Publication | Open Access
Fabrication and THz loss measurements of porous subwavelength fibers using a directional coupler method
100
Citations
22
References
2009
Year
Thz PhotonicsOptical MaterialsEngineeringTerahertz PhotonicsFiber-optic CommunicationHigh-performance FiberOptical PropertiesTransmission LossGuided-wave OpticNanophotonicsMaterials SciencePhotonicsTransmission LossesFiber Optic SensingPorous Subwavelength FibersFiber OpticMultimaterial FiberThz Loss MeasurementsApplied PhysicsTerahertz TechniqueDirectional Coupler MethodOptoelectronicsPe Plastic
We report several strategies for the fabrication of porous subwavelength fibers using low density Polyethylene plastic for low-loss terahertz light transmission applications. We also characterize transmission losses of the fabricated fibers in terahertz using a novel non-destructive directional coupler method. Within this method a second fiber is translated along the length of the test fiber to probe the power attenuation of a guided mode. The method is especially suitable for measuring transmission losses through short fiber segments, a situation in which standard cutback method is especially difficult to perform. We demonstrate experimentally that introduction of porosity into a subwavelength rod fiber, further reduces its transmission loss by as much as a factor of 10. The lowest fiber loss measured in this work is 0.01 cm(-1) and it is exhibited by the 40% porous subwavelength fiber of diameter 380 microm. For comparison, the loss of a rod-in-the-air subwavelength fiber of a similar diameter was measured to be approximately 0.1 cm(-1), while the bulk loss of a PE plastic used in the fabrication of such fibers is >or= 1 cm(-1). Finally, we present theoretical studies of the optical properties of individual subwavelength fibers and a directional coupler. From these studies we conclude that coupler setup studied in this paper also acts as a low pass filter with a cutoff frequency around 0.3 THz. Considering that the spectrum of a terahertz source used in this work falls off rapidly below 0.25 THz, the reported loss measurements are, thus, the bolometer averages over the approximately 0.25 THz-0.3 THz region.
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