Tutorial Passive Fiber Optics, Part 8: Fiber couplers and splitters (original) (raw)

Key questions:

This is part 8 of a tutorial on passive fiber optics from Dr. Paschotta. The tutorial has the following parts:

Part 8: Fiber Couplers and Splitters

fiber coupler

Figure 1: A 2-by-2 fiber coupler.

When using fiber optics, one often needs to use fiber couplers for various purposes. Some examples:

The probably most often used operation principle of a directional fiber coupler is evanescent wave coupling in a configuration where two fiber cores come close to each other. Such a device can be made by heating two bare fibers such that the glass begins to melt and the fibers fuse together. One might also slightly pull the fibers during that process. A refractive index profile obtained in that way is shown in Figure 1:

refractive index profile of a fiber coupler

Figure 2: Refractive index profile of a fiber coupler.

Both waveguides are single-mode waveguides with a super-Gaussian index profile. The coupling region in the middle is only a few millimeters long. Outside that region, the coupling is negligible, as the mode fields really don't touch each other.

With numerical beam propagation, one can now check what happens when light is injected only into the upper left input port:

amplitude distribution in a fiber coupler

Figure 3: Amplitude distribution in a fiber coupler, obtained with a numerical simulation of beam propagation, done with the software RP Fiber Power.

In this particular situation, the light first couples almost entirely to the lower waveguide after a short distance, but then back to the upper waveguide, and finally most of the power remains there. As the coupling strength depends sensitively on the wavelength, for some other wavelengths one may e.g. get nearly all power to cross over to the lower output port. The simulated wavelength dependence is shown in Figure 4. The somewhat strange shape of the curve in the longer-wavelength region results from bend losses of the waveguides, which get substantial in that region.

wavelength-dependent coupling

Figure 4: Degree of power coupling as a function of the wavelength.

If the coupling is made weak (through the waveguide distance) but can occur over a longer length, the wavelength sensitivity gets stronger. Conversely, broadband couplers require a strong coupling over a short length.

Note that such couplers are directional couplers: essentially no light couples into the “backward” direction.

Of course, one can inject light into both input ports of such a fiber coupled. The outputs will then be a linear superposition of electric field amplitudes caused by the two inputs, assuming that the optical intensities are not high enough to cause nonlinear optical effects. Particularly for fiber couplers made from single-mode fibers, one can obtain destructive interference in one of the output ports if two coherent inputs of correctly chosen powers, polarization directions and relative phases are injected. In such a case, constructive interference will occur for the other output port; the overall power has to be preserved, of course, apart from some possible parasitic power losses.

Pump couplers for high-power fiber lasers and amplifiers are different in some respects. The input and output fibers are strongly multimode, with large cores and high numerical aperture. The coupling principles can also be different from that in the example case above. For example, instead of evanescent wave coupling one may simply inject light from smaller cores into a large core for the output. Power losses must be carefully minimized — partly because lost light at high power levels might destroy the coupler.

Go to Part 9: Polarization Issues or back to the start page.

Questions and Comments from Users

Here you can submit questions and comments. As far as they get accepted by the author, they will appear above this paragraph together with the author’s answer. The author will decide on acceptance based on certain criteria. Essentially, the issue must be of sufficiently broad interest.

Please do not enter personal data here. (See also our privacy declaration.) If you wish to receive personal feedback or consultancy from the author, please contact him, e.g. via e-mail.

By submitting the information, you give your consent to the potential publication of your inputs on our website according to our rules. (If you later retract your consent, we will delete those inputs.) As your inputs are first reviewed by the author, they may be published with some delay.