Since the demonstration of Davis et al. in 1996, femtosecond laser direct inscription emerged as a powerful tool for the fabrication of three-dimensional photonic circuits. Even today, the performance of calculations based on the volume density of components would greatly benefit from the 3D capability of fs-laser inscription. Although several advanced 3D devices such as photonic quantum circuits and lab-on-a-chip were successfully fabricated, compactness is still limited by the minimum achievable waveguide bend radius. Another growing interest is the laser inscription in materials with transmission up to the mid- and long-wave infrared for applications such as micro-organism detection, environmental monitoring, medical diagnostic and optical communication in the second atmospheric window at 8–12 microns. In this spectral band, materials that can be drawn into fiber optics, such as fluoride and chalcogenide glasses, are expensive and fragile. On the other hand, laser inscription allows the fabrication of waveguides in virtually any material, even crystals, enabling new IR applications, especially for harsh environmental conditions. In this communication, we present our recent progress on these two topics. First, we demonstrate waveguide bend radii down to <400 µm, which is an important improvement over the minimum 10-mm radius reported previously. The high refractive index change allowing such tight bends is attributed to a femtosecond laser induced band gap shift (FLIBGS) in the material. We also report low loss depressed-cladding waveguide (DCW) in crystals for IR applications. We particularly demonstrate the challenging inscription of a large DCW for single-mode operation at 10.6 µm with propagation loss of <0.63 dB/cm. We also describe a technique using a cover slide with optical contact to inscribe waveguides at the bulk surface for refractometric sensing applications.
Volume Bragg Gratings (VBG) are inscribed in the bulk of non-conventional photosensitive glasses tailored with silver by means of femtosecond laser irradiation. Thanks to intrinsic features of the spatial distribution of silver-sustained inscribed structures, it is possible to fabricate gratings with sub-wavelength periodic refractive index modulation. As a result, the achieved VBG target first-order Bragg reflection in the VIS - NIR spectral range. This work paves the way to manufacturing more complex optical devices, such as Waveguide Bragg Gratings.
We report on our very recent demonstration of new waveguide Bragg gratings inscribed in a silver-containing oxide phosphate glass. We present the mask-less fabrication of first-order Bragg grating in the red/near-IR range. Based on coupled mode theory, these waveguide Bragg gratings show strong coupling constants, up to 3.9 mm-1 depending of the chosen Bragg grating geometry, which is relevant for applicative perspectives in integrated optics. Detailed description of these silver-sustained waveguide Bragg gratings will be provided, allowing for discussing both limitations and potentialities of the proposed innovative approach for the production of Bragg gratings in such photosensitive glasses.
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