Mid-Wave Infrared Polarization-Maintaining Single Mode Fiber
Navy SBIR 2019.1 - Topic N191-012 NAVAIR - Ms. Donna Attick - [email protected] Opens: January 8, 2019 - Closes: February 6, 2019 (8:00 PM ET)
TECHNOLOGY
AREA(S): Air Platform ACQUISITION
PROGRAM: PMA272 Tactical Aircraft Protection Systems OBJECTIVE:
Develop single mode polarization-maintaining fiber (PM-fiber) that covers the
Mid-Wave Infrared (MWIR) wavelengths from 2um � 6um for applications that
require a high polarization extinction ratio at the fiber output and is able to
waveguide tens of watts of optical power through the fiber. DESCRIPTION:
Applications requiring linearly polarized light and the flexibility of fiber
delivery in the MWIR region will require a fiber solution that preserve the
polarization state of the launched light. Most infrared lasers are polarized.
PM-fiber offers the capability of preserving the launched light polarization
state as it propagates through the fiber. In conventional fibers the
polarization state is not preserved due to mechanical stress, temperature
induced changes, fiber fabrication imperfections, and fiber bends. Commercially
available silica PM-fibers cover the visible and near-infrared spectrum; these
work by creating a strong birefringence across the core of the fiber, which is
responsible for preserving the polarization state of launched light as long as
the polarization is aligned with one of the birefringent axes. Several
different approaches can be taken in order to fabricate such specialty fibers
including, but not limited to, the use of elliptical core, the addition of
stress rods (Panda type and Bow-Tie type), and also by micro-structuring the
optical fiber (MOF). Currently there is no commercially available PM-fiber
solution for the MWIR region. A specialty fiber capable of high-power laser
transmission (>10W cw) and preserving the polarization state of the input
light with high polarization extinction ratio (~-30dB), high birefringence
(~10-3) and with low propagation losses (<0.2dB/m) covering the MWIR
wavelength spectrum is desired. PHASE
I: Determine the feasibility of an initial design of a PM-fiber approach best
suited for the MWIR spectral region. Evaluate the performance of the PM-fiber
design by determining if wave guidance is achieved in the spectral window of
2um � 6um, the magnitude of the birefringence, and the attenuation loss is less
than 0.2dB/m. Demonstrate fabrication proof of concept and identify the steps
and approach needed to fabricate the fiber design. Develop a Phase II plan. The
Phase I effort will include prototype plans to be developed under Phase II. PHASE
II: Develop an initial PM-fiber prototype. Perform characterization of the
optical and mechanical performance of the PM-fiber. Compare experimental
results to the expected specifications. Optimize the PM-fiber design based on
the characterization results and evaluation. Produce several different lengths
of PM-fibers� to test the performance of the drawn fibers (i.e., 1m, 5m, 10m),
which should be terminated in an optical connector that requires a minimal
amount of epoxy. Ensure that the insertion loss of these fibers is less than
0.5 dB. PHASE
III DUAL USE APPLICATIONS: Finalize development and support fiber testing.
Refine the fiber based upon results of testing and transition the final
technology to be used with the next-generation Infrared Counter Measures
(IRCMs). Successful development would benefit the medical industry for
transporting high amounts of optical energy to manage drug efficacy or cells
manipulation. REFERENCES: 1.
Folkenberg, J., Nielsen, M., Mortensen, N., Jakobsen, C., and Simonsen, H.
Polarization Maintaining Large Mode Area Photonic Crystal Fiber. Optics
Express, 2004. https://www.osapublishing.org/DirectPDFAccess/03FB670B-D83C-C517-012C0C8F20DB2EB6_79214/oe-12-5-956.pdf?da=1&id=79214&seq=0&mobile=no 2.
Mendez, A., and Morse, T. �Polarization Maintaining Fibers (Chapter 8).�
Specialty Optical Fibers Handbook, 2007, pp. 243-277. Elsevier Inc.:
Burlington. https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/book/9780123694065#book-info KEYWORDS:
PM Fiber; Polarization; Polarization Maintaining Fiber; MID IR Fiber; PM
Photonic Crystal Fiber; PM AS2S3 Fiber
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