large mode area fibers (original) (raw)

Acronym: LMA fiber

Definition: optical fibers with relatively large mode areas and a single transverse mode or only a few modes

Category: article belongs to category fiber optics and waveguides fiber optics and waveguides

Related: large-core fiberseffective mode areadouble-clad fibersbend lossesnumerical aperturefiber coreleaky modesfiber amplifiersphotonic crystal fibersSingle-Mode Fibers with Large Mode AreasHigher-Order Modes of Fibers: a Solution for Single-Mode Guidance with Large Mode Area?Diffraction in Optical FibersDiffraction in Optical FibersContinuing Struggle for Larger Fiber Mode AreasEasier Launching into Fibers with Large Mode Area?

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Contents

What are Large Mode Area Fibers?

For some applications, it is desirable to use optical fibers with particularly large effective mode areas (LMA fibers) — but often still with single-mode guidance, or at most with few modes. In many cases, such fibers are double-clad fibers, as these are often needed for applications involving high power levels.

For a given optical power, large mode areas imply reduced optical intensities. Therefore, such fibers effectively exhibit weaker nonlinear optical effects and a higher damage threshold. That makes them suitable for, e.g., the amplification of intense pulses or single-frequency signals in fiber amplifiers, or in the case of passive fibers for delivery of such light. Whereas standard single-mode fibers have an effective mode area below 100 ÎĽm2, large mode area fibers reach values of hundreds or even thousands of ÎĽm2.

For a large mode area, one requires a large fiber core. However, large-core fibers do not necessarily have large modes, if they are strongly multimode; at least the fundamental mode may then be much smaller than the core.

Note that waveguide dispersion becomes weak for large mode areas. Therefore, there is limited scope for tailoring the chromatic dispersion of large mode area fibers.

standard and large mode area fiber

Figure 1: Comparison of bare (uncoated) fibers with a standard core size (e.g. 8 ÎĽm diameter) and a large core (50 ÎĽm diameter).

Design Approaches and Limiting Factors

A straightforward design approach to obtain large mode areas is to decrease the numerical aperture (NA), i.e., to decrease the refractive index difference between the core and the cladding, for a step-index fiber design (see Figure 2). However, there are severe limitations: the guidance (waveguiding) then becomes weak, and significant losses can arise from small imperfections of the fiber or from bending (→ bend losses). Therefore, the numerical aperture should normally not be made smaller than approximately 0.06, although in extreme cases values as low as 0.04 have been used [39].

parameters of step-index LMA fibers

Figure 2: Effective mode area of a step-index fiber as a function of numerical aperture (NA) for different values of the V-number.

Large mode areas can in principle be achieved even with ($V$) = 2, i.e., with strictly single-mode guidance, but this requires the use of a very small numerical aperture, which implies a critical dependence on refractive index inhomogeneities and bending.

There are additional difficulties in applying this concept to rare-earth-doped fibers. Relatively high concentrations of additional dopants like alumina or phosphorus are often required, e.g. for reducing certain quenching effects, and these dopants often increase the numerical aperture. Even if the refractive index contrast can be reduced in some way, e.g. by also somewhat raising the refractive index around the core, the precision of refractive index control may be decreased, and this affects the ability to realize very large mode areas. Also, in high-power fiber lasers and amplifiers based on large mode area fibers, thermal lensing can lead to changes in mode properties, in particular to a reduction in effective mode area [32].

Somewhat larger mode areas can be achieved with fiber designs supporting a few propagation modes (→ few-mode fibers). It may then still be possible to guide light dominantly in the fundamental mode, so that the output e.g. of a fiber amplifier is close to diffraction-limited [2, 3, 6]. Stringent limitations arise from the more critical launch conditions and from mode mixing in the fiber, which can spoil the beam quality and lead to beam pointing fluctuations [17].

Various more sophisticated fiber designs (partly based on photonic crystal fibers) and techniques have been developed for addressing these challenges. In many cases, one attempts to introduce substantial propagation losses for any higher-order modes, making it easier to maintain robust single-mode propagation in a multimode fiber. Another important aspect is to minimize unwanted mode coupling, basically by achieving a large enough difference in the propagation constants between the fundamental and higher-order modes.

Some examples of possible design strategies of large mode areas are:

The best fiber designs reach an effective mode area of several thousand ÎĽm2. There is no strict limit, but designs with larger mode areas exhibit less robust single-mode propagation and often can tolerate only very slight bending. It appears that no kind of design can offer a further substantial expansion of the mode area with robust single-mode propagation. The reason for this is essentially that a mode involves some balance of diffraction and waveguiding, and as diffraction inevitably becomes weaker at larger mode areas, this balance becomes more and more sensitive to any disturbances.

For high-power operation, significant thermo-optic problems can occur in large mode area fibers. In particular, the effective mode area may shrink due to thermal lensing, and additional spatial modes may be supported.

Difficulties with Interfacing

A general problem with the use of large mode are fibers is that these fibers are not compatible with standard fiber components. (Many fiber-optic components are only available with standard mode sizes.) When a large mode area fiber is spliced to a standard fiber, the large mismatch in mode areas leads to an excessive power loss at the joint (see the article on fiber joints). There are two solutions to this problem, which however are both not fully satisfying:

Alternative Solution: Using Higher-order Modes

Normally, a large mode area fiber is understood to be a fiber which has a single guided mode per polarization direction or only very few modes. However, one can also obtain a large mode area by utilizing a high-order mode of a multimode fiber [11, 21, 35]. In practice, one can first couple light from the fundamental mode to a particular higher-order mode, using a long-period fiber Bragg grating. Thereafter, light can propagate in that mode e.g. in an amplifying fiber, and finally it can be converted back to the fundamental mode with another fiber Bragg grating.

The advantage of using a higher-order mode is twofold: such modes have larger effective mode areas, and they exhibit a weaker coupling to other modes. The power losses associated with coupling to and from this higher-order mode can be small, and the fiber design can be optimized for a broad bandwidth for this coupling.

However, difficulties with that HOM fiber technique might arise from the very uneven intensity distribution. This can lead to fiber damage even in a regime where the overall nonlinearity is moderately strong, so the approach may solve problems with nonlinearities but not those with damage. Also, the mode field significantly extends into the cladding (the inner cladding in the case of a double-clad fiber), which is not ideal for amplification.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is a large mode area (LMA) fiber?

A large mode area (LMA) fiber is an optical fiber designed to have a particularly large effective mode area, often in the hundreds or thousands of ÎĽm2, while maintaining single-mode or few-mode guidance.

Why are large mode areas in fibers often desirable?

A large mode area reduces the optical intensity for a given power level. This mitigates unwanted nonlinear optical effects and increases the damage threshold, which is crucial for high-power fiber amplifiers and delivering intense light pulses.

What is the simplest way to design an LMA fiber, and what is its limitation?

The most straightforward approach for a step-index fiber is to use a large fiber core and a small numerical aperture (NA). The main limitation is that a very small NA leads to weak light guidance, making the fiber highly sensitive to bend losses and imperfections.

How can robust single-mode operation be achieved in a large mode area fiber?

Various advanced designs introduce high propagation losses for higher-order modes while keeping losses low for the fundamental mode. Examples include leakage channel fibers, chirally coupled core fibers, and careful bending of the fiber.

What are the challenges when connecting LMA fibers to standard optical fibers?

Splicing an LMA fiber to a standard fiber results in a large mode area mismatch, causing significant power loss at the joint. This can be addressed by using a tapered mode converter or by using free-space optical coupling.

What are the challenges with rare-earth-doped LMA fibers?

Is it possible to use higher-order modes to get a large effective area?

Yes, one can use a higher-order mode (HOM) of a multimode fiber, which can have a very large area. Special components like long-period fiber Bragg gratings are needed to couple light into and out of the desired HOM.

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