The present invention relates to optical fibres, in particular to optical fibres propagating light over long distances, i.e. several kilometers.
Optical fibres have experienced a tremendous development since 1970, in such a way that the material quality (silica) presently shows an ideal chemical purity. Optical transparency has therefore reached the ultimate limit that can be expected from the material properties. In particular the loss experienced by the light propagating in the fibre is now routinely below 0.2 dB/km, which means that half of the light is lost for every 15 km distance increment. In many situations propagation over distances of 100 km and more is desired, like for instance in telecommunication lines and in remote or distributed sensing systems. The loss penalty for a larger distance is traditionally compensated by an increased input power.
Input power cannot be increased indefinitely, since the material no longer responds in a standard way under an intense light irradiation. The optical properties of the material (glass in the case of an optical fibre) are modified and turn dependent on the light intensity. In this situation the material response is considered as nonlinear and the result is to transfer light from the signal to a distinct spectrally shifted optical wave through a gradual coupling. The signal wave is thus depleted and may entirely decay, all the light being transferred out of the spectral transmission channel. Furthermore the transfer is turning gradually more important when the amplitude of the nonlinearly generated wave is growing, through a stimulated coupling effect.
For the above reasons optical fibres of the state of the art have a relatively limited distance range.
An object of the present invention is to substantially increase the power handling capacity of the optical fibre, in particular for distributed fibre sensors, communication links or any other long range optical signal distribution systems.
To this effect the invention concerns an optical fibre as defined in the claims.
The invention concerns an optical fibre designed to substantially increase the power handling capacity over long distances. This is achieved by simultaneously increasing its immunity to the most limiting nonlinear optical effects observed in long haul sensing and transmission systems: modulation instability and stimulated Raman scattering.
This simultaneous attenuation of both nonlinear effects is obtained in taking specific actions to judiciously modify the optical properties of the fibre or the optical transmission link as a whole.
If we consider the presence of one signal wave at a definite frequency, the 3 nonlinear effects that are observed in a silica optical fibre, each corresponding to a different material response, are by decreasing importance (see the unique figure):
The distance range of a “state of the art” optical fibre is eventually limited by these nonlinear effects, since the signal power cannot be indefinitely increased to compensate the loss. Techniques to suppress stimulated Brillouin scattering are known, for instance in modulating the lightwave to enlarge its spectral width. There are also optical fibre designs that specifically attenuate the efficiency of stimulated Brillouin scattering. But for a wide range of applications, in particular sensing, the full efficiency of stimulated Brillouin scattering must be maintained, since it is the interaction that is exploited in the sensing process. Modulation instability and stimulated Raman scattering remain however a penalty and cannot be suppressed using the procedures applied for stimulated Brillouin scattering. For those reasons, one of the preferred embodiment of the invention consists in attenuating the effects of modulation instability and stimulated Raman scattering but maintaining Brillouin scattering. Such an approach allows to increase the range of distributed optical fibre sensors and to propagate broadband signals over longer distances in communication optical links.
A standard procedure to suppress modulation instability is to design the fibre, so that the propagation at the signal wavelength is in the regime of normal group velocity dispersion.
Raman scattering cannot be suppressed using the same procedure since it results from the material response and therefore presents specific difficulties that are solved by the present invention, proposing solutions compatible with the suppression of modulation instability. It can be for instance realized by simultaneously lowering the refractive index of the fibre core and the inner cladding, to make the refractive index of the inner cladding substantially lower than the index of the whole or a part of the outer cladding. This way the light guided in the core leaks to the outer cladding through a tunnelling effect and is lost for the guided propagation. Since the evanescent part of the guided light is larger for longer wavelength, the tunnelling effect is more pronounced when the light wavelength is increased. The fibre can be thus designed to have a negligible light leakage by this tunnelling effect at the signal wavelength and a pronounced leakage at the Raman signal wavelength that is at a ˜100 nm longer wavelength in silica fibre in the higher transparency spectral window.
Another solution is to dope the fibre with materials showing a selective higher absorption at the Raman signal wavelength, while being fully non-absorptive at the signal wavelength. For instance doping the silica at a low concentration (100 ppm and less) with rare-earth ions of Thulium realizes this selective spectral absorption for a signal propagating in the highest transparency spectral window in silica optical fibres. Other rare-earth ions can be used, such as Dysprosium and Neodymium, as well as nanoparticles and quantum dot specifically designed to realize this spectrally selective absorption.
As mentioned previously, maintaining Brillouin scattering is preferred in most of the cases but in other cases the optical fibre according to the invention may furthermore be designed to simultaneously attenuate the Brillouin scattering.
The invention will be better understood below with some non-limitative examples showing how modulation instability and Raman scattering can be attenuated.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
2010/055615 | Dec 2010 | IB | international |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
PCT/IB11/55522 | 12/7/2011 | WO | 00 | 7/30/2013 |