only slowly escaping into the cladding. In contrast, larger kr leads to higher loss, causing light to radially escape, similar to the effect of higher kT in planar waveguides. As shown in the second row of modes below the silica line in
Centrifugal Barrier
Where the angular effective index profile is
For L>0, the angular effective index profile is not step-shaped anymore; rather it comprises a trench (as an inverted barrier) depending on L. For example, in a step index fiber with Δn=0.14 and radius 1.4 um, the angular effective index profiles of L=0, L=1 and L=2 are shown in
2. Attenuation (Loss) for Different Modes (L, m)
This section assumes a particular example fiber, namely a ring-core fiber with outer ring radius ˜15 urn, referred to herein as “Gen5 A3” fiber.
While
Such L-dependent loss points to a new rule of scaling the mode count just by enlarging the fiber size. As seen in
The loss criteria one would use to designate a mode as being useful depends on the length scale of the application of interest. For example, a loss of ˜0.1 dB/m is required for meter-length fiber devices (switches, network nodes, amplifiers, lasers). For longer length scale applications in data communications (˜1 km), lower loss values, such as ˜1 dB/km, may be required. For even longer length scales, like metro lengths (˜100 km) and long haul (˜1000 km), the theoretical loss should be at least lower than the material transmission loss in single-mode fiber of around 0.15 dB/km.
Specifically, if 0.1 dB/m is set as the loss criteria then the number of such modes that are topologically confined but not conventionally known to exist, can be compared for the different fibers illustrated in
3. Frustrated Coupling
In a multi-mode application such as multi-channel telecommunications transmission, mode mixing needs to be avoided to prevent information channels from mixing. Although all modes with different L, m and polarizations are orthogonal with each other, they can couple in the presence of fiber bends and perturbations, which exist in any realistic system. Literature is replete with teachings on how to reduce this mode coupling by fiber design. Commonly known techniques include propagating in high m but L=0 modes, which works for lengths up to 10s of meters of fiber, but only when the fiber is handled rather gently. Alternatively, a class of ring-core fibers have shown to decrease coupling between SOa and SOaa modes having the same L. In yet another embodiment, elliptical core fibers are designed to alleviate mode coupling between select polarization-diverse modes. In all such designs, mode coupling is alleviated by lifting the neff splitting between the relevant modes. In general, in the context of scaling mode counts for telecommunications, it is desirable to operate with a modes of different azimuthal order L but with radial order m=1, because they are generally more stable in an ensemble of modes. However, these modes may be accidentally degenerate—i.e., they may share their neff with modes with m>1 (and if different or the same L) in given wavelength ranges. When this happens, strong mode coupling results, since it is well known that modes of similar or same neff tend to couple in a fiber.
Such accidental degeneracy is very dependent on the specific refractive index profile of fibers and the crossing wavelength (i.e., wavelength at which modes with m=1 and m>1 share neff) can be very sensitive to slight changes of the index profile. A known approach to avoid such accidental degeneracy is by carefully tuning the fiber parameters (ring radius, thickness and refractive index) to move such crossing points away from the desired range of operation, commonly the so-called C-band (1530 nm˜1565 nm) in telecommunications. However, this can be very hard to achieve for a lot of modes simultaneously.
As mentioned in the context of
The output of L=33 SOa not only shows the typical image distortion (resulting from inference between it and the corresponding high-m modes), but also has extra loss at the mode coupling wavelength. It is due to the high loss of corresponding high-m modes. The output of L=35 SOa also shows image distortion and extra loss at the mode coupling point, while the extra loss is much larger compared with that of L=33 SOa. The output of L=35 SOaa also has extra loss at the mode coupling wavelength, while there is no image distortion anymore. The output of L=37 SOa shows similar phenomenon as L=35 SOa while the extra loss is lower.
An extinction ratio can be defined as the loss at the mode-crossing wavelength that is in excess of the loss that is otherwise experienced by the mode. The following table lists the extinction ratios for the modes illustrated in
The highest extinction ratio for L=35 SOa modes is due to reasonably high mode coupling ratio and high loss of high-m modes. Notwithstanding the limited data above, it can be assumed that the extinction ratio continues to decrease from 6.7 dB (L=35 SOaa) and 4.0 dB (L=37 SOaa) to a very small value, where such mode coupling is completely suppressed.
Experimentally, L=33 SOa and L=35 SOa mix with high-m modes, with image distortion and extra loss; L=35 SOaa and L=37 SOa mix with high-m modes with extra loss and no image distortion. L=40 shows neither extra loss nor image distortion.
From these experiments, we surmise that the loss threshold of high-m modes past which mode coupling with a desired high-L but m=1 mode is substantially suppressed such that no image distortion is evident at the output of the fiber, is 8×10e−5 dB/m (corresponding to the loss of the high-m mode that crossed with the L=35, m=1 SOaa mode in the experiments described above). As the extra loss is very low and almost negligible in a short length of fiber (10s of meters), it is effectively the point where the desired m=1 mode avoids mode coupling with undesired high-m modes in short-haul applications. The loss threshold of high-m modes is 5×10e3 dB/m (corresponding to the loss of the high-m mode that crossed with L=40, m=1 mode in the experiments described above) when mode coupling is suppressed so significantly that the desired m=1 mode neither suffers from image distortion nor does it experience extra loss. This regime of operation may be important for applications requiring longer lengths of fiber (>1 km).
As discussed above,
The principle is tested by using an external cavity laser (ECL) or a pulsed ps laser in the C-band to excite desired OAM modes (L: ±25 to ±45; m=1; LCP/RCP) in a 25-meter ring-core fiber with a spatial light modulator (SLM), and by analyzing the power as well as mode images after separating the output into LCP and RCP bins (see
4. Fiber Scaling and Mode Count
5. Application for Highly Energetic Soliton
Topological confinement provides the ability to have many modes with very high L. Because dispersion scales with mode order L, it also can provide an alternative way to achieve very high dispersion, which is currently very hard to realize, requiring exotic photonic crystal fiber designs with complicated design and high loss. In addition, as all m=1 modes have similar field profiles, their effective areas remain large even as mode order L is increased. This potentially paves the way dramatically scaling the power that can be transmitted through such fibers.
The energy of a soliton pulse that is transmitted through a fiber can be written as
where A is wavelength (around 1 um in the following cases), N is the soliton number (usually set as one), D is dispersion, Aeff is effective area, n2 is the nonlinear refractive index of the material, and T0 is duration of the pulse. From the above equation, it is evident that soliton energy scales as DAeff.
In an optical fiber system as disclosed, in one embodiment a desired TCM or set of TCMs is carried into the fiber by the input optical signal(s), such as from the optical source subsystem 10 or mux 22. More generally the desired TCM or TCMs are in some way induced or excited within the fiber but not necessarily by simply being accepted from an external source. In one type of embodiment, the fiber contains a mode-transformative element that receives a conventional mode (from an input optical signal) and converts it into a desired TCM. In another embodiment, a conventional mode in the fiber undergoes nonlinear transformation into a desired TCM through one or more intermodal nonlinear optical transformations such as are generally known in the art.
While the above description assumes the use of passive fibers, it is well known to those skilled in the art that once certain passive properties of fiber modes are known, these can also be exploited in active fibers. Passive fiber primarily transmits light, and does not provide gain to the light beam, mode or signal. In contrast, an active fiber is typically doped with a laser-gain element such as Ytterbium, Erbium of Thulium, which, when pumped with well-known pumping mechanisms, can yield gain for a mode, and hence also for TCMs, thereby allowing the use of TCMs and frustrated coupling not just in passive fibers and in transmissive functionalities, but also in amplifiers and lasers.
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 scope of the invention as defined by the appended claims.
This invention was made with Government support under Grant No. DE-SC0012704 awarded by the Department of Energy, Grant No. ECCS-1610190 awarded by the National Science Foundation, and Grant Nos. N00014-19-1-2632, N00014-20-1-2226 and N00014-20-1-2450 awarded by the Department of the Navy. The Government has certain rights in the invention.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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6614974 | Elrefaie | Sep 2003 | B2 |
20020146226 | Davis et al. | Oct 2002 | A1 |
20070104434 | Ramachandran | May 2007 | A1 |
20080056654 | Bickham et al. | Mar 2008 | A1 |
20150168643 | Gruner-Nielsen et al. | Jun 2015 | A1 |
20150309250 | Bickham | Oct 2015 | A1 |
20160127073 | Ashrafi et al. | May 2016 | A1 |
20190222309 | Gross | Jul 2019 | A1 |
20190290100 | Ramachandran | Sep 2019 | A1 |
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20220011512 A1 | Jan 2022 | US |
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