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1.
Opt Express ; 32(10): 17966-17976, 2024 May 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38858964

ABSTRACT

We present a thulium-doped silica fiber, featuring a depressed cladding, for applications at wavelengths below 1800 nm. The depressed cladding is used as a distributed filter suppressing amplified spontaneous emission at longer wavelengths, which helps promote emission at shorter wavelengths. We describe the fiber design process that was carried out by using a combination of numerical methods. The fiber was prepared in-house by a combination of the standard modified chemical vapor deposition method and nanoparticle doping. We demonstrate the effectiveness and tunability of ASE filtering, which is influenced by fiber bend radius and its variation.

2.
Opt Express ; 32(10): 17932-17941, 2024 May 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38858961

ABSTRACT

We present the development of a pair of silica-based thulium-doped fiber amplifiers working together in a broad spectral range from 1.65 µm to 2.02 µm. For the one optimized for shorter wavelengths, we designed and prepared optical fiber with a depressed cladding. We show the performance of the amplifiers achieving small-signal gain of at least 10 dB over 350 nm range from 1670 nm to 2020 nm, maximum gain of 40.7 dB with a noise figure as low as 6.45 dB and an optical signal-to-noise ratio of up to 50 dB. To the best of our knowledge, it is the first time that thulium fiber amplifiers of straightforward design without using redundant spectral filters operating efficiently in such a wide spectral region are demonstrated.

3.
Opt Express ; 31(26): 43004-43016, 2023 Dec 18.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38178404

ABSTRACT

We present the pedestal-free thulium doped silica fiber with a large nanostructured core optimized for fiber lasers. The fiber is composed of over 6 thousand thulium doped silica nanorods with a diameter of 71 nm each which form a nanostructured step-index core. We study the influence of non-continuous distribution in nanoscale active areas on gain, beam quality, and fiber laser performance. The proof-of-concept fiber is effectively single mode for wavelength above 1.8 µm. We demonstrate the performance of the fiber in a laser setup pumped at 792 nm. Single mode laser emission with a slope efficiency of 29% at quasi-continuous output power of 4 W with M2 = 1.3 at the emission spectrum 1880-1925 nm is achieved.

4.
Opt Express ; 30(6): 10050-10062, 2022 Mar 14.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35299415

ABSTRACT

We investigate the influence of various optical fiber fabrication processes on the fluorescence decay of RE ions commonly used in fiber lasers and amplifiers, i.e. Yb3+, Tm3+ and Ho3+. Optical fiber preforms were prepared using the MCVD method combined with Al2O3 nanoparticle doping and subjected to subsequent heat treatment processes such as preform elongation and fiber drawing. The fluorescence decay of RE ions was measured in multiple stages of optical fiber preparation: in an original preform, in an elongated preform (cane), in a standard fiber, and in an overcladded fiber. It was found that heat treatment processing of the preforms generally leads to a faster fluorescence decay, which can be explained by the diffusion of dopants and clustering of RE ions. The fiber drawing exhibited a greater effect compared to preform elongation, which was ascribed to a faster cooling rate of the process. In general, the heat treatment of RE-doped silica glass preforms leads to the decline of fluorescence decay.

5.
Materials (Basel) ; 13(22)2020 Nov 17.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33212802

ABSTRACT

Laser sources emitting in the infrared range at around 2 µm are attracting great interest for a variety of applications like processing of transparent thermoplastic polymers in industry as well as plenty of applications in medicine, spectroscopy, gas sensing, nonlinear frequency conversion to the mid-infrared, to mention a few. Of late, fiber lasers compared to other kinds of lasers benefit from their all-fiber design, leading to a compact, robust, and well thermally manageable device. Particularly, thulium- and holmium-doped fiber lasers are the first choice in fiber lasers emitting light around 2 µm. In this paper, we give an overview of our recent results in the research on thulium- and holmium-doped optical fibers, fiber lasers, and related research topics in the 2-µm spectral range. In particular, we present, to our knowledge, the first results of improvement of pump absorption in double-clad fibers thanks to the fiber twist frozen during drawing. Finally, a brief demonstration of material processing by thulium all-fiber laser operating at 2 µm is presented.

6.
Opt Express ; 28(9): 13601-13615, 2020 Apr 27.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32403831

ABSTRACT

We experimentally compared for the first time, two techniques of optical fiber preform shaping based on the mechanical grinding and thermal CO2 laser processing from the point of the inner-cladding losses. The shaped preforms were fabricated of coreless pure silica technical rods as well as high purity silica Heraeus F300 rods and drawn them into coreless multimode fibers with various inner-cladding geometries coated with a low index fluorinated polymers. The background losses of the fibers were measured via the cut-back method and compared to the losses of the unshaped fibers with a circular cross-section. Results show that both preform-shaping techniques would induce additional losses in the inner-cladding. High surface scattering losses were observed in the mechanically-grinded fibers. On the other hand, the mechanical grinding retains the advantage of a significant reduction of attenuation peaks attributed to OH-groups that penetrated into the preform surface during the preform collapse. On the contrary, CO2 laser thermal-shaping provides the advantage of quick, fully automated shaping with smooth surface finish and induces much lower scattering losses, but it is not so effective in removing water penetrated surface layer of the preform so that OH-groups diffuse deeper towards the preform center. Additionally, laser thermal-shaping allows processing the preform to complex shapes which are more effective in scrambling cladding modes. Some of the absorption peaks of OH-groups and fluorinated polymers may be rather close to common pumping wavelengths and this should be considered in the design of the double-clad fibers and selection of proper shaping technology.

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