The Reduction of 1.06-m Emission in a Double Cladding Tellurite
All-solid Photonic Bandgap Fiber Doped with Neodymium Ions
Tong Hoang Tuan, Kohei Suzaki, Nobuhiko Nishiharaguchi, Takenobu Suzuki and Yasutake Ohishi
Toyota Technological Institute, 2-12-1 Hisakata, Tempaku-ku, Nagoya, 468-8511, Japan
Keywords: Neodymium Doped Fiber, All-solid Photonic Bandgap Fibers, Tellurite Fibers, Fiber Fabrication.
Abstract: In order to take advantage of the 1.33-µm emission from
4
F
3/2
→
4
I
13/2
transition of Nd
3+
ions to realize many
potential applications in this telecommunication band, it is important to filter out the intense 1.06-µm
emission from the
4
F
3/2
→
4
I
11/2
transition. In this work, a new tellurite all-solid photonic bandgap fiber with
double cladding layer was proposed. In addition, 8 high-index rods and an Nd
3+
-doped core were arranged
in a horizontal line and located in the center of the fiber. Numerical calculation was carried out to study the
properties of the propagation modes at 0.8, 1.06 and 1.33 µm. By controlling the diameters of the core and
high-index rods, it is possible to reduce the intensity of the 1.06-m light, but maintain the intensity of the
lights at 0.8 and 1.33 µm when they propagate in the fiber core.
1 INTRODUCTION
In recent years, the demands of optical amplifiers
and lasers which can operate at various wavelengths
in telecommunication bands to develop broadband
optical systems for global telecommunication are
rapidly raising. By using Erbium-doped fiber
amplifiers (EDFA) as gain media for wavelength
division multiplexing (WDM) systems, gain
bandwidths from 1530 to 1560 nm (Jose, 2015) can
be achieved but they are as narrow as 30 nm.
Among several active rare-earth ions that have
been investigated for optical fiber amplifiers and
lasers in the telecommunication band, Neodymium
ion (Nd
3+
) is an attractive candidate as 1.3-µm
optical amplification active ions due to its
4
F
3/2
→
4
I
13/2
transition (Miniscalco, 1988; Wang, 1994;
Naftaly, 2000). However, when it is excited by
pumping at 0.8 µm, the presence of the intense
amplified spontaneous emission (ASE) at 1.06 µm
has become a major problem. This ASE is attributed
to the
4
F
3/2
→
4
I
11/2
transition whose branching ratio is
about 5 times larger than that of the
4
F
3/2
→
4
I
13/2
transition for the ASE at 1.33 µm. To take full
advantage of the 1.33-µm ASE, it is necessary to
filter out the intense 1.06-m ASE by using a
continuous distributed filter (Naftaly, 2000).
In this work, we proposed a new tellurite all-
solid photonic bandgap fiber (ASPBF) as a
promising solution. The fiber consists of an Nd
3+
-
doped core in the center, a horizontal line of 8 high-
index rods and double cladding layers. The
propagation of the lights at 0.8, 1.06 and 1.33 m in
the fiber core was investigated. By controlling the
fiber parameters, the transmission of the 1.06-m
light can be reduced and becomes weaker as
compared to the others.
2 MATERIAL PROPERTIES
A conventional ASPBF usually consists of an
arrangement of isolated high-index rods located in a
low-index cladding (Knight, 2006). In this work, a
step-index cladding profile was designed by using
two cladding layers with different refractive index.
The materials for the core, rod, inner cladding and
outer cladding were developed by using tellurite
glasses. The core material was TeO
2
-ZnO-Na
2
O-
La
2
O
3
which was doped with 0.5 wt% of Nd
3+
ions
(TZNL-Nd-doped). The tellurite glass TeO
2
-Li
2
O-
WO
3
-MoO
3
-Nb
2
O
5
(TLWMN) was used for high
index rods and the TeO
2
-ZnO-Na
2
O-La
2
O
3
(TZNL)
and TeO
2
-ZnO-Li
2
O-K
2
O-Al
2
O
3
-P
2
O
5
glasses were
used for the cladding materials, respectively. High
purity TeO
2
powder (99.999%) and an electric
furnace with dry gas flows of argon and oxygen
were used to avoid the OH-contamination. After