ترغب بنشر مسار تعليمي؟ اضغط هنا

Microstructured fiber links for THz communications and their fabrication using infinity printing

99   0   0.0 ( 0 )
 نشر من قبل Maksim Skorobogatiy
 تاريخ النشر 2021
  مجال البحث فيزياء
والبحث باللغة English




اسأل ChatGPT حول البحث

In this work, a novel infinity 3D printing technique is explored to fabricate continuous multi-meter-long low-loss near-zero dispersion suspended-core polypropylene fibers for application in terahertz (THz) communications. Particular attention is paid to process parameter optimization for 3D printing with low-loss polypropylene plastic. Three microstructured THz fibers were 3D printed using the standard and infinity 3D printers, and an in-depth theoretical and experimental comparison between the fibers were carried out. Transmission losses (by power) of 4.79 dB/m, 17.34 dB/m and 11.13 dB/m are experimentally demonstrated for the three fibers operating at 128 GHz. Signal transmission with BER far below the forward error correction limit (10-3) for the corresponding three fiber types of lengths of 2 m, 0.75 m and 1.6 m are observed, and an error-free transmission is realized at the bit rates up to 5.2 Gbps. THz imaging of the fiber near-field is used to visualize modal distributions and study optimal fiber excitation conditions. The ability of shielding the fundamental mode from the environment, mechanical robustness and ease of handling of thus developed effectively single-mode high optical performance fibers make them excellent candidates for upcoming fiber-assisted THz communications. Additionally, novel fused deposition modeling (FDM)-based infinity printing technique allows continuous fabrication of unlimited in length fibers of complex transverse geometries using advanced thermoplastic composites, which, in our opinion, is poised to become a key fabrication technique for advanced terahertz fiber manufacturing.

قيم البحث

اقرأ أيضاً

We report two novel fabrication techniques, as well as spectral transmission and propagation loss measurements of the subwavelength plastic wires with highly porous (up to 86%) and non-porous transverse geometries. The two fabrication techniques we d escribe are based on the microstructured molding approach. In one technique the mold is made completely from silica by stacking and fusing silica capillaries to the bottom of a silica ampoule. The melted material is then poured into the silica mold to cast the microstructured preform. Another approach uses microstructured mold made of plastic which is co-drawn with a cast preform. Material of the mold is then dissolved after fiber drawing. We also describe a novel THz-TDS setup with an easily adjustable optical path length, designed to perform cutback measurements using THz fibers of up to 50 cm in length. We find that while both porous and non-porous subwavelength fibers of the same outside diameter have low propagation losses (alpha leg 0.02cm-1), however, the porous fibers exhibit a much wider spectral transmission window and enable transmission at higher frequencies compared to the non-porous fibers. We then show that the typical bell-shaped transmission spectra of the subwavelengths fibers can be very well explained by the onset of material absorption loss at higher frequencies due to strong confinement of the modal fields in the material region of the fiber, as well as strong coupling loss at lower frequencies due to mismatch of the modal field diameter and a size of the gaussian-like beam of a THz source.
We observe the dynamics of pulse trapping in a microstructured fiber. Few-cycle pulses create a system of two pulses: a Raman shifting soliton traps a pulse in the normal dispersion regime. When the soliton approaches a wavelength of zero group veloc ity dispersion the Raman shifting abruptly terminates and the trapped pulse is released. In particular, the trap is less than 4ps long and contains a 1ps pulse. After being released, this pulse asymmetrically expands to more than 10ps. Additionally, there is no disturbance of the trapping dynamics at high input pulse energies as the supercontinuum develops further.
Precision frequency and phase synchronization between distinct fiber interconnected nodes is critical for a wide range of applications, including atomic timekeeping, quantum networking, database synchronization, ultra-high-capacity coherent optical c ommunications and hyper-scale data centers. Today, many of these applications utilize precision, tabletop laser systems, and would benefit from integration in terms of reduced size, power, cost, and reliability. In this paper we report a record low 3x10^-4 rad^2 residual phase error variance for synchronization based on independent, spectrally pure, ultra-high mutual coherence, photonic integrated lasers. This performance is achieved with stimulated Brillouin scattering lasers that are stabilized to independent microcavity references, realizing sources with 30 Hz integral linewidth and a fractional frequency instability less than or equal to 2x10^-13 at 50 ms. This level of low phase noise and carrier stability enables a new type of optical-frequency-stabilized phase-locked loop (OFS-PLL) that operates with a less than 800 kHz loop bandwidth, eliminating traditional power consuming high bandwidth electronics and digital signal processors used to phase lock optical carriers. Additionally, we measure the residual phase error down to a received carrier power of -34 dBm, removing the need to transmit in-band or out-of-band synchronized carriers. These results highlight the promise for a path to spectrally pure, ultra-stable, integrated lasers for network synchronization, precision time distribution protocols, quantum-clock networks, and multiple-Terabit per second coherent DSP-free fiber-optic interconnects.
It is well known that temperature variations and acoustic noise affect ultrastable frequency dissemination along optical fiber. Active stabilization techniques are in general adopted to compensate for the fiber-induced phase noise. However, despite t his compensation, the ultimate link performances remain limited by the so called delay-unsuppressed fiber noise that is related to the propagation delay of the light in the fiber. In this paper, we demonstrate a data post-processing approach which enables us to overcome this limit. We implement a subtraction algorithm between the optical signal delivered at the remote link end and the round-trip signal. In this way, a 6 dB improvement beyond the fundamental limit imposed by delay-unsuppressed noise is obtained. This result enhances the resolution of possible comparisons between remote optical clocks by a factor of 2. We confirm the theoretical prediction with experimental data obtained on a 47 km metropolitan fiber link, and propose how to extend this method for frequency dissemination purposes as well.
Silicon nanoparticles possess unique size-dependent optical properties due to their strong electric and magnetic resonances in the visible range. However, their widespread application has been limited, in comparison to other (e.g. metallic) nanoparti cles, because their preparation on monodisperse colloids remains challenging. Exploiting the unique properties of Si nanoparticles in nano- and micro-devices calls for methods able to sort and organize them from a colloidal suspension onto specific positions of solid substrates with nanometric precision. Here, we demonstrate that surfactant-free Silicon nanoparticles of a predefined and narrow ($sigma$ < 10 nm) size range can be selectively immobilized on a substrate by optical printing from a polydisperse colloidal suspension. The size selectivity is based on differential optical forces that can be applied on nanoparticles of different sizes by tuning the light wavelength to the size-dependent magnetic dipolar resonance of the nanoparticles.
التعليقات
جاري جلب التعليقات جاري جلب التعليقات
سجل دخول لتتمكن من متابعة معايير البحث التي قمت باختيارها
mircosoft-partner

هل ترغب بارسال اشعارات عن اخر التحديثات في شمرا-اكاديميا