We propose a quantum memory protocol based on trapping photons in a fiber-integrated cavity, comprised of a birefringent fiber with dichroic reflective end facets. Photons are switched into resonance with the fiber cavity by intracavity Bragg-scattering frequency translation, driven by ancillary control pulses. After the storage delay, photons are switched out of resonance with the cavity, again by intracavity frequency translation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHigh-temperature-resistant fiber Bragg gratings (FBGs) are the main competitors to thermocouples as sensors in applications for high temperature environments defined as being in the 600-1200 °C temperature range. Due to their small size, capacity to be multiplexed into high density distributed sensor arrays and survivability in extreme ambient temperatures, they could provide the essential sensing support that is needed in high temperature processes. While capable of providing reliable sensing information in the short term, their long-term functionality is affected by the drift of the characteristic Bragg wavelength or resonance that is used to derive the temperature.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA review of recent progress in the use of infrared femtosecond lasers to fabricate optical fiber sensors that incorporate fiber Bragg gratings (FBG) and random fiber gratings (RFG) is presented. The important advancements in femtosecond laser writing based on the phase mask technique now allow through-the-coating (TTC) fabrication of Bragg gratings in ultra-thin fiber filaments, tilted fiber Bragg gratings, and 1000 °C-resistant fiber Bragg gratings with very strong cladding modes. As an example, through-the-coating femtosecond laser writing is used to manufacture distributed fiber Bragg grating sensor arrays for oil pipeline leak detection.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn this erratum, we correct the mistakes in Eqs. (2) and (2a) in Opt. Lett.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTilted fiber Bragg gratings are inscribed in non-photosensitized single mode fibers through the polyimide coating using a femtosecond infrared laser and a phase mask. The inscription technique used is based on simultaneously translating the fiber along its axis and the focusing cylindrical lens in the orthogonal direction by means of piezoelectric actuators. The grating plane tilt angles up to 10.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe combined effect of chromatic dispersion and conical diffraction (i.e., off-plane diffraction) in femtosecond laser inscription of fiber Bragg gratings using the phase mask technique is characterized by measuring the light intensity distribution after the phase mask.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNarrowband high-temperature stable fiber Bragg gratings (FBGs) can be made by introducing a π-phase shift in the middle of a Type II periodic grating structure. This creates a passband inside the wavelength rejection band. During the inscription of Type II Bragg gratings broadband, optical loss is induced in the fiber core as a result of interaction between the inscription beam and the silica host.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFType II π-phase-shifted Bragg gratings stable up to ~1000°C are written inside a standard single mode silica optical fiber (SMF-28) with infrared femtosecond pulses and a special phase mask. Inscription through the protective polyimide fiber coating is also demonstrated. The birefringence of the Bragg gratings and, as a result, the polarization dependence of their spectra are strongly affected by the femtosecond laser polarization.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThis paper reports the testing results of radiation resistant fiber Bragg grating (FBG) in random air-line (RAL) fibers in comparison with FBGs in other radiation-hardened fibers. FBGs in RAL fibers were fabricated by 80 fs ultrafast laser pulse using a phase mask approach. The fiber Bragg gratings tests were carried out in the core region of a 6 MW MIT research reactor (MITR) at a steady temperature above 600°C and an average fast neutron (>1 MeV) flux >1.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe femtosecond laser-induced fiber Bragg grating is an effective sensor technology that can be deployed in harsh environments. Depending on the optical fiber chosen and the inscription parameters that are used, devices suitable for high temperature, pressure, ionizing radiation and strain sensor applications are possible. Such devices are appropriate for aerospace or energy production applications where there is a need for components, instrumentation and controls that can function in harsh environments.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFVery short Type I and Type II Bragg gratings, on the order of 100 µm in length, are written through the protective polyimide coating of high NA and standard single mode silica optical fibers with infrared femtosecond pulses and a phase mask. By exploiting the transverse walk-off of apertured diffracted beams produced by the phase mask and a slit placed proximate the mask, complex grating structures are fabricated and characterized. These gratings are suitable for structural health monitoring based on acoustic measurements or localized high-temperature measurements.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNonlinear photoluminescence imaging is used to visualize the intensity distribution of femtosecond laser pulses inside the optical fiber during Bragg grating inscription based on side illumination through a phase mask. This technique, which results in direct imaging of the inscription laser field inside the optical fiber, facilitates i) the characterization of the laser focus in the vicinity of the fiber core and ii) the optimization of the fiber alignment with respect to the laser focus while using pulses with energies several times lower than those used during the actual inscription process. The applicability of this imaging technique is demonstrated for Bragg grating inscription in different optical fibers, including direct inscription through the fiber coating.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPeriodic planar nanostructures are found in Type II-IR Bragg gratings produced in SMF-28 fiber by side-illuminating it with infrared femtosecond-laser pulses through a phase mask. The planar nanostructures are aligned perpendicular to the laser polarization, as demonstrated using scanning electron microscopy analysis of cleaved fiber samples. Dark field optical microscopy is employed for real-time monitoring of structural changes occurring inside the fiber during the inscription process.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA novel type of fiber Bragg grating is produced by annealing a type I-like grating that is written with multiple infrared femtosecond laser pulses through a phase mask under conditions that are typically used to fabricate thermally stable type II gratings. This new grating is created through a process similar to a regenerative one and displays low loss and high resilience in a 1000 °C ambient environment. Such gratings are ideally suited for quasi-distributed sensing at high temperatures.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFGaussian profile fiber Bragg gratings exhibit narrow-bandwidth transmission peaks with significant group delay at the edge of their photonic bandgap. We demonstrate group delays ranging from 0.2 to 5.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe report the first experimental demonstration of Bragg grating-based nonlinear switching in a bismuth-oxide single-mode fiber. Exploiting the strong χ3-nonlinearity of this fiber in a cross-phase modulation scheme, we change the transmission of a probe near the grating stop band from 90 % to 20 %, a 6.5 dB extinction ratio, at powers as low as 55 W.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe present, for the first time to our knowledge, a dual strain/temperature sapphire fiber Bragg grating sensor. Temperature and strain coefficients of the grating are evaluated. By recording the blackbody radiation level above 650 degrees C, wavelength shifts due to temperature can be decoupled from those due to strain.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe present fiber Bragg grating pressure sensors in air-hole microstructured fibers for high-temperature operation above 800 degrees C. An ultrafast laser was used to inscribe Type II grating in two-hole optical fibers. The fiber Bragg grating resonance wavelength shift and peak splits were studied as a function of external hydrostatic pressure from 15 psi to 2000 psi.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA number of useful fiber optic devices depend on being able to predict and manipulate the radiation field emitted by tilted fiber Bragg gratings. Previously we demonstrated analytically the manner in which this radiation field is directionally dependent on the phase matching characteristics of a grating's three-dimensional structure as well as the polarization dependent dipole response of the medium itself. In this paper, for the first time, experimental measurements of the out-tapped field are presented which clearly illustrate and confirm the existence of the predicted trends associated with each of these physical mechanisms.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFType I infrared ultrafast laser induced fiber Bragg gratings have been shown to exhibit higher-order resonances related to the Fourier components possessed by their nonsinusoidal index change profile. Using successive higher-order phase masks, we determine the Fourier components of type I-IR gratings in both hydrogen-loaded and unloaded fiber. Knowledge of the relative dc and ac components of a fiber Bragg grating is required for tailoring its spectral response.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA unique ultranarrowband fiber-optic phase-shifted Fabry-Perot Bragg grating filter for atmospheric water vapor lidar measurements was designed, fabricated, and successfully tested. Customized optical fiber Bragg gratings were fabricated so that two transmission filter peaks occurred: one (89% transmission, 8 pm FWHM) near the 946-nm water vapor absorption line and the other peak (80% transmission, 4 pm FWHM) at a region of no absorption. Both transmission peaks were within a 2.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe formation of two grating types in SMF-28 fiber by focusing 125 fs, 0.5-2 mJ pulses through a phase mask onto a fiber sample is studied. The first type, specified as type I-IR, occurs below the damage threshold of the medium.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe threshold for the fabrication of fiber Bragg gratings with ultrafast 800-nm radiation and a phase mask was studied in SMF-28 and all-silica core fiber by use of 125-fs pulses. High-pressure molecular hydrogen loading (H2 loading) was observed to significantly lower the grating writing threshold in standard Ge-doped telecommunication fiber. No reduction was observed with all-silica core fiber.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe compare the cladding patterns present in grating structures fabricated with an ultrafast laser and a phase mask with a cw beam interference model. We find that the observed patterns agree well with the model results for picosecond pulses; however, for femtosecond pulses, we show that the full bandwidth and the pulsed nature of the sources must be considered because the pattern can be affected by group-velocity walk-off. An interesting consequence of order walk-off is the possibility of pure two-beam interference generation with a phase mask in the femtosecond pulse regime.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHigh-quality retroreflecting fiber Bragg gratings were written in standard Ge-doped telecom fiber (Corning SMF-28) after a few minutes exposure with pulsed 800-nm, 120-fs laser radiation by use of a deep-etch silica zero-order nulled phase mask optimized for 800 nm. Induced index modulations of 1.9 x 10(-3) were achieved with peak power intensities of 1.
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