1. Field of the Invention
This invention relates to optical fibers and more particularly to photonic bandgap fibers.
2. Description of the Related Art
The concept of optical waveguides based on photonic bandgap (PBG) in periodic optical media was first proposed in a theoretical paper by Yeh and Yariv in 1978 (“Theory of Bragg Fibers”, Journal of Optical Society of America, vol. 68, no. 9, September 1978, pp. 1196-1201). Not until 21 years thereafter was the first practical demonstration of an optical fiber guided by the PBG effect reported in a paper by Cregan et al published in Science in September 1999 (R. F. Cregan, B. J. Mangan, J. C. Knight, T. A. Birks, P. St. J. Russell, P. J. Roberts, and D. C. Allan: “Single-mode Photonic Bandgap Guidance of Light in Air”, Science, vol. 285, September 1999, pp. 1537-1539). In these first demonstrations, the cladding of the optical fiber was formed by triangular stacking of silica capillaries and the core was formed by a central large air hole. The cladding of this fiber was not, in cross-section, a set of concentric circles of different mediums as proposed in the original 1978 paper by Yeh and Yariv, which is referred to as Bragg fiber. The same principles, however, form the basis of both waveguides. A first Bragg fiber demonstration was reported in November 1999 by Fink in a paper published in Journal of Lightwaves Technology (Y. Fink, D. J. Ripin, S. Fan, C. Chen, J. D. Joannopoulos, and E. L. Thomas: “Guiding Optical Light in Air Using an All-Dielectric Structure”, Journal of Lightwaves Technology, vol. 17, no. 11, November 1999, pp. 2039-2041).
Since the first demonstration of the photonic bandgap fibers (PBGF) in 1999, progress has been swift. Smith et al reported PBGF with loss as low as 13 dB/km in a paper published in Nature in August 2003 (C. M. Smith, N. Venkataraman, M. T. Gallagher, D. Muller, J. A. West, N. F. Borrelli, D. C. Allan, and K. W. Koch: “Low-loss Hollow-core Silica/air Photonic bandgap Fiber”, Nature, vol. 424, August 2004, pp. 657-659). A further breakthrough came in a post-deadline paper at the Optical Fiber Communications Conference in February 2004 (B. J. Mangan, L. Farr, A. Langford, P. J. Roberts, D. P. Williams, F. Couny, M. Lawman, M. Mason, S. Coupland, R. Flea, and H. Sabert: “Low Loss (1.7 dB/km) Hollow Core Photonic Bandgap Fiber”, PDP24, Optical Communications Conference, February 2004). Mangan et al reported a PBGF with loss as low as 1.7 dB/km.
This progress has brought the technology closer to real world applications. A first area of application is high energy optical pulse propagation. In general, most of the optical power propagating along the optical fiber is in the core, which typically comprises a hole in the center of the PBGF. Light can effectively propagate in vacuum, air, or inert gas with much lower nonlinear coefficients than solids. Accordingly, such hollow cores are an ideal media to propagate optical pulses with high peak power. Such pulses may not otherwise be guided over substantial distances in a conventional optical fiber due to pulse distortion and/or energy loss from nonlinear processes in the core glass. A first demonstration of such high peak power pulse propagation was reported in a paper in Science published in 2003 by Ouzounov et al (D. G. Ouzounov, F. R. Ahmad, A. L. Gaeta, D. Muller, N. Venkataraman, M. Gallagher, C. M. Smith, and K. W. Koch, Science, vol. 301, 2003, pp. 1702). Xenon gas was used to fill the core during one of the reported experiments. Distortion-free transmission over 100 m with pulse intensities up to 1013 W/cm2 was achieved.
Accurate dispersion control is useful for optical fibers employed for long haul transmission and pulse shaping. In the absence of nonlinearity, dispersion dictates the pulse evolution during transmission through the optical fiber. In cases where the pulse shape is to be preserved, e.g. in telecommunications and delivery of optical pulses, low dispersion may be desirable. In particular, a flat low dispersion over a wide bandwidth can be helpful. A notable example is wavelength-division-multiplexing in telecommunication where a constant low dispersion level over the wavelength can help provide a uniform performance for all carrier wavelengths. Conversely, in cases where a pre-determined level of pulse shaping is desirable, a high level of dispersion with controllable amount of variation over wavelength may be preferred instead. A notable example is pulse compression in a high energy pulse system, where a combination of second and third order dispersion (β2 and β3, where βm=dmβ/dωm, and, β and ω are propagation constant and optical frequency) can be used to achieve a fair amount of compensation.
What is needed therefore is the ability to design optical fibers having the desired dispersion characteristics.
Included among the many structures described herein are photonic bandgap fibers designed to provide a desired dispersion spectrum. Additionally, designs for achieving wide transmission bands and lower transmission loss are also discussed.
As described below, for example, dispersion in a PBGF can be tailored for specific applications by appropriately designing the layers of the cladding. In some case, for example, the strong interaction of core mode with the innermost layer or layers of the cladding can be used to obtain a range of desirable dispersion spectra in PBGFs. For instance, in some fiber designs, smaller dimensions of high index material in the cladding and large core size provide small flat dispersion over a wide spectral range. Additionally, low index cladding features distributed along concentric rings or circles may be used for achieving wide bandgaps. A wide variety of other designs are also possible.
Techniques for the fabrication of PBGF are also described herein. An example fabrication technique includes forming of a preform, which is a large version of the PBGF that may be scaled up, e.g., by a factor of few tens to few hundreds, and drawing of the preform to reduce it to the required fiber diameter, typically few tens to few hundreds of micrometers. Other methods are described.
A variety of applications of photonic bandgap fibers is also presented. Other applications not discussed herein are possible as well.
One embodiment of the invention, for example, comprises a photonic bandgap fiber for propagating light having a wavelength, λ, comprising a core and a cladding disposed about the core. The cladding comprises a first plurality of ring-shaped regions defined by high index material having an index of refraction, nh, and a second plurality of ring-shaped regions having a low index of refraction, nl. The first plurality of high index ring-shaped regions has an average thickness, d, and an average periodicity, Λ, such that the ratio d/Λ is less than about 0.3. The cladding has a normalized frequency ν=2πd(nh2−nl2)1/2/λ that is less than about π radians and the core has a wavelength transmission band larger than about 100 nm.
Another embodiment of the invention also comprises a photonic bandgap fiber for propagating light having a wavelength, λ, comprising a core and a cladding disposed about the core. The cladding comprises a first plurality of ring-shaped regions defined by high index material having an index of refraction, nh, and a second plurality of ring-shaped regions having a low index of refraction, nl. The first plurality of high index ring-shaped regions having an average thickness, d. The high index ring-shaped region closest to the core forms a core cladding boundary that has an average thickness, δ, so as to provide a normalized frequency ν=2πδ(nh2−nl2)1/2/λ that is less than about 1 radian.
Another embodiment of the invention comprises a photonic bandgap fiber having a transmission band comprising a core larger than about 10 μm and a cladding disposed about the core. The cladding comprises a first plurality of ring-shaped regions defined by high index material having an index of refraction, nh, and a second plurality of ring-shaped regions having a low index of refraction, nl. The first plurality of high index ring-shaped regions has an average thickness, d, and an average periodicity, Λ, such that the ratio d/Λ is less than about 0.2. The fiber has a dispersion between about −50 to 50 ps/nm/km over at least about 100 nm of the transmission band.
Another embodiment of the invention also comprises a photonic bandgap fiber having a transmission band comprising a core and a cladding disposed about the core. The cladding comprising a first plurality of ring-shaped regions defined by high index material having an index of refraction, nh, and a second plurality of ring-shaped regions having a low index of refraction, nl. The first plurality of high index ring-shaped regions has an average thickness, d, and an average periodicity, Λ, such that the ratio d/Λ is less than about 0.2. The high index ring-shaped region closest to the core has a thickness, δ, larger than about 1.1 times the average thickness, d. The fiber has a dispersion below about −50 ps/nm/km over at least about 20 nm of the transmission band.
Another embodiment of the invention comprises a photonic bandgap fiber for propagating light having a wavelength, λ, comprising a core and a cladding disposed about the core. The cladding comprises a first plurality of ring-shaped regions defined by high index material having an index of refraction, nh, and a second plurality of ring-shaped regions having a low index of refraction, nl. The high index ring-shaped region has an average thickness, d, such that the fiber has a transmission loss of less than about 100 dB/km at a wavelength corresponding to a normalized frequency ν=2πd(nh2−nl2)1/2/λ between about (a) 0.55π to 0.85π, (b) 1.05π to 1.75π, or (c) 2.4π to 2.7π.
Another embodiment of the invention comprises a photonic bandgap fiber having a transmission band comprising a core and a cladding disposed about the core. The core comprises a first plurality of ring-shaped regions defined by high index material having an index of refraction, nh, and a second plurality of ring-shaped regions having a low index of refraction, nl. The first plurality of high index ring-shaped regions has an average thickness, d, wherein the high index ring-shaped region closest to the core has a thickness, δ, between about 0.1 to 5 times the maximum thickness, d, such that the fiber has zero dispersion at a tailored wavelength.
Another embodiment of the invention comprises an gas analyzer comprising a light source, an optical fiber, and at least one optical detector. The optical fiber comprises a core and a cladding and is optically coupled to the light source. The optical fiber further comprises one or more holes in the core or in proximity to the core for receiving the gas. The at least one optical detector is disposed to receive light from the core of the fiber that is affected by the gas.
Another embodiment of the invention comprises a method of manufacturing a photonic bandgap fiber. The method comprises arranging a plurality of tubes so as to form a plurality of rings of tubes disposed about a center and excluding at least three rings of tubes from the center to provide an open region. The method further comprises stretching the tubes thereby reducing the size of the rings and the open region.
Other embodiments of the invention are also possible.
A photonic band gap fiber (PBGF) 100 such as shown in
These fibers may be formed by drawing the tubes. Although the cladding 104 is created by stacking circular tubes, the final cross-section of the fiber 100 typically does not contain circular holes because the interplay of surface tension and viscous flow during the drawing process distorts the circular holes. The holes are typically pressurized during drawing. This pressure plays a major part in determining the final hole geometry.
The tubes may comprises hollow glass tubes, the glass portion comprising a relatively high index material in comparison to the hollow portion, which is empty and may be evacuated or filled with gas or air. After drawing, the glass portions fuse together forming a high index matrix having hollow regions therein. These hollow regions within the glass matrix form the microstructures 106 that provide the photonic band gap confinement of the cladding 104.
These fibers 100 made by removing 7 or 19 tubes from the center of a hexagonal stack, however, have a transmission window of less than 100 nm. Yet for many applications, a much wider transmission band is useful. As described herein, a wider transmission band or window can be achieved by reducing the thickness of the high index materials in the cladding. Additionally, transmission loss has a minimum at an optimized thickness of this high index material in the cladding. Higher leakage loss can result at very small thickness of the high index cladding material, and thus, the cladding no longer provides good confinement. A greater number of tubes or resulting microstructures can be removed from the center to provide for the desired core size. A preform comprising the plurality of tubes with many tubes in the center removed can be drawn down to provide a desired core size. The cladding dimension can be substantially reduced when drawn down to give a desired core size. According, in various embodiments, the transmission band is large, while transmission loss may also be substantially reduced.
An illustration of the stacked preform is shown in
Apart from confinement loss, an additional loss mechanism in PBGF is from the presence of surface modes around the core. Guided core modes can couple power into the surface modes. Part of this coupled power is subsequently lost. The presence of surface modes is a direct consequence of removing tubes in a regular matrix to form a core. Advantageously, however, the number of surface modes can be reduced by reducing or minimizing the width of the high index material around the core. In various preferred embodiments, the width of the core/cladding boundary is much further reduced than that of the corresponding cladding. Much stronger coupling exists between the guided core modes and these surface modes than that of the guided core modes and the modes supported in the cladding. The width reduction of the core/cladding boundary is provided by the techniques described above for reducting the width of the high index material in the cladding structure.
Accordingly, some loss in PBG fibers is due to the presence of surface modes around the core and cladding interface formed by the high index material closest to the core. This high index material may comprises a layer, which may be annular or ring-shaped as seen in the cross-section such as shown in
Additionally, a further step can be taken to eliminate surface modes. In this approach, a composite structure 208 is used in place of the tubes closest to the core 204 as is schematically illustrated in
Repeated stacking and drawing can be used to further reduce the dimension of the high index material. More of the cladding tubes, especially the ones nearer to the core 202, can be replaced by the composite structure 208 to be benefited by the small dimension of the high index material. This approach thus can substantially reduce the glass dimension around the core. The general approach illustrated in
As used herein in a consistent manner as used by those skilled in the art, PBG fiber is fiber that guides light therein largely by the photonic bandgap effect. Photonic bandgap effect does not necessarily require a periodic cladding structure and only that there are few guided modes supported the cladding such that the guided modes in the core, which is surrounded or partially surrounded by the cladding, have few pathways to channel power out of the core. The cladding structure in cross-section may comprises a two-dimensional periodic structure formed by a triangularly stacked arrangement of tubes that provides for hexagonally shaped rings of microstructures. The cladding structures may also comprise concentric circular rings of alternative high and low index optical material. In some embodiments, the cladding structures comprise concentric circular rings with holes disposed in alternating ones of these concentric circles. A common features of these cladding designs is the inclusion of at least two optical materials with relatively high and a low refractive indices. To provide various advantages such as described above, in certain preferred embodiments, the physical dimension of the optical material with the high refractive index is small enough so it supports few modes. Typical examples of cladding include cylindrical structures as described by Yeh and Yariv and triangular or hexagonal arrangements of microstructures as described in by Cregan et al. Additional discussion of photonic bandgap fibers is provided in U.S. patent application Ser. No. 10/844,943 entitled “Large Core Holey Fibers” as well as U.S. patent application Ser. No. 11/134,856 entitled “Single Mode Propagation in Fibers and Rods with Large Leakage Channels” are also incorporated herein by reference in their entirety.
As described above, to increase transmission bandwidth and reduce transmission loss of a PBGF, the number of modes supported by the cladding may be reduced, as these supported modes can act as leakage channels to couple out guided modes in the core. An effective way to reduce the number of modes in the cladding is to reduce the width of high index part of the cladding. The high index material in the PBG fibers such as shown in
Circular ring-shaped regions offer some performance advantages in comparison to hexagonal ring-shaped regions illustrated in the
The design in
Another design having circular stacking is illustrated in
An apparatus 412 used for stacking this preform is shown in
Once a stacked perform is formed, two tapers are made a small distance away from the holders, for example, by heating the tubes at locations in proximity to the holders to fuse the tubes together at the two ends. The holders can then be removed. The stack may be inserted into another larger tube and fused over its entire length with a moving burner. Two ends of the stack may be cut open to allow further etching of surface layers and deposition of high purity softer glass using, e.g., a chemical vapor deposition system. The etching process can help to remove surface contamination. The deposition of a softer glass layer on the surface layers can help to reduce scattering loss by providing a smoother surface. The perform is subsequently drawn to form fiber.
Simulations have been performed for a fiber 420 shown in
Simulated fields of the HE11 mode are shown in
To assess the affect of the width of the high index material in the core/cladding boundary of a PBGF for reducing or minimizing the number of supported surface modes, simulations are performed. In particular, the mode supported by a high index rod of radius δ and index nh embedded in a low index background of index nl is calculated for a wavelength λ. In this case, the V value derived for conventional optical fiber can be used.
Only a fundamental mode is supported when V<2.405 and this fundamental mode will never cut off. At least 2 modes are supported if the fundamental mode is considered to have a two-fold degeneracy. In practice, the supported mode can, however, be so weakly guided when V is small, that the fundamental mode is effectively not supported. To obtain this practical limit for V, the loss of a bent optical fiber is determined using the loss formula given by Snyder and Love in Optical Waveguide Theory (Chapman and Hall, 1983). If power transmission in an optical fiber can be expressed as P(z)=P(0)exp(−γz) over a bent fiber having a bend radius of Rc, γ can be obtained in the following formula for the fundamental mode in a step index fiber.
where U and W are as normally defined for a waveguide, K1 is modified Bessel function of the 1st order, and Δ=(nh−nl)/nh. For small V, where V≈U, the bend loss formula can be simplified.
The bend loss is calculated for a glass rod of refractive index of 1.45 surrounded by air with a refractive index of 1 for a bending radius of 15 cm and shown in
Bragg fiber formed by alternating glass and air layers have been discussed above. The cross-section of a Bragg fiber 600 is shown in
Certain parameters are also shown in
This model is based on boundary field matching with fields decomposed in a Fourier-Bessel series. A simulated HE11 mode in a Bragg fiber is illustrated in
Two types of chirped Bragg fiber are also studied. The first type is illustrated in
The effect of core radius on fiber dispersion is shown in
Effect of ratio, R=d/Λ, is shown in
In the plots in
As the curves can be shifted in wavelength by proportionally scaling Λ, any desired part of the dispersion curve can be used by shifting it to a specific wavelength of interest. Dispersion tailoring can be done for any wavelength this manner. Although the effect of the ratio and core size are studied, the refractive index of the first layer 603 can also be similarly adjusted to obtain the desired dispersion in a PBGF.
Before proceeding to the following analysis, additional definition of parameters is given below.
nr: real part of effective index
ni: imaginary part of effective index
λ: optical wavelength
ν: normalized frequency
k: =2π/λ, vacuum wave number
β: =βr+iβi=2π(nr+ini)/λ, propagation constant
α: =2πini/λ, confinement loss
kh: =k(nh2−nr2)1/2, transverse wave vector in the high index media
kl: =k(nr2−nl2)1/2, transverse wave vector in the low index media
m: order of transmission or stop bands, m∈(1, ∞)
In certain preferred embodiments of PBGF, the effective index nr of the guided mode is very close to the core refractive index nl. This approximation leads to kl≈0 and kh=k(nh2−nl2)1/2. In the limit of nr≈nl, for TE-like modes,
The amplitude of the exp(ikTEΛ) determines the convergence or divergence of the modal field, the bandgap of the Bragg fiber are determined as:
|eik
|eik
Since the amplitude of the exp(ikTEΛ) provides a measurement of the degree of all TE-like mode confinement, this amplitude is proportional to the modal confinement loss. The transmission band boundary is determined by |exp(ikTEΛ)|=1. If a normalized frequency is define as ν=kd(nh2−nl2)1/2 and in the limit of nr≈nl, ν=khd, then the upper limits of the transmission band are determined by νh=mπ, where m determines the order of the transmission band and is integer. Lower limits of the transmission bands (lower frequency limit) νl are determined by the following equation:
The upper transmission limits are independent of waveguide parameters and lower transmission limits depend only on R. As illustrated, the normalized frequency ν is only dependent on the dimensional parameter d and becomes independent of period, Λ. Accordingly, the period Λ does not play a role in determining the limits of the transmission bands. The relationship for determining the lower limit of the transmission band is shown in
The precise amount of confinement loss is determined by the modal field distribution, which is also influenced by the core design. |exp(ikTEΛ)| is proportional to the confinement loss and is plotted in
The numerical simulations for R=0.4 and 0.5, are shown in
Two sides of above equation are plotted in
Since the simple method of determining transmission bands is based on TE-like modes, this method applies to all the TE and HE modes. The equivalent formulae for TM and HM modes are:
The uppers limit of the transmission bands are given by νh=mπ while the lower limit of the transmission band is determined by
Full numerical simulation was performed for cases where d is kept constant while Λ is changed in an incremental fashion from the innermost layer. The results are shown in
Note that with a 3% change in period per layer, the period of the outmost layer is 30% larger than that of the innermost layer.
Another simulation was run for the same fiber with various chirps, i.e. both d and Λ are changed incrementally form innermost layer. The results are shown in
Based on these results, both d and D are kept constant from layer to layer in various preferred embodiments, so as to provide increased or maximum transmission bandwidth and reduced or minimum transmission loss. Using a constant value of d appears to have a stronger effect than using a constant value of D. For the same reason, a constant d and D around each circumference is also use in certain embodiments. For example, in a triangularly stacked claddings, variation of both d and D around each layer surrounding the core can lead to a reduction of overall transmission bandwidth and an increase of transmission loss comparing with a Bragg fiber. In certain embodiments, however, d and/or D are varied.
In these simulations of Bragg fibers, the impact of surface modes, which will further reduce the transmission bandwidth, has been ignored. As discussed above, in a design that excludes surface modes, V=2πδ*(nh2−nl2)1/2/λ<0.5, where δ is the maximum thickness of the core/cladding layer.
The lowest loss can be achieved in the absence of surface modes when operating at the highest possible m and at ν=νopt. However there will be more surface modes at higher m. This fact typically limits the highest possible m to operate. A smaller core/cladding thickness δ will allow operation at higher m without the penalty of the surface modes, hence lower possible transmission loss. Note, however, that the transmission band gets narrower in the wavelength domain as m increases.
The results of
The cylindrically stacked cladding designs illustrated in
Accordingly, the PBG fibers formed from microstructures arranged in a circular pattern are similar to a Bragg fiber. Both comprise substantially ring-shaped regions of high and low refractive index. These substantially ring-shaped regions of high and low refractive index are concentric and are centered about the core. These substantially ring-shaped regions of high and low refractive index alternate.
In the case where the PBG fiber comprise cladding formed by a plurality of microstructures such as shown in
The average thickness of the high index material between these two centerlines A, B may be computed in different ways. One method of determining this average thickness is to calculate the area of the high index material located within these two centerlines A, B. This area can be uniformly distributed along an annular pathway that extends around the core between and equidistant to the two circular or annular centerlines. The width of this annular pathway between the two centerlines corresponds to the average thickness of the high index material, d. This average thickness is computed for the other rings of high index material in a similar fashion to obtain a thickness, d, that an average across the cladding. Other ways of calculating the average thickness of the high index material between the two centerlines may also be used.
The same approach for determining the average thickness of the high index material is applicable ring-shaped regions of high index having other shapes as well. In the case, for example, where the microstructures are arranged to form hexagonal rings, the centerlines are hexagonal as the centerlines pass through the centers of the microstructures forming the ring. The thickness of the high index material between these hexagonal centerlines may be determined to obtain the value, d. The same approach can be used for any arbitrary shaped regions of high index material and is not limited to circular or hexagonal shapes.
A similar approach can be used to determine the average thickness, δ, of the innermost high index region closest to the core. The average thickness of the high index material within the centerline through the ring of microstructures closest to the core is determined. In
The low transmission loss and low dispersion over a wide wavelength region of several hundred nanometers as illustrated in
PBGF can also be employed in systems for generating optical pulses such as ultrafast optical pulses. Additional details regarding ultrafast pulse systems is included in U.S. patent application Ser. No. 10/814,502 entitled “Pulsed Laser Sources” and U.S. patent application Ser. No. 10/814,319 entitled “High Power Short Pulse Fiber Laser”, which are incorporated herein by reference in their entirety.
A PBGF with low loss and a wide transmission band can also be used for trace gas analysis with much improved sensitivity due to the long interaction length. FIG. 22A illustrates such a system that detects, identifies, quantifies, or otherwise performs measurements on gases based on spectral absorption. A tunable source 2201 is optically coupled to a PBGF 2204 through a multiplexer 2202, which allows gas to be injected into the core of the PBGF 2204. A gas filter 2203 may be employed to take out solid particles in the gas stream. At the output end, a de-multiplexer 2205 is used to separate gas and the optical beam. The optical beam is then directed to a detector 2207. Gas pumps can be connected to gas filter 2203 and/or gas outlet 2206 to speed up gas flow.
In such a system gas is introduced into the multiplexer and enters into portions of the PBGF though holes or openings therein. In various preferred embodiments, the core is hollow and the gas enters the hollow core. The gas affects the propagation of the light, for example, by attenuating the light due to absorption at one or more wavelengths. The absorption spectrum of the gas can, therefore, be measured using the detector 2308 and monochrometer or tunable filter 2307. In certain embodiments such as shown in
In the embodiment shown in
The multiplexer 2302 comprising a sealed chamber 2310A is illustrated in
The de-multiplexer 2305 is illustrated in
The Raman detection system shown in
The de-multiplexer 2404 is illustrated in
Optical connection is provided between the optical components as shown in
The systems and components shown in
Other variations are also possible. Additional components can be added to the systems. Likewise, some components in
Any two dielectric media with different refractive indexes can be used to implement the fiber structures described herein. A suitable candidate for the high index material is glass, especially fused silica glass which is advantageous physical and optical properties, and durability. The low index medium can be chosen from one or a mixture of gases or vacuum. This choice of low index material has high nonlinear threshold, low scattering and absorption loss, and very low dispersion.
A PBGF with a wide transmission band has many applications, e.g. telecommunication and trace gas analysis based on spectral absorption or Raman scattering techniques. Such a broad transmission band can be achieved in Bragg fibers with ν<π, i.e. d<0.5λ/(nh2−nl2)1/2 and R<0.3. Wavelength scaling enables fiber designs for any wavelength range. The fiber dimension can be scaled proportionally to wavelength, i.e. double wavelength results in double fiber dimension.
Broad transmission band can also be achieved by reducing the average thickness, d, in any cladding design which resembles a layered cladding structure around a core. In certain embodiments comprising a triangularly stacked structure where reduced average d is used to achieve a 200 nm transmission band, ν<π and R<0.05. In the circularly stacked structure described in
Low transmission loss is also advantageous for a range of applications. Loss can be reduced or minimized by operating at νopt determined by equation 7. In certain embodiments, the average thickness, d may be used to estimate νopt, in case where d varies circumferentially. For example, for R=0.2, νopt≈0.7π for m=1, 1.60π for m=2, and 2.56π for m=3. For R=0.1, νopt≈0.67π for m=1, 1.58π for m=2, and 2.55π for m=3.
Low dispersion is also useful for telecommunications. In certain embodiments, core radius can be chosen to be larger than 10 μm to achieve dispersion below 20 ps/nm/km. In addition, the first layer thickness, δ, and refractive indices can be varied to tailor dispersion. The first layer thickness 6 can be adjusted from 1% to 50% of d. In some embodiments, for example, δ (nh2−nl2)1/2/λ=0.01 to 2 can be used to tailor dispersion. A large d can be used to achieve strong negative dispersion. For robust single mode operation, core radius ρ may be smaller than 15 μm in certain embodiments.
It may be useful for broad band transmission band to eliminate surface modes on the core/cladding boundary. In various embodiments, the δ(nh2−nl2)1/2/λ, of the core/cladding boundary may be less than about 0.15 for a complete elimination of surface modes. The reduction of the first layer thickness will decrease confinement and increase mode penetration into the first layer, which leads to higher confinement loss and scattering loss from the first layer. In practice, a compromise between surface mode loss and confinement/scattering loss has to be sought.
Other embodiments having different designs and configurations are possible and should not be limited to those described above. Moreover, the above description of the preferred embodiments has been given by way of example. From the disclosure given, those skilled in the art will not only understand the present invention and its attendant advantages, but will also find apparent various changes and modifications to the structures and methods disclosed. It is sought, therefore, to cover all such changes and modifications as fall within the scope of the invention, as defined by the appended claims, and equivalents thereof.
This application is a continuation of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 12/188,153 entitled “Photonic Bandgap Fibers” filed on Aug. 7, 2008, now U.S. Pat. No. 7,792,394, which is a divisional of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 11/686,810, entitled “Photonic Bandgap Fibers” filed Mar. 15, 2007 (now U.S. Pat. No. 7,418,836), which is a divisional of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 11/323,177 entitled “Photonic Bandgap Fibers” filed Dec. 30, 2005 (now U.S. Pat. No. 7,209,619), which claims priority to U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 60/640,345 entitled “Dispersion Control in Photonic Bandgap Fibers” filed Dec. 30, 2004. Each of these applications is incorporated by reference.
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