RESUMEN
When a hollow core fiber is drawn, the core and cladding holes within the internal cane geometry are pressurized with an inert gas to enable precise control over the internal microstructure of the fiber and counteract surface tension forces. Primarily by considering the temperature drop as the fiber passes through the furnace and the geometrical transformation of the internal microstructure from preform-to-fiber, we recently established that the gas pressure within the final 'as-drawn' fiber is substantially below atmospheric pressure. We have also established that slight changes in the gas refractive index within the core and surrounding cladding holes induced by changes in gas pressure are sufficient to significantly affect both the modality and loss of the fiber. Here we demonstrate, through both simulations and experimental measurements, that the combination of these effects leads to transient changes in the fiber's attenuation when the fibers are opened to atmosphere post-fabrication. It is important to account for this phenomenon for accurate fiber characterization, particularly when long lengths of fiber are drawn where it could take many weeks for every part of the internal microstructure to reach atmospheric pressure.
RESUMEN
We report a high-power single-mode mid-infrared (MIR) pulse delivery system via anti-resonant hollow-core fiber (HCF) with a record delivery distance of 108 m. Near-diffraction-limited MIR light was transmitted by HCFs at wavelengths of 3.12-3.58 µm using a tunable optical parametric oscillator (OPO) as the light source. The HCFs were purged beforehand with argon in order to remove or reduce loss due to parasitic gas absorption (HCl, CO2, etc.). The minimum fiber loss values were 0.05 and 0.24â dB/m at 3.4-3.6 µm and 4.5-4.6 µm, respectively, with the 4.5-4.6 µm loss figure representing, to the best of our knowledge, a new low loss record for a HCF in this spectral region. At a coupling efficiency of â¼70%, average powers of 592â mW and 133â mW were delivered through 5 m and 108 m of HCF, respectively. Assuming the 120-ps duration of the MIR pulses remained constant over the low-dispersion HCF (theoretical maximum: 0.4 ps/nm/km), the corresponding calculated peak powers were 4.9â kW and 1.1â kW.
RESUMEN
Using micro-optic collimator technology, we present compact, low-loss optical interconnection devices for hollow core fibers (HCFs). This approach is one of the key manufacturing platforms for commercially available fiber optic components and most forms of HCFs can readily be incorporated into this platform without the need for any substantial or complicated adaptation or physical deformation of the fiber structure. Furthermore, this technique can provide for very low Fresnel reflection interconnection between solid-core fiber and HCF and in addition provides a hermetic seal for HCFs, which can be a critical issue for many HCF applications. In this paper, several exemplar HCF components are fabricated with low insertion loss (0.5-2 dB), low Fresnel reflection (-45 dB) and high modal purity (>20 dB) using various state-of-the-art HCFs.