Hollow-core optical fiber rapidly closing in on solid-core transmission specifications

March 30, 2020
The University of Southampton is among the scientific groups advancing the capabilities of hollow-core fiber as it closes in on solid-core fiber parameters.

Researchers from the Zepler Institute for Photonics and Nanoelectronics at the University of Southampton (Southampton, England) have demonstrated a new leap in hollow-core fiber performance, underlining the technology's potential to soon eclipse current optical fibers.

Hollow-core fibers replace conventional glass cores with gas or a vacuum to enable unique properties including faster light speed and reduced sensitivity to environmental variations.

The novel technology, which is being advanced in the Zepler Institute's renowned Optoelectronics Research Centre (ORC), is believed able to reach lower loss and higher data transmission capacity than all-solid glass fibers, with current research accelerating models toward this peak performance.

The newest hollow-core fibers attenuate the light traveling through it by 50% less than the previous record, reported only six months ago. The maximum transmission length at which data can be relayed in such revolutionary fibers has also doubled.

Thanks to an innovative design proposed at the ORC, in the space of 18 months the attenuation in data-transmitting hollow-core fibers has been reduced by over a factor of 10, from 3.5 dB/km to only 0.28 dB/km within a factor of two of the attenuation of conventional all-glass fiber technology. At the same time, the maximum transmission distance at which large bandwidth data streams can be transmitted through an air-core has been improved by over 10 times, from 75 to 750 km.

Professor Francesco Poletti, Head of the ORC's hollow core fiber group, says: "Transmitting light in an air core rather than a glass core presents many advantages which could revolutionise optical communications as we know them. These latest results further reduce the performance gap between hollow core fiber and mainstream optical fiber technology, and the whole team is really excited by the prospect of the additional significant improvements that seem possible, according to modelling. Latency, which is the round-trip time for communications, is becoming as important as bandwidth for the new digital economy. Network latency creates a delay between sensing and its response, causing sickness in AR/VR users, loss of fidelity in remote surgery and accidents in autonomous systems. These fibers deliver a vital 30% reduction in round-trip data transmission times and could enable the next generation of connected real-time digital applications, from smart manufacturing and advanced healthcare to the entertainment."

The considerable improvements in attenuation and transmission distance demonstrated in these two works open up the possibility to target longer reach distances, edging close to the 1,000 km span of typical long-distance, long-haul terrestrial data transmission links.

Southampton researchers are pushing the boundaries of hollow-core performance in several major research programs, including the European Research Council funded LightPipe and the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC) funded Airguide Photonics.

The team are working in close collaboration with one of the leading groups in advanced optical communications at the Politecnico di Torino, led by Professor Pierluigi Poggiolini, and ORC spinout Lumenisity.

SOURCE: University of Southampton via phys.org; https://phys.org/news/2020-03-hollow-core-fiber-technology-mainstream-optical.html

About the Author

Gail Overton | Senior Editor (2004-2020)

Gail has more than 30 years of engineering, marketing, product management, and editorial experience in the photonics and optical communications industry. Before joining the staff at Laser Focus World in 2004, she held many product management and product marketing roles in the fiber-optics industry, most notably at Hughes (El Segundo, CA), GTE Labs (Waltham, MA), Corning (Corning, NY), Photon Kinetics (Beaverton, OR), and Newport Corporation (Irvine, CA). During her marketing career, Gail published articles in WDM Solutions and Sensors magazine and traveled internationally to conduct product and sales training. Gail received her BS degree in physics, with an emphasis in optics, from San Diego State University in San Diego, CA in May 1986.

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