Everything about Double-clad Fiber totally explained
In
fiber optics, a
double-clad fiber (or
doubly clad fiber, or DCF) is an
optical fiber that has a relatively small-diameter
core and two layers of large-diameter
cladding. Usually, both cladding layers have lower
refractive index than the core, and the inner cladding layer has lower refractive index than the outer layer. This allows the inner cladding to carry
multimode light of a different
wavelength from that carried in the core of the fiber. This type of fiber is also called
depressed-inner-cladding fiber and
W-profile fiber (from the fact that a symmetrical plot of its refractive index profile superficially resembles the letter W). Mostly, DCF fibers are used as
fiber laser.
Fiber lasers and optical amplifiers
Double-clad fibers often are used for
fiber lasers and
optical amplifiers, because the core can be doped to act as the
gain medium while the inner cladding layer carries a
pump beam used to maintain the
population inversion in the core. For such applications, the core may be
single-mode or may be
multimode with a low
numerical aperture. The use of double-clad fibers allows fiber lasers to be
scaled to higher powers than can otherwise be achieved.
The shape of the cladding is very important at narrow core and wide cladding. Circular symmetry in a double-clad fiber seems to be the worst solution for a fiber laser; in this case, many modes of the light in the cladding miss the core and hence can't be used to pump it.
In the language of
geometrical optics, most of the
rays of the pump light don't pass through the core, and hence can't pump it.
Ray tracing, simulations of the paraxial propagation
and mode analysis
give similar results.
Chaotic fibers
In general, modes of a waveguide have
scars, which correspond to the classical trajectories. The scars may avoid the core, then
the mode isn't coupled, and it's vain to excite such a mode in the double-clad fiber amplifier. The scars can be distributed more or less uniformly in
so-called
chaotic fibers
have more complicated cross-sectional shape and provide more uniform distribution of
intensity in the inner cladding, allowing efficient use of the pump light.
However, the scaring takes place even in chaotic fibers.
Spiral shape
An almost-circular shape with small spiral deformation seems to be the most efficient for
chaotic fibers.
In such a fiber, the
angular momentum of a ray increases at each reflection from the smooth wall, until the
ray hits the chunk [fig.3] of the spiral curve. The core placed in vicinity of this chunk is visited by all the rays more regularly, than in other chaotic fibers.
This behavior of rays has analogy in the wave optics. On the language of
modes, all the modes have non-zero
derivative in vicinity of the chunk, and can't avoid the core placed there.
One example of modes is shown in fig.3. Although some of modes are scared and show wide voids, none of these voids cover the core.
The property of the DCF with spiral-shaped cladding can be interpreted as conservation of angular momentum.
The square of the derivative of a mode at the boundary can be interpreted as pressure. Modes (as well as rays), touching the spiral-shaped boundary transfer it some angular momentum.
This transfer of angular momentum should be compensated with pressure at the chunk. Therefore, no one mode can avoid the chunk.
Modes can show strong scarring along the classical trajectories (rays) and wide voids, but at least one of scars should approach the chunk to compensate the angular momentum transferredby the spiral part.
The interpretation with angular momentum indicates the reasonable size of the chunk. There is no reason to make this chunk larger than the core; a large chunk wouldn't localize the scars sufficiently to provide coupling with the core. There is no reason to locaize the scars within an angle smaller than the core: the small derivative to the radius makes the manufacturing less robust; the larger is
, the larger fluctuations
of shape are allowed without breaking the condition
. Therefore, the size of the chunk should be of order of size of the core.
More rigorously, the property of the spiral-shaped domain follows from the theorem about boundary behavior of modes of the
Dirichlet Laplacian. Although this theorem is formulated for the core-less domain, it prohibits the modes avoiding the core. A mode avoiding the core, then, shold be similar to that of the core-less domain.
The stochastic optimization of the shape of cladding confirm that almost circular spiral realizes the best coupling of pump into the core .
Filling factor
The efficiency of absorption of pumping energy in the fiber is an important parameter of a double-clad fiber laser. In many cases this efficiency can be approximated with
»
where
» is the cross-sectional area of the cladding
is the radius of the core (which is taken to be circular)
» is the
absorption coefficient of pump light in the core
is the length of the double-clad fiber, and
» is a
dimensionless adjusting parameter, which is sometimes called the "filling factor";