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1.
Opt Express ; 30(17): 31310-31321, 2022 Aug 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36242216

ABSTRACT

Today's lowest-loss hollow core fibers are based on antiresonance guidance. They have been shown both theoretically and experimentally to have very low levels of backscattering arising from the fiber structure - 45 dB below that of traditional optical fibers with a solid silica glass core. This makes their longitudinal characterization using conventional reflectometric techniques very challenging. However, it was recently estimated that when filled with air, their backscattering coefficient increases to about 30 dB below that of standard solid core fibers. This level should be measurable with commercially available high performance optical time domain reflectometers (OTDR). Here we demonstrate - for the first time to the best of our knowledge - the measurement of backscattering from the air inside a hollow core fiber. We show that the characterization of multi-km long hollow core fibers with 15 m spatial resolution is possible using a commercial OTDR instrument. To benefit from its full dynamic range, we strongly suppress the 4% back-reflections that ordinarily occur at the OTDR's standard fiber output when directly-connected to a hollow core fiber. Furthermore, low coupling loss into the hollow core fiber (0.3 dB in our experiment) also helps to maximize the achievable OTDR signal-to-noise ratio. This approach enables distributed characterization and fault-finding in low-loss hollow core fibers, a topic of increasing importance as these fibers are now starting to be installed in commercial optical communication networks.

2.
Sci Rep ; 11(1): 8799, 2021 Apr 22.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33888786

ABSTRACT

We demonstrate halving the record-low loss of interconnection between a nested antiresonant nodeless type hollow-core fiber (NANF) and standard single-mode fiber (SMF). The achieved interconnection loss of 0.15 dB is only 0.07 dB above the theoretically-expected minimum loss. We also optimized the interconnection in terms of unwanted cross-coupling into the higher-order modes of the NANF. We achieved cross-coupling as low as -35 dB into the LP[Formula: see text] mode (the lowest-loss higher-order mode and thus the most important to eliminate). With the help of simulations, we show that the measured LP[Formula: see text] mode coupling is most likely limited by the slightly imperfect symmetry of the manufactured NANF. The coupling cross-talk into the highly-lossy LP[Formula: see text] mode ([Formula: see text] dB/km in our fiber) was measured to be below -22 dB. Furthermore, we show experimentally that the anti-reflective coating applied to the interconnect interface reduces the insertion loss by 0.15 dB while simultaneously reducing the back-reflection below -40 dB over a 60 nm bandwidth. Finally, we also demonstrated an alternative mode-field adapter to adapt the mode-field size between SMF and NANF, based on thermally-expanded core fibers. This approach enabled us to achieve an interconnection loss of 0.21 dB and cross-coupling of -35 dB into the LP[Formula: see text] mode.

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