silica fibers (original) (raw)

Definition: optical fibers based on fused silica or related materials

Categories: article belongs to category optical materials optical materials, article belongs to category fiber optics and waveguides fiber optics and waveguides

Related: Telecom Fiber With Parabolic Index Profilefiberstelecom fibersrare-earth-doped fibersfiber opticsphotodarkeningphotonic crystal fibersoptical fiber communicationsfluoride fibersoptical glasses

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What are Silica Fibers?

Optical fibers are long and flexible kinds of optical waveguides. They are essentially always based either on some glass or on polymers (plastic optical fibers). Among the glasses, fused silica (amorphous silicon dioxide, SiO2) is the primary base material in fiber optics (particularly for optical fiber communications, → telecom fibers) because it has a number of very favorable properties:

intrinsic losses of silica

Figure 1: Intrinsic losses of silica. At long wavelengths, infrared absorption related to multiphonon absorption (vibrational resonances) is dominating. At shorter wavelengths, Rayleigh scattering at the unavoidable density fluctuations in the glass is more important. There is a loss minimum of ā‰ˆ 0.2 dB/km around 1.55 μm. Some telecom fibers nearly reach that level. If the fiber contains hydroxyl (OH) ions, additional peaks at 1.39 μm and 1.24 μm can be seen in the loss spectrum.

Silica fibers dominate many applications, such as optical fiber communications (except for very short distances with plastic optical fibers), most fiber lasers and amplifiers, and fiber-optic sensors. The large efforts which have been invested in the development of various kinds of silica fibers have further increased the performance advantages of such fibers over fibers based on other materials (see below).

There are also pure silica fibers in the form of photonic crystal fibers, containing tiny air holes. Here, the guidance (waveguide function) is achieved either by a reduced effective index of the cladding (caused by a larger fraction of air) or by a photonic bandgap effect.

For special applications, certain non-silica fibers are required:

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Bibliography

[1] Y. Ohmori, T. Miya and M. Horiguchi, ā€œTransmission-loss characteristics of Al2O3-doped silica fibersā€, J. Lightwave Technol. LT-1 (1), 50 (1983); doi:10.1109/JLT.1983.1072067
[2] W. A. Gambling, ā€œThe rise and rise of optical fibersā€, J. Sel. Top. Quantum Electron. 6 (6), 1084 (2000); doi:10.1109/2944.902157

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