LC-filled PC fibers form tunable bandpass filter

July 1, 2010
Two short sections of optical fiber that combine to become an electrically tunable bandpass filter have been fabricated by scientists at the Technical University of Denmark and NKT Photonics.

Two short sections of optical fiber that combine to become an electrically tunable bandpass filter have been fabricated by scientists at the Technical University of Denmark (Lyngby, Denmark) and NKT Photonics (Birkerød, Denmark). The 10 mm long sections are each large-mode-area solid-core photonic-crystal (PC) fibers with their holes filled with a fluid of liquid-crystal (LC) molecules; the hole diameters and the LC type are different for each section. The two sections are placed serially and butt-coupled in a silicon v-groove containing gold electrodes along the sides of the groove; two single-mode fibers are also held in the ends of the groove and butt-coupled to the sections to couple light in and out of the PC-fiber arrangement.

Light from a supercontinuum-fiber source is coupled into the device. One LC type is a longpass filter and the other a shortpass filter; the combination produces a bandpass filter transmitting over the 1520 to 1680 nm range. When a driving voltage variable between 90 and 120 V is applied to one LC and no voltage to the other, the shortpass edge of the filter can be tuned over a 36 nm bandwidth, with the longpass edge immobile. A similar process applied conversely to the fiber sections produces a longpass tuning range of 12 nm with no shortpass change. Contact Lei Wei at [email protected].

Sponsored Recommendations

Brain Computer Interface (BCI) electrode manufacturing

Jan. 31, 2025
Learn how an industry-leading Brain Computer Interface Electrode (BCI) manufacturer used precision laser micromachining to produce high-density neural microelectrode arrays.

Electro-Optic Sensor and System Performance Verification with Motion Systems

Jan. 31, 2025
To learn how to use motion control equipment for electro-optic sensor testing, click here to read our whitepaper!

How nanopositioning helped achieve fusion ignition

Jan. 31, 2025
In December 2022, the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory's National Ignition Facility (NIF) achieved fusion ignition. Learn how Aerotech nanopositioning contributed to this...

Nanometer Scale Industrial Automation for Optical Device Manufacturing

Jan. 31, 2025
In optical device manufacturing, choosing automation technologies at the R&D level that are also suitable for production environments is critical to bringing new devices to market...

Voice your opinion!

To join the conversation, and become an exclusive member of Laser Focus World, create an account today!