The development and the emergence of fully integrated all-fiber optical systems is very interesting from a technical point of view in photonics. Indeed, the development of mutimaterials fibers combining both optical waveguide properties and simultaneous in-fiber electrical excitation could provide plenty of innovative signal-processing, sensing or imaging functionalities. Here, we report the engineering of a new glass/metal composite fiber. For the glass, we have chosen tellurite glasses for their excellent thermo-viscous abilities (low Tg) and linear/nonlinear optical properties. This low Tg allows to have a larger panel of potential metals to be co-drawn with. The synthesis is firstly realized by build-in-casting at room atmosphere which allows to get a large-core. Then, the rod-in-tube technique and the insertion of metallic wires allow to get a step-index fiber with a small-core (7μm) and two continuous metallic electrodes running along the fiber axis (Øelectrodes = 30μm). Thus, we obtain a tellurite-based core-clad dual-electrode composite fiber made by direct, homothetic preform-to-fiber thermal co-drawing. The rheological and optical properties of the selected glasses allow both to regulate the metallic melting flow and to manage the refractive index core/clad waveguide profile. We will discuss the engineering of these multimaterials optical fibers and their characterization: thermal and viscosity properties, linear optical properties (loss), electrical properties with a continuity of the electrodes over meters of fiber.
Optical fibers mid-infrared (mid-IR) supercontinuum (SC) generation for sources covering the 1–20 μm range are of great interest for many applications in optics, spectroscopy, sensing for environmental monitoring or medical diagnosis and treatment. We present here our work regarding two low phonon energy glasses families, leading to highly nonlinear optical fibers for SC generation: tellurites and seleno-telluride glasses. Tellurite fibers are suitable for working in the 1-5 μm range, when seleno-telluride ones are intended to the 2-16 μm range. For tellurites, we focus on the definition of glass pairs suitable for the drawing of step index fibers with a controlled chromatic dispersion for a femto-second (fs) pumping around 2 μm. In the case of chalcogenide glasses, we focus on the Ge-Se-Te ternary system, which offers the advantage of allowing the drawing of step index or micro-structured fibers avoiding the usage of toxic arsenic. Depending on the fiber geometry the management of the chromatic dispersion is quite different. Suspended core fibers allow to shift deeply the unique zero dispersion wavelength (ZDW) towards short wavelengths for fs pumping around 2- 3 μm. For step index fibers, it is possible to design waveguides with no, one or two ZDW. Various pumping schemes are available between 3 and 9 μm, with a fs tunable source. As a result, SC generation experiments in these different fibers allows to reach wide spanning spectra, between 1 and more than 5 μm for tellurite fibers, and between 2 and more than 14 μm in the case of chalcogenides ones.
Access to the requested content is limited to institutions that have purchased or subscribe to SPIE eBooks.
You are receiving this notice because your organization may not have SPIE eBooks access.*
*Shibboleth/Open Athens users─please
sign in
to access your institution's subscriptions.
To obtain this item, you may purchase the complete book in print or electronic format on
SPIE.org.
INSTITUTIONAL Select your institution to access the SPIE Digital Library.
PERSONAL Sign in with your SPIE account to access your personal subscriptions or to use specific features such as save to my library, sign up for alerts, save searches, etc.