Abstract
1. Introduction
Since the 90s, Er-doped fiber amplifiers (EDFAs) play an important role in modern optical telecommunications. Besides this, in recent years, high-repetition-rate (HRR) or single-frequency (SF) Er-doped fiber lasers (EDFLs) are widely applied in some specific fields, owing to their eye safety and high atmospheric transmission, such as remote sensing, LIDAR, and gravitational wave detection[
However, for silica-based EDFs manufactured by modified chemical vapor deposition (MCVD), the doping concentration is limited by ion clusters induced quenching (CIQ), which is detrimental to emission properties[
Several researchers focus on non-silica fibers[
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Several fiber manufacturing processes based on the CVD process have been developed to ensure uniform dispersion of Er ions, such as surface plasma chemical vapor deposition (SPCVD)[
In this Letter, we introduced an MCVD combined with sol doping technology to fabricate heavily doping silica fiber. This fiber fabrication method combines the advantage of low-loss preparation of MCVD and the sol-gel merit of high doping homogeneity. Based on this technique, we prepared a heavily Er-doped silica fiber (MCVD and SG-EDF, MS-EDF). The core absorption and background loss were measured using the cut-back method. The unsaturable absorptions of the MS-EDF and the SG-EDF were measured to estimate the CIQ effect. Also, gain and short-cavity lasing properties of the MS-EDF were invested and discussed in all-fiber schemes.
2. Fiber Fabrication
The method of preparing the -doped silica preform is shown in Fig. 1. Firstly, a porous silica layer was deposited in a chemically polished silica tube (F300, Heraeus) with flow of 200 mL/min. The temperature of oxy-hydrogen burner is set to 1500°C to ensure uniform porosity. After pure silica soot deposition, we immersed it in the Er/Al co-doped transparent sol for 1 h of soaking. The sol composition is in molar ratio, and the preparation of rare-earth-doped transparent sol was already described in detail in our previous works[
Figure 1.Schematic diagram of fiber preform fabrication.
Figure 2(a) shows the radial refractive index profile (RIP) measured by an optical fiber analyzer (IFA-100). It is shown that there is no central dip in the RIP, and the refractive index fluctuation is lower than . The refractive index difference with respect to the pure silica glass is about thanks to the sol-gel method decreasing the Al content. The corresponding numerical aperture (NA) is 0.13, which can achieve single-mode operation with an core diameter for application at 1.5 µm. The concentration distribution of and in both MS-EDF and SG-EDF measured by an electron probe micro analyzer (EPMA, JEOL, JXA-8230) is shown in Fig. 2(b). For the SG-EDF, the concentrations of and in the core glass rod were measured to be 16,200 ppm (parts per million) and 25,200 ppm through inductively coupled plasma optical emission spectrometry (ICP-OES, radial-view Thermo iCAP 6300), respectively. The concentrations of and in the MS-EDF core are a little bit lower than that in the SG-EDF and thus are estimated to be 15,000 ppm (by weight) and 24,000 ppm (by weight), respectively. The dilution effect of doping into silica soot may be responsible for the relatively low concentration.
Figure 2.(a) Radial refractive index profile. Inset: micrograph of MS-EDF cross section. (b) Concentrations of Al3+ and Er3+ in the MS-EDF and SG-EDF from EPMA measurement.
The core background loss and absorption spectra were measured with a white light source and an optical spectrum analyzer (OSA) by the cut-back method. In Fig. 3(a), we plotted the background loss spectra of the heavily EDF. The background loss is about 20 dB/km at 1100 nm, which is much lower than the 200 dB/km of the SG-EDF reported in Ref. [21], owing to the low-loss MCVD fabrication process. The core absorption spectrum was measured using a short fiber, and the result was plotted in Fig. 3(b). The core absorption coefficients of the MS-EDF at 980 nm and 1530 nm were about 65 dB/m and 128 dB/m, respectively.
Figure 3.(a) Background loss and (b) absorption of the MS-EDF.
3. Experiments and Results
The lifetime of the metastable level in the clustered ions is several orders of magnitude shorter (50 ns–10 µs) than that in isolated ions, which is due to so-called CIQ[
Figure 4.(a) Simplified energy level diagram of isolated Er3+ ions and Er3+-Er3+ pairs with an excitation at 980 nm. (b) Unsaturable absorptions at 976 nm of a 25 cm SG-EDF (blue) and a 32 cm MS-EDF (red). (c) Fluorescence decay curves obtained from the two fibers.
The unsaturable absorptions of the MS-EDF and the SG-EDF at 976 nm are shown in Fig. 4(b). The lengths of two fibers were chosen for providing the same absorption of pump power at 976 nm, and it can be seen in Fig. 4(b) that the maximum small-signal absorptions of two fibers are both about 22 dB. With the input laser power increasing, the absorption was decreased rapidly and became stable gradually. The stable value is called unsaturable absorption, and the unsaturable absorption fraction is the ratio of unsaturable absorption to the maximum absorption. This part of absorbed pump power cannot transfer to laser power, and thus it can be considered as “excess background loss” to a certain extent. When the injected pump power is 199 mW, the absorption of the MS-EDF is 9.3 dB, thus the unsaturable absorption fraction is . However, for the SG-EDF, the unsaturable absorption fraction is 54.9%. The reason why the unsaturable absorption fraction of the MS-EDF is smaller than that of the SG-EDF can be attributed to the doping concentration difference, which can also be found from the EPMA results and absorption coefficient.
We also measured the fluorescence decay of the energy level in the MS-EDF and the SG-EDF, which was core pumped using a pulsed 980 nm laser. The decay curve was recorded using an InGaAs photon detector (DET20C2, Thorlabs) and an oscilloscope (DSOX6002A, Keysight). It is seen from Fig. 4(c) that the lifetime of the two fibers is around 10 ms, showing no obvious lifetime shortening. Therefore, from the results of unsaturable absorptions and fluorescence decay measurements, the MS-EDF has a high doping homogeneity without concentration quenching.
As is shown in Fig. 5(a), the gain properties of the MS-EDF were evaluated with an all-fiber EDFA setup. The EDFA was seeded by a tunable light source (TSL) operated in the C + L band. An optical isolator (ISO) was placed after the seed source to protect the TSL from backward propagating light. The signal optical power injected into the EDFA was fixed to be through adjusting the seed power. The EDF was core pumped by a single-mode 976 nm laser diode (LD) in a forward pumping configuration via a 980/1550 nm wavelength division multiplexer (WDM). After the active fiber, another WDM was used to split the amplified signal and residual pump light. The spectra of the input signal and the amplified signal were measured with an OSA to calculate the gain and the noise figure (NF). In the measurement, the insert loss and propagation loss of the whole device have been taken into account.
Figure 5.(a) Schematic of EDFA experiment. (b) Dependence of the gain and NF of the MS-EDF on the wavelength with different fiber lengths.
Figure 5(b) shows the signal gain and NF from 1520 to 1600 nm under 500 mW launched pump power and input signal power for three different fiber lengths of 75, 45, and 25 cm. The step size of the wavelength was 10 nm. The NF of the MS-EDF at all measured wavelengths is less than 6 dB, showing an excellent noise performance. It can be seen that the gain peak wavelength of the shorter fiber is located at 1530 nm, and the maximum gain red shifted to 1560 nm with longer fiber. The small-signal gain at 1530 nm was obtained in both 25 and 45-cm-long MS-EDFs. The maximum gain up to 23.6 dB with an NF of 4.4 dB was obtained by the 75-cm-long MS-EDF at 1560 nm.
The short-cavity laser performance was investigated, employing a short linear cavity scheme as in Fig. 6(a). A laser cavity was formed by a pair of fiber Bragg gratings (FBGs) fabricated in a standard 1.5 µm single-mode fiber (SMF-28e, Corning). The reflectivity of the low-reflectivity (LR) FBG is , which is centered at 1533.66 nm with a 3 dB bandwidth of 0.15 nm. The high-reflectivity (HR) FBG is centered at 1533.65 nm with a 3 dB bandwidth of 0.45 nm, and its reflectivity is above 99%. A backward pumping configuration was applied this time to easily split the laser power and residual pump power via a WDM. An ISO was spliced to the 1550 nm end of the WDM to block the backward propagating light. The laser power and residual pump power were recorded by two optical power meters, respectively, and the laser spectrum was measured using an OSA.
Figure 6.(a) Schematic of short-cavity laser experiment. (b) Dependence of laser output power on absorption pump power for different fiber length. (c) Laser spectra of 3.7 and 1.8-cm-long fibers. Inset: the enlarged and normalized spectrum (left) and the picture of the laser cavity (right) using the 3.7-cm-long MS-EDF.
The dependence of laser output power on absorbed pump power for five different fiber lengths (3.7, 5.0, 5.7, 6.5, and 8.0 cm) is illustrated in Fig. 6(b). With the increased fiber length, the slope efficiency initially increases from 13.6% to 20.4%, then decreases from 20.4% to 13.6%. The highest slope efficiency of 20.4% and output power of 11.9 mW were obtained in a 6.5-cm-long MS-EDF under 81 mW absorbed pump power. The slope efficiency of 20.4% is higher than the value reported for SG-EDF (12%, in Ref. [31]), and it can be attributed to lower background loss.
For a longer fiber, the signal power was reabsorbed by an extra active fiber, which results in lower laser efficiency. For a shorter length fiber, it is very difficult to absorb enough pump power and provide enough gain, resulting a larger threshold and lower slope efficiency. The output spectra of a 3.7 cm and a 1.8 cm MS-EDF are shown in Fig. 6(c), and the left inset is the enlarged and normalized laser spectrum, which was measured at a resolution of 0.02 nm. The laser spectrum of the 3.7 cm MS-EDF was centered at 1533.7 nm with a 0.014 nm spectrum linewidth full width at half-maximum (FWHM), and it shows great optical signal-to-noise ratio (OSNR) performance. Meanwhile, it can be noted that the 1.8-cm-long MS-EDF could not achieve effective lasing due to insufficient gain, although we maximized the pump power.
4. Conclusion
In this Letter, we proposed a technique to fabricate heavily EDFs combining commercial MCVD with the sol-gel method. The proposed technique can achieve a uniform dispersion of Er ions in a silica matrix, and the clustered ion fraction was estimated by unsaturable absorption measurement. The peak absorption coefficient is at 1530 nm. The background loss of the MS-EDF is measured to be at 1100 nm and compatible to commercial EDFs. The net gain coefficient of the MS-EDF can reach 23 dB at both 1530 and 1560 nm through adjusting the fiber length. Thanks to the low background loss and unsaturable absorption, our MS-EDF shows great laser performance. The maximum average power of 12 mW and slope efficiency of 20.4% were successfully obtained in a 6.5-cm-long MS-EDF. At a fiber length of 3.7 cm, an effective lasing was obtained with an OSNR up to 45 dB and an FWHM of 0.014 nm. We believe our MS-EDF can be a promising candidate for HRR and SF fiber lasers. At the same time, the new fiber fabrication technique can also be applied to other rare-earth fibers, such as ytterbium and thulium.
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