Access
To read this story in full you will need to login or make a payment (see right).
Letters to Nature
Nature 420, 650-653 (12 December 2002) | doi:10.1038/nature01275; Received 3 July 2002; Accepted 29 October 2002
Open Innovation Challenges
-
Single-cell Analysis Platform
This Challenge is looking for novel approaches to analyzing changes at a single-cell level. This is...
-
Direct Molecular Detection of Proteins and Nucleic Acids
This Challenge is looking for novel approaches to protein and nucleic acid detection. This is an Id...
nature jobs
Senior Manager-Pharma / CRO-Strategic Sourcing
- Varda Biotech
- Mumbai India
Junior Research Groups (W1 / W2)
- Cluster of Excellence "Multimodal Computing and Interaction"
- Saarbruecken Germany
Wavelength-scalable hollow optical fibres with large photonic bandgaps for CO2 laser transmission
Burak Temelkuran1, Shandon D. Hart1, Gilles Benoit, John D. Joannopoulos & Yoel Fink
- Research Laboratory of Electronics and Department of Materials Science and Engineering, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02139, USA
- These authors contributed equally to this work
Correspondence to: Yoel Fink Correspondence and requests for materials should be addressed to Y.F. (e-mail: Email: yoel@mit.edu).
Abstract
Conventional solid-core optical fibres require highly transparent materials. Such materials have been difficult to identify owing to the fundamental limitations associated with the propagation of light through solids, such as absorption, scattering and nonlinear effects. Hollow optical fibres offer the potential to minimize the dependence of light transmission on fibre material transparency1, 2, 3. Here we report on the design and drawing of a hollow optical fibre lined with an interior omnidirectional dielectric mirror4. Confinement of light in the hollow core is provided by the large photonic bandgaps5, 6, 7 established by the multiple alternating submicrometre-thick layers of a high-refractive-index glass and a low-refractive-index polymer. The fundamental and high-order transmission windows are determined by the layer dimensions and can be scaled from 0.75 to 10.6
m in wavelength. Tens of metres of hollow photonic bandgap fibres for transmission of carbon dioxide laser light at 10.6
m wavelength were drawn. The transmission losses are found to be less than 1.0 dB m-1, orders of magnitude lower than those of the intrinsic fibre material, thus demonstrating that low attenuation can be achieved through structural design rather than high-transparency material selection.
To read this story in full you will need to login or make a payment (see right).

