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Kevin Edmonds Patrick Chan Dr. H.P. Lee

Development and Refinement of Long Period Fiber Grating (LPFG) Manufacture and Characterization Techniques. Kevin Edmonds Patrick Chan Dr. H.P. Lee. Long Period Fiber Gratings. Operate as band rejection filters in optic fibers Useful for sensing and signal shaping applications

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Kevin Edmonds Patrick Chan Dr. H.P. Lee

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  1. Development and Refinement of Long Period Fiber Grating (LPFG) Manufacture and Characterization Techniques Kevin Edmonds Patrick Chan Dr. H.P. Lee

  2. Long Period Fiber Gratings • Operate as band rejection filters in optic fibers • Useful for sensing and signal shaping applications • Two important kinds: • CO2 Etched Gratings • Acousto-optic Tunable Filters

  3. LPFGs Continued • Optic fibers with periodically varying indexes of refraction through a section of the fiber • We’ll call them interfaces • CO2 Etched Gratings have their interfaces written into them with a CO2 laser • AOTFs use a standing wave

  4. LPFGs Continued Continued • Important differences: • CO2 etched gratings are compact and passive devices, but are non-tunable • AOTFs are tunable, but are comparatively bulky and active devices

  5. Manufacture of Etched Gratings • Point by point method: • Place fiber under tension • for(int i = 0; i < 20; i++){ • Heat • Stop heat • Move laser a little }

  6. Manufacture of Etched Gratings • Modulation Scan • Keep laser on entire time, but increase intensity when writing interfaces • End result is smoother changes in refractive index, which results in lower insertion loss (signal degradation)

  7. Novel Approach to Manufacture of Etched Gratings • Each time light passes through an interface it gets attenuated at some wavelength • If all of the interfaces are the same, we strongly reject one wavelength

  8. Novel Approach to Manufacture of Etched Gratings • If each wavelength is a little different, we sort-of-strongly reject lots of wavelengths • This is a broad-band rejection filter, sometimes called a chirped grating

  9. Novel Approach to Manufacture of Etched Gratings • One way of writing chirped gratings is to change the writing intensity for each interface • Question: What happens if we angle the fiber as we write?

  10. Novel Approach to Manufacture of Etched Gratings Answer: Terrible, horrible things

  11. Experimental Setup Schematic

  12. Actual Setup

  13. Actual Setup Continued

  14. Actual Setup Supercontinued

  15. Novel Approach to Manufacture of Etched Gratings • Laser falls out of focus at some interfaces and focuses too hard at other interfaces. • End result is that some interfaces are written too strongly while others are written too weakly. • It’s really just an awful awful nightmare because each test that fails (and there were a lot of tests that failed) means we (by “we” I mean “I”) have to prepare another optic fiber for writing and it turns out that there’s a certain minimum amount of manual dexterity required to work in my lab and it turns out I don’t have that kind of manual dexterity because for each fiber I prepare successfully I break two others and I think I got a splinter once FROM AN OPTIC FIBER HOW MANY PEOPLE IN THE WORLD GET THOSE?? ONLY ONE AND IT’S ME BECAUSE EVERYONE ELSE APPARENTLY HAS THE MANUAL DEXTERITY TO NOT GET SPLINTERS.

  16. Novel Approach to Manufacture of Etched Gratings • It’s possible to correct this problem in software but that sort of defeats the purpose • We conclude that this method is more trouble than it’s worth

  17. Interferometric Measurement of the Vibration Amplitude of an AOTF to Determine Mounting Efficiency • The actual vibration transferred to the optic fiber is dependent on the connection between the optic fiber and the PZT • We’ll call the quality of this connection the mounting efficiency

  18. AOTF Mounting Efficiency • We would like to quantitatively characterize the mounting efficiency of our AOTFs • We use interferometry to measure the amplitude of the vibration of our AOTFs

  19. Experimental Setup Schematic • Laser goes through a beam splitter • Beam breaks up into “sample beam” and “reference beam” • Sample beam will hit the vibrating sample • Reference beam goes through an acousto-optic modulator and gets tuned to some frequency (80MHz in our case) • Sample and reference beams recombine and go into photodetector

  20. Actual Setup

  21. What the signal looks like • In the frequency domain we will see three peaks

  22. What to do with this • The ratio of the high peak to the lower side peaks is given by l /4pa, where a is the amplitude of the vibrating sample

  23. Extraction of a signal from a high noise environment • Our AOTFs may be vibrating very weakly and may therefore be hard to detect • We will use a lock-in amplifier in this case

  24. Lock-in Amplifier • Tool to extract a weak signal from a noisy environment • Output given by:

  25. Development of a Software Lock-in Amplifier • Successfully reproduced lock-in amplifier functionality in software • End result:

  26. Measurement Results • Successfully able to measure vibration of a dummy sample

  27. Future Research • Ensure measurement consistency • Signal from photodetector is jittery • Automate data detection • Do tests with real AOTFs

  28. Acknowledgements • Patrick Chan, Ivan Tomov, Len Szalkowski, H.P. Lee • National Science Foundation • IM-SURE • Said M. Shokair

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