Paper
17 February 2010 A monolithic pump signal multiplexer for air-clad photonic crystal fiber amplifiers
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Abstract
We report on the performance of a monolithic 6+1X1 fiber pump signal multiplexer for use in fiber amplifiers. The key component of this coupler design is an etched taper that transforms the low-numerical aperture large diameter pump radiation into a high numerical aperture small diamter format for injection into the pump cladding of an air-clad fiber while maintaining a constant refractive index profile in the core for efficient signal coupling. This taper was then fused onto the 6+1 fiber bundle at the large end and to the air-clad large mode area polarization maintaining photonic crystal fiber at the small end. We employed 6 pump delivery fibers in a 200/220/0.22 core/clad/NA format and a 25/250 polarization maintaining step index signal delivery fiber for the bundle. The large end of the taper had a cladding diameter of 650 μm while the small end had a cladding diameter of 300 μm to match the pump cladding diameter of the PCF which was 314 μm. The core within the taper had a constant diameter of 40 μm and NA of 0.07 achieved through a step index profile. The mode field diameter of the PCF was 54 μm. Signal coupling efficiency at 1550 nm was measured to be 90% with a polarization extinction ratio > 20dB while pump coupling efficiency was measured to be 87% at 1532nm. The low pump coupling efficiency was found to be due to pump delivery fibers that had a numerical aperture of 0.24, higher than the specification of 0.22. A simple calculation shows that with 0.22 NA pump fibers, the pump coupling efficiency would increase to 94%.
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Benjamin G. Ward, Donald L. Sipes Jr., and Jason D. Tafoya "A monolithic pump signal multiplexer for air-clad photonic crystal fiber amplifiers", Proc. SPIE 7580, Fiber Lasers VII: Technology, Systems, and Applications, 75801C (17 February 2010); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.845769
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Cited by 5 scholarly publications and 2 patents.
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KEYWORDS
Cladding

Photonic crystal fibers

Signal attenuation

Multiplexers

Polarization

Capillaries

Fiber lasers

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