Www.cudos.org.au Modes in Microstructured Optical Fibres Martijn de Sterke, Ross McPhedran, Peter Robinson, CUDOS and School of Physics, University of.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Unit-2 Polarization and Dispersion
Advertisements

Application of adaptive optics to Free-Space Optical communications
Wigner approach to a new two-band envelope function model for quantum transport n. 1 di 22 Facoltà di Ingegneria ICTT19 – 19 th International Conference.
Wigner approach to a two-band electron-hole semi-classical model n. 1 di 22 Graz June 2006 Wigner approach to a two-band electron-hole semi-classical model.
Wigner approach to a new two-band envelope function model for quantum transport n. 1 di 22 Facoltà di Ingegneria ICTT19 – 19 th International Conference.
Spectral Analysis of Function Composition and Its Implications for Sampling in Direct Volume Visualization Steven Bergner GrUVi-Lab/SFU Torsten Möller.
K The Common Core State Standards in Mathematics © Copyright 2011 Institute for Mathematics and Education Welcome to a clickable.
Classical behaviour of CW Optical Parametric Oscillators T. Coudreau Laboratoire Kastler Brossel, UMR CNRS 8552 et Université Pierre et Marie Curie, PARIS,
Nanophotonics Class 3 Photonic Crystals. Definition: A photonic crystal is a periodic arrangement of a dielectric material that exhibits strong interaction.
S Transmission Methods in Telecommunication Systems (5 cr)
Notes 12 ECE Microwave Engineering Fall Surface Waves Prof. David R. Jackson Dept. of ECE Fall 2011.
Hanjo Lim School of Electrical & Computer Engineering Lecture 3. Symmetries & Solid State Electromagnetism.
Evolutionary Design of Microstructured Polymer Optical Fibres using an Artificial Embryogeny Representation Steven Manos 1,2 Leon Poladian 3, Maryanne.
S Digital Communication Systems Fiber-optic Communications - Supplementary.
Fiber Optics Communication
Nonlinear Optics Lab. Hanyang Univ. Chapter 3. Propagation of Optical Beams in Fibers 3.0 Introduction Optical fibers  Optical communication - Minimal.
ME 381R Fall 2003 Micro-Nano Scale Thermal-Fluid Science and Technology Lecture 4: Crystal Vibration and Phonon Dr. Li Shi Department of Mechanical Engineering.
1 Experimental Determination of Crystal Structure Introduction to Solid State Physics
1 Au-shell cavity mode - Mie calculations R core = 228 nm R total = 266 nm t Au = 38 nm medium = silica cavity mode 700 nm cavity mode 880 nm 880 nm =
Experimental History Leading to Quantum Theory Particles versus Waves.
Designing Dispersion- and Mode-Area-Decreasing Holey Fibers for Soliton Compression M.L.V.Tse, P.Horak, F.Poletti, and D.J.Richardson Optoelectronics Research.
Expression of d-dpacing in lattice parameters
ECE 4853: Optical Fiber Communication Waveguide/Fiber Modes (Slides and figures courtesy of Saleh & Teich) (Modified, amended and adapted by R. Winton)
Patrick Sebbah Nicolas Bachelard, Sylvain Gigan Institut Langevin, ESPCI ParisTech CNRS UMR 7587, Paris A. Christian Vanneste, Xavier Noblin LPMC – Université.
Optical Fiber Basics Part-3
Holey Fibers Suchita Kaundin. Agenda Background What are Holey Fibers Physical Structure Fabrication Properties Advantages Applications Industries References.
1 Fermi surfaces and Electron dynamics  Band structure calculations give E(k)  E(k) determines the dynamics of the electrons  It is E(k) at the Fermi.
Slow light in photonic crystal waveguides Nikolay Primerov.
Hard Gluon damping in hot QCD hep-ph/ André Peshier * Institut for Theoretical Physics, Giessen University  QCD thermodynamics  Effects due to.
EE 230: Optical Fiber Communication Lecture 3 Waveguide/Fiber Modes From the movie Warriors of the Net.
Photonic Crystal Fibers
‘Twisted’ modes of split-band- edge double-heterostructure cavities Sahand Mahmoodian Andrey Sukhorukov, Sangwoo Ha, Andrei Lavrinenko, Christopher Poulton,
The Stability of Internal Transport Barriers to MHD Ballooning Modes and Drift Waves: a Formalism for Low Magnetic Shear and for Velocity Shear The Stability.
Non-Symmetric Microstructured Optical Fibres. Introduction Information Age – Computers, CD’s, Internet Need a way to transmit data – Optic Fibres Other.
Left-handed materials ordinary right-handed (RH) materials: E H, B k, S  left-handed (LH) materials: E H S k  LH materials first theoretically.
Prof. David R. Jackson Notes 19 Waveguiding Structures Waveguiding Structures ECE Spring 2013.
Physics “Advanced Electronic Structure” Pseudopotentials Contents: 1. Plane Wave Representation 2. Solution for Weak Periodic Potential 3. Solution.
FIBER PROPERTIES Transmission characteristics of a fiber depends on two important phenomena Attenuation Dispersion Attenuation or transmission loss Much.
1 Lecture IX dr hab. Ewa popko Electron dynamics  Band structure calculations give E(k)  E(k) determines the dynamics of the electrons.
Optical Fiber Communications
CLEO2004 K. L. Ishikawa No. 0 Enhancement in photoemission from He + by simultaneous irradiation of laser and soft x-ray pulses Kenichi L. Ishikawa Department.
Introduction 2. 2.Limitations involved in West and Yennie approach 3. 3.West and Yennie approach and experimental data 4. 4.Approaches based on.
Pulse confinement in optical fibers with random dispersion Misha Chertkov (LANL) Ildar Gabitov (LANL) Jamey Moser (Brown U.)
Electronic Band Structures electrons in solids: in a periodic potential due to the periodic arrays of atoms electronic band structure: electron states.
Propagation in Photonic Crystal Coupled Cavity Waveguides Possessing Discontinuities Ben Z. Steinberg Amir Boag Orli Hershkoviz Mark Perlson Tel Aviv University.
Anne-Laure Fehrembach, Fabien Lemarchand, Anne Sentenac,
In eq.(1), represent the MFA values of the sigma fields, G S,  P the corresponding coupling constants (see Ref.[3] for details), and is the MFA Polyakov.
Band width Refractive Index Wavelength Information carrying capacity of optical fiber. The ratio of velocity of light in vacuum to velocity.
Comp. Mat. Science School 2001 Lecture 21 Density Functional Theory for Electrons in Materials Richard M. Martin Bands in GaAs Prediction of Phase Diagram.
Advanced design rules for Nanophotonic thin film solar cells Sonia Messadi, H. Ding, G. Gomard, X. Meng, R. Peretti, L. Lalouat, E. Drouard, F. Mandorlo,
FIBER OPTIC TRANSMISSION
CONSERVATION LAWS FOR THE INTEGRATED DENSITY OF STATES IN ARBITRARY QUARTER-WAVE MULTILAYER NANOSTRUCTURES Sergei V. Zhukovsky Laboratory of NanoOptics.
For review of Schrodinger equation: monroecc
OPTICAL FIBER COMMUNICATION
Narrow-band filtering with resonant gratings under oblique incidence Anne-Laure Fehrembach, Fabien Lemarchand, Anne Sentenac, Institut Fresnel, Marseille,
NANO ENGINEERED OPTICAL FIBERS AND APPLICATIONS. OUTLINE Introduction to photonic crystal fibers. Nano engineered optical fiber. Design and applications.
Chapter XII Propagation of Optical Beams in Fibers
Wave propagation in optical fibers Maxwell equations in differential form The polarization and electric field are linearly dependent.
Optical Fiber Basics Part-3
Four wave mixing in submicron waveguides
Photonic Bandgap (PBG) Concept
Chapter 3 Energy Band Theory.
Maksim Skorobogatiy John Joannopoulos MIT, Department of Physics
Bumsoo Kyung, Vasyl Hankevych, and André-Marie Tremblay
Niki Farnsworth R. Steven Turley
Modal profiles at the SPR wavelengths for different SF values
Group theory for the periodic lattice
Group theory for the periodic lattice
Chapter 8.1 Chapter 8.2 PERIODIC STRUCTURES
Presentation transcript:

Modes in Microstructured Optical Fibres Martijn de Sterke, Ross McPhedran, Peter Robinson, CUDOS and School of Physics, University of Sydney, Australia Boris Kuhlmey, Gilles Renversez, Daniel Maystre Institut Fresnel, Université Aix Marseille III, France

Outline Microstructured optical fibres (MOFs) Modal cut-off in MOFS―what is issue? Analysis MOF modes―Bloch transform Modal cut-off of MOF modes –Second mode –Fundamental mode Conclusion

MOFs: Holes Silica matrix Core: - air hole - silica cladding, n J Conventional fibres: core n C >n J Total internal reflection MOFs and conventional fibres

Cladding, n J Conventional fibres: Core, n C >n J Total reflection MOFs:  d Holes Silica matrix Core: - air hole - silica MOFs and conventional fibres

Key MOF properties “Endlessly single-modedness” (Birks et al, Opt. Lett. 22, 961 (1997)) Unique dispersion

MOFs and structural losses Finite number of rings  always losses

Dilemma of Modes in MOFs (1) Conventional fibre: number of modes is number of bound modes (without loss) In a MOF, all modes have loss Want: way to select small set of preferred MOF modes, to get a mode number

Dilemma of Modes in MOFs (2) The answer lies in the difference between bound modes and extended modes Few bound modes: sensitive to core details, loss decreases exponentially with fibre size Many extended modes: insensitive to core details, loss decreases algebraically with fibre size

Properties of Modes in MOFs Mode properties have been studied using the vector multipole method This enables calculation of confinement loss accurately, down to very small levels The form of modal fields is also calculated, and symmetry/degeneracy properties can be incorporated into the method JOSA B 19, 2322 & 2331 (2002)

Bloch Transform Bloch transform enables post processing of each mode to clarify structure better Combine quantities B n (describe field amplitude at each cylinder centred at c l ) Define: If fields at all holes are in phase: peaks at k=0

Bloch Transform: properties Peaks at Bloch vectors associated with mode Periodic in k-space (if holes on lattice) Knowledge in first Brillouin zone suffices Other properties as for Fourier transform –Heisenberg-like relation – Parseval-like relation

Bloch Transform: benefit Understand and recognize modes x y |Sz||Sz| kxkx kyky Bloch Transform Max Min Real space Reciprocal space

Extended modes : dependence on cladding shape |S z | (real space) Bloch Transform (reciprocal lattice)

Centred CoreDisplaced CoreNo Core Extended modes: weak dependence on core

Defect modes |Sz||Sz|Bloch Transform

Defect Modes: weak dependence on cladding shape

Centred CoreDisplaced CoreNo Core Defect Modes: strong dependence on defect ? Very strong losses!

Cutoff of second mode: from multimode to single mode In modal cutoff studies, operate at λ=1.55  m; follow modal changes as rescale period  and hole diameter d, keeping ratio constant.

Cutoff of second mode: localisation transition Mode size Loss Loss  d/  =0.55,  m

rings 8 The transition sharpens Mode size Loss Loss  d/  =0.55,  m 4

Zero-width transition for infinite number of rings Number of rings Transition Width (on period)

Without the cut-off moving Cut-off wavlength (on period) Number of rings

Phase diagram of second mode  multimode monomode “endlessly monomode” d 

Cutoff of second mode: experimental verification From J. R. Folkenberg et al., Opt. Lett. 28, 1882 (2003).

Fundamental mode transition? Conventional fibres: no cut-off W Fibres : cut-off possible, cut-off wavelength proportional to jacket size MOF’s ?

Hint of fundamental mode cut-off d/  =0.3,  m Loss

Transition sharpens d/  =0.3,  m Loss

But keeps non-zero width Number of rings Transition width (on period)

     Transition of finite width: transition region d/  =0.3,  m Loss  Q Confined Extended Cut-off Transition

Phase diagram and operating regimes Homogenisation

Simple interpretation of second mode cut-off From Mortensen et al., Opt. Lett. 28, 1879 (2003)

Conclusions Both fundamental and second MOF modes exhibit transitions from extended to localized behaviour, but the way this happens differs Number of MOF modes may be regarded as number of localized modes MOF modes behave substantially differently than in conventional fibres only where they change from extended to localized