CA2638136A1 - Method of changing the birefringence of an optical waveguide by laser modification of the cladding - Google Patents
Method of changing the birefringence of an optical waveguide by laser modification of the cladding Download PDFInfo
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- CA2638136A1 CA2638136A1 CA 2638136 CA2638136A CA2638136A1 CA 2638136 A1 CA2638136 A1 CA 2638136A1 CA 2638136 CA2638136 CA 2638136 CA 2638136 A CA2638136 A CA 2638136A CA 2638136 A1 CA2638136 A1 CA 2638136A1
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- cladding
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- G—PHYSICS
- G02—OPTICS
- G02B—OPTICAL ELEMENTS, SYSTEMS OR APPARATUS
- G02B6/00—Light guides; Structural details of arrangements comprising light guides and other optical elements, e.g. couplings
- G02B6/02—Optical fibres with cladding with or without a coating
- G02B6/02057—Optical fibres with cladding with or without a coating comprising gratings
- G02B6/02076—Refractive index modulation gratings, e.g. Bragg gratings
- G02B6/02123—Refractive index modulation gratings, e.g. Bragg gratings characterised by the method of manufacture of the grating
- G02B6/02133—Refractive index modulation gratings, e.g. Bragg gratings characterised by the method of manufacture of the grating using beam interference
- G02B6/02138—Refractive index modulation gratings, e.g. Bragg gratings characterised by the method of manufacture of the grating using beam interference based on illuminating a phase mask
-
- G—PHYSICS
- G02—OPTICS
- G02B—OPTICAL ELEMENTS, SYSTEMS OR APPARATUS
- G02B6/00—Light guides; Structural details of arrangements comprising light guides and other optical elements, e.g. couplings
- G02B6/02—Optical fibres with cladding with or without a coating
- G02B6/02057—Optical fibres with cladding with or without a coating comprising gratings
- G02B6/02071—Mechanically induced gratings, e.g. having microbends
-
- G—PHYSICS
- G02—OPTICS
- G02B—OPTICAL ELEMENTS, SYSTEMS OR APPARATUS
- G02B6/00—Light guides; Structural details of arrangements comprising light guides and other optical elements, e.g. couplings
- G02B6/02—Optical fibres with cladding with or without a coating
- G02B6/02057—Optical fibres with cladding with or without a coating comprising gratings
- G02B6/02076—Refractive index modulation gratings, e.g. Bragg gratings
- G02B6/0208—Refractive index modulation gratings, e.g. Bragg gratings characterised by their structure, wavelength response
- G02B6/02085—Refractive index modulation gratings, e.g. Bragg gratings characterised by their structure, wavelength response characterised by the grating profile, e.g. chirped, apodised, tilted, helical
-
- G—PHYSICS
- G02—OPTICS
- G02B—OPTICAL ELEMENTS, SYSTEMS OR APPARATUS
- G02B6/00—Light guides; Structural details of arrangements comprising light guides and other optical elements, e.g. couplings
- G02B6/02—Optical fibres with cladding with or without a coating
- G02B6/024—Optical fibres with cladding with or without a coating with polarisation maintaining properties
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- Physics & Mathematics (AREA)
- Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
- Manufacturing & Machinery (AREA)
- General Physics & Mathematics (AREA)
- Optics & Photonics (AREA)
- Optical Fibers, Optical Fiber Cores, And Optical Fiber Bundles (AREA)
- Lasers (AREA)
Abstract
Description
BY LASER MODIFICATION OF THE CLADDING
CROSS-REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS
[001] The present application is a continuation-in-part of United States Patent Application No.
11/683,070 filed March 7, 2007, which claims priority from United States Patent Application No. 60/780,870 filed March 10, 2006, which are incorporated herein by reference for all purposes.
11/104,545 filed on April 13, 2005, now abandoned, which claims priority from United States Patent Application No.
60/561,882 filed April 14, 2004; United States Patent Application No.
60/616,838 filed October 8, 2004 and from United States Patent Application No. 60/634,547 filed December 10, 2004, and which is a continuation-in-part of United States Patent Application No.
10/803,890 filed March 19, 2004, now issued as US 7,031,571, which claims priority from United States Patent Application No. 60/545,949 filed February 20, 2004; Canadian patent application 2,436,499 filed August 1, 2003 and European patent application 03405845.3 filed November 26, 2006, and which is a continuation-in-part of United States Patent Application No.
10/639,486 filed August 13, 2003, now issued as US 6,993,221, which claims priority from United States Patent Application No. 60/456,184 filed March 21, 2003, which are incorporated herein by reference for all purposes.
Doc. No. 102-31 CA Patent BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
(transverse magnetic) waveguide modes that are known to be polarization sensitive, that is the response of the waveguide differs for orthogonally polarized light beams. The difference in refractive index of the waveguide seen by the different polarizations of the optical signal result in a wavelength splitting of the signal. This wavelength splitting is defined as the birefringence of the waveguide.
Doc. No. 102-31 CA Patent
2021-2025 (1993), where higher output powers can be realized if the gain in the resonator cavity of the laser couples into a single polarization state rather than into two states of polarization.
The short cavity fiber laser as described by Mizrahi et al. is obtained by inscribing Bragg gratings directly into the core of the Erbium and Germanium-doped active fiber, to act as the laser cavity mirrors. Typically single polarization lasers require complicated design incorporating polarization maintaining fiber and bulk optics such as Faraday rotators as taught for example by MacCormack et al. in US
Patent 6,282,016.
in US Patent 6,600,149 where a grating written onto birefringent optical fiber generates two spectral peaks that are reflected in the absence of a load. As the grating written onto birefringent fiber is transversely loaded, the spacing between the two spectral peaks will change.
This variation in spacing can be used to monitor pressure, while the simultaneous wavelength shift of the two spectral peaks can be used to monitor temperature. In this fashion, an intrinsic fiber grating sensor can be created which can simultaneously monitor temperature and pressure.
It is well know that such localized internal stress in glass fiber optics leads to optical birefringence in and around the stressed region. Birefringence in optical fiber can also be photoinduced by locally processing the optical substrate with high energy laser pulses. Small amounts of birefringence (4x 10-5) can be created by UV exposure of UV photosensitive fibers cores as described by Erdogan et al. in J.
Opt. Soc. Am. B, 11 (10), pp. 2100-2105, 1994 when the polarization of the UV
source is normal to the waveguide axis. The birefringence can be minimized if the induced index change is symmetric about the waveguide core as described by Vengsarkar et al. in Opt.
Lett. 19 (16), pp.
1260-1262, 1994.
Doc. No. 102-31 CA Patent
in Appl. Phys. Lett.
84 (24), pp. 4983-4985 (2004) presented tomographic measurements of Ge-doped telecommunication fiber cores that were exposed to femtosecond pulse duration infrared laser pulses below intensity levels needed to induce multiphoton ionization of the material. They showed that in the regions of the optical fiber exposed to the laser, increased levels of induced stress were observed. Birefringent long period gratings were also written in single mode fiber by placing the grating off center of the core of the fiber as was described by M.
Dubov et al. in paper OWI50 of the Proceedings of the Optical Fiber Communications Conference, (2006). The levels of birefringence produced were - 2x 10-5.
Doc. No. 102-31 CA Patent
Some applications not only require the separation of orthogonal polarization but the cancellation or reduction of one of the polarization states as well. This function is usually performed by single polarization fibers that require a relatively large propagation length before a substantial cancellation of one polarization is obtained. In US Patent 5,511,083 for example, D'Amato et al.
teach a technique for producing a single polarization fiber laser source by inducing a blazed or tapped grating within the resonator cavity of a fiber laser. The tapped grating out couples one state of polarization within the cavity through radiation mode coupling thus reducing one of the states of polarization within the laser cavity.
induced birefringence by exposing a portion of the core or cladding, very high intensities are required, often by focusing regeneratively amplified femtosecond laser pulses with high numerical aperture (NA) microscope objectives to near diffraction limited focal spot sizes (a few microns in diameter) in order to produce multiphotonic absorption and multiphotonic ionization and disruption to the glass structure. The resultant levels of induced birefringence are also low and on the same order Doc. No. 102-31 CA Patent of UV laser induced birefringence (- 10"5). The induction of birefringence through exposure of the core to high intensity femtosecond infrared laser pulses that result in multiphotonic ionization of the exposed region, also generate significant loss in the waveguide due to scattering. For fiber laser applications especially those requiring short fiber laser cavity designs, this scattering loss limits the output power and performance of the fiber laser.
BRIEF INTRODUCTION TO THE INVENTION
Patent 6,993,221 incorporated herein by reference, a birefringence as large as those that are generated in specialty high birefringence fiber designs using stress rods can be locally created in the core region of a standard optical fiber without generating additional insertion loss. The periodic regions of stress induced in the cladding of the optical fiber must be adjacent to the core but not close enough to the core as to result in a significant overlap of the fundamental guided mode with the regions of the cladding where the periodic stress was induced. This distance is approximately 2 to 5 m from the core/cladding interface. This invention relates to methods of generating localized large birefringence in standard single mode fiber by creating regions of high material stress in the fiber cladding with femtosecond infrared radiation. It is preferred there be a ratio of about 10 to 5000 of these regions or pillars of stress per millimeter, and preferably but not limited thereto, these regions are periodic or quasi-periodic.
Doc. No. 102-31 CA Patent As well, the periodic structures can be be quasi-periodic. A small variation in the periodicity of the structure along the length of the waveguide or `chirp' of the periodic structure would likely produce the same levels of birefringence. Therefore the periodic spacing of the stress lines need not be fixed along the entire length of the structure but can be slowly varying, for example the periodic spacing may increase along the length.
7,031,571, the fiber requirements for fabrication of the laser cavity are further simplified in that fiber co-doping with Ge to promote UV-photosensitivity is no longer required. Germanium co-doping of Erbium doped active silica fiber promotes clustering of Er3+ ions that reduces the lasing efficiency of the active fiber. In the absence of Ge, higher levels of Er3+ doping are possible which increases lasing efficiency. Creation of the laser cavity mirrors both in the core and cladding region of the active fiber reduce coupling to cladding modes, as taught in 7,031,571. The removal of the cladding mode losses of the resonator cavity mirrors improves the lasing efficiency of laser cavity, especially if one of the cavity mirrors has a slowly varying periodicity or grating chirp.
Doc. No. 102-31 CA Patent
6,993,221, the resultant fiber grating sensor also has the additional advantage of being able to operate at high temperatures (1000 C) approaching the glass transition temperature of the silica fiber.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENION
providing an optical waveguide having a core and a cladding and a core cladding interface;
irradiating the waveguide cladding with energy of a sufficient intensity so as to induce a stress in the optical waveguide wherein said irradiation causes a multitude of spaced stress induced regions within the cladding of the optical waveguide such that there are 100 to 50000 spaced regions per cm.
said optical waveguide having a stress induced region comprising a plurality of spaced stress Doc. No. 102-31 CA Patent pillars within the cladding , wherein the number of stress pillars is between 10 and 5,000 per millimeter; and wherein said regions are proximate the core such that an operating mode of the waveguide, that mode being made birefringent, does not significantly overlap with the stress induced region, such that any reflectivity of that mode which may occur due to the stress induced region is less than 1% when light guided in that mode is incident on the stress induced region.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
laser induced grating overlapping the core-cladding interface. Image taken along the exposure beam axis;
Doc. No. 102-31 CA Patent
regions of periodic stress are induced in the fiber cladding with relation to the core.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
writing beam 100 with a Gaussian profile and 6.4 mm diameter, was focused using a 30 mm focal length cylindrical lens 101 through a phase mask 102 into the core 103 or cladding 104 of the single mode fiber 105. The IR beam was polarized along the fiber axis. A
phase mask pitch A. producing a third order Bragg resonance was selected in order to create the spatially modulated exposure that could be directly observable under an optical microscope. The Bragg condition for a third order grating is 3ABrQgg = n,,ffA,,, where AB,Qgg is the wavelength of the Bragg resonance and n,,ff is the effective refractive index of the core. In order to expose a large transversal area of the fiber either in the core or in the cladding region, the focused laser beam scanned 106 a 30 m span in 10 seconds normal to the fiber axis using a piezo-driven translation stage. As was shown previously by Sudrie et al. in Opt. Comm., vol. 191, pp.
333-339, 2001, two types of femtosecond laser induced structures can be generated in bulk silica resulting either Doc. No. 102-31 CA Patent from a defect formation/material compaction induced index change (type I) or from material ionization and resolidification (type II). For the induction of high levels of stress in the material, it was advantageous to work in the type II regime. When placing the target fiber a distance d 107 several millimeters from the phase mask, as taught by Mihailov et al. in US
Patent 7,031,571, the mask order walk-off process produces a two-beam interference pattern, which at moderate laser pulse power, produces type I structures which produce index changes with behavior similar to type I UV laser induced Bragg gratings. When the phase mask 102 is placed in close proximity of the fiber 105, as taught by Mihailov et al. in US Patent 6,993,221, the mask generates a multi-beam interference field with high peak intensities resulting in the generation of periodic type II
laser induced structures that are stable up to the glass transition temperature of the material.
This is more difficult to accomplish at the boundaries between such regions, resulting in higher stresses at these locations, just as stress concentrations are observed at a crack tip. Larger displacements of the void boundaries, frozen into the glass during photo-inscription, result in higher stress gradients at these boundaries. Ultimately, in order to generate large levels of birefringence the challenge is to maximize the magnitude of displacements frozen into the fiber cross section without generating catastrophic failure. From fracture analysis it is well known that longer cracks are more prone to failure. Hence, a distributed type II
photoinduced structure, analogous to many small cracks, can induce greater transverse displacements and stress prior to fibre failure than can be generated by a single long void / crack occupying the same axial extent.
Doc. No. 102-31 CA Patent Although the distribution need not be strictly periodic in order to take advantage of this effect, it is expected that structures having some degree of periodicity will most efficiently increase the average transverse displacement / stress / birefringence per unit of fiber length.
white light source and an optical spectrum analyzer (OSA) with 50 pm accuracy and then re-measured after writing using different input signal polarizations from a high resolution (5 pm) tunable laser scanning system. The polarization of the signal was rotated using a free space in line OFR polarizer controller.
multiphotonic ionization in the material. A non-periodic type-II damage structure in the cladding proximate the core did not produce stresses that propagated to the core that would result in stress-induced birefringence.
exposure with 1.5 mJ femtosecond pulses using the technique presented by Mihailov et al. in US
patent 7,031,571.
Such an exposure normally results in - 10'3 change in the refractive index of the glass. The type II exposure, with the parameters described above, at the core-cladding interface as shown in Fig.
2, resulted in a relatively large PDW of - 250 pm as shown in Fig. 3. This value of PDW was reached in an iterative way by scanning repeatedly the cladding to the core/cladding interface in Doc. No. 102-31 CA Patent 20-second cycles with 10 Hz repetition laser rate of the 1.5 mJ pulses.
Because of the scanning nature of the exposure cycle, the laser exposure (beam dwell time) is larger (longer) close to the core/cladding interface. The dynamics of how the induced birefringence changes with the number of scans is presented in the Fig. 4 where the change in the refractive index of the ordinary axis is denoted by the diamonds, the extraordinary by squares and the birefringence by triangles.
1312-1314, 2004.
Doc. No. 102-31 CA Patent
variation) in the grating birefringence was measured with no noticeable change in the effective refractive index of the fundamental mode. As type II structures are extremely stable even at very high temperatures as described by Grobnic et al in Meas. Sci. Technol. 17 (5), p. 1009-1013 (2006), the birefringence is likely caused by induced stress in the material.
A dependence of the PDW on axial strain applied to the fiber was also observed. A- 20 pm variation in PDW was measured before and after a- 300 g stretching strain was applied to the fiber.
femtosecond IR laser induced Bragg gratings were written at the core/cladding interface. In this instance, no weak probe grating was required. Only a weak birefringence effect was obtained for type I gratings. A type II grating structure as shown in the microscope image of Fig. 7, resulted in a stronger variation in reflectivity with polarization compared to the type I-IR case and a very strong coupling to cladding modes. The type II gratings are often affected by side lobs and strong coupling to cladding modes as has been described by Mihailov et al in J.
Lightwave. Technol. 22 (1), pp. 94-100, 2004. These features are accentuated when the gratings are written at the core/cladding interface. Such a strong polarization dependent loss is ideally suited for the formation of short cavity single polarization fiber lasers. The grating spectra presented in Fig. 8 display three preferential polarization states. There are two polarization states, P 1 and P2, that maximize Bragg resonances separated by 300 pm corresponding to a birefringence of - 3x10-4 .
The polarization state of the signal can be adjusted to a different polarization so that there is very little reflectivity displayed by the grating but there is a sizable increase in the coupling to cladding modes that correspond to Bragg resonances related to polarizations P
1 and P2, as shown by the dotted line in Fig. 8. Based on the first order grating approximation, the difference in strength between the maximum reflectivity and minimum reflectivity corresponds to a difference between the refractive index modulations of the two polarization states of - 3 x 104.
9a) the incident laser beam 900 after passing through the phase mask is focused into the cladding region 901 of the fiber 902 adjacent to but not overlapping the core 903. The inscribed region of Doc. No. 102-31 CA Patent periodic stress 904 induces a certain amount of birefringence. After repositioning of the fiber with respect to the irradiating beam 900, a second exposure can be made in order to induce a second region of periodic stress 905 on the opposite side of the core further increasing the birefringence. Alternatively as single grating can be written at the core cladding interface 906.
Typically the cladding 1002 consists of silica while the core 1003 is doped with an active ion such as Erbium or Ytturbium. The laser cavity consists of an output coupler Bragg grating 1004 and a back reflector Bragg grating 1005. Both gratings 1004 and 1005 are inscribed in the fiber such the grating ideally but not necessarily extends into the cladding, in order to reduce cavity losses due to coupling to cladding modes. Regions of periodic stress 1006 are then induced in the cladding proximate the back reflector grating 1005. As well the periodic stress 1006 could be induced about the output coupler 1004 instead of the back reflector 1005. A
simple set up for launching the pump laser radiation into the fiber optic laser cavity is shown in Fig. lOb. If the active fiber 1001 is doped with Erbium, the pump laser emits at 980 nm. The fiber laser emission will be in the Erbium emission band ranging from 1510 to 1580 nm. The pump light is routed through a 980/1550 nm wavelength division multiplexing optical coupler to the active fiber which is mechanically spliced to the output fiber of the coupler. The fiber laser emission then returns through the coupler and is directed towards the detector which in this example is an optical spectrum analyzer.
Doc. No. 102-31 CA Patent
Claims (16)
providing an optical waveguide having a core and a cladding and a core cladding interface;
irradiating the waveguide cladding with energy of a sufficient intensity so as to induce a stress in the optical waveguide wherein said irradiation causes a multitude of spaced stress induced regions within the cladding of the optical waveguide such that there are 10 to 5000 spaced regions per mm and wherein the stress induced regions are proximate the core greater than
2. A method as defined in claim 1 wherein the spaced stress induced regions are periodic, or quasi-periodic.
a length of light transmissive material having a core and a cladding and a core-cladding interface said optical waveguide having a stress induced region comprising a plurality of spaced stress pillars within the cladding, wherein the number of stress pillars is between 10 and 5,000 per millimeter; and wherein said regions are proximate the core such that an operating mode of the waveguide, that mode being made birefringent, does not significantly overlap with the stress induced region, such that any reflectivity of that mode which may occur due to the stress induced region is less than 1% when light guided in that mode is incident on the stress induced region.
a light source for emitting a selected plurality of wavelengths of light, optically coupled to an end of the optical fiber, said light source for transmitting said light into said fiber;
a detector optically coupled with the Bragg grating for receiving reflected light from said Bragg grating; and, means for analyzing a spectral response of said reflected light from said Bragg grating, wherein the system is a sensing system.
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Cited By (2)
| Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| CN118024638A (en) * | 2024-02-22 | 2024-05-14 | 中国航天三江集团有限公司 | Novel optical fiber cladding preparation method and system |
| CN120445596A (en) * | 2025-07-14 | 2025-08-08 | 度亘核芯光电技术(苏州)股份有限公司 | Chip detection method and device |
-
2008
- 2008-07-21 CA CA2638136A patent/CA2638136C/en active Active
Cited By (3)
| Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| CN118024638A (en) * | 2024-02-22 | 2024-05-14 | 中国航天三江集团有限公司 | Novel optical fiber cladding preparation method and system |
| CN120445596A (en) * | 2025-07-14 | 2025-08-08 | 度亘核芯光电技术(苏州)股份有限公司 | Chip detection method and device |
| CN120445596B (en) * | 2025-07-14 | 2025-09-02 | 度亘核芯光电技术(苏州)股份有限公司 | Chip detection method and device |
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| CA2638136C (en) | 2016-06-14 |
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