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Letters to Nature
Nature 424, 657-659 (7 August 2003) | doi:10.1038/nature01849; Received 24 February 2003; Accepted 18 June 2003
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- Praj Matrix - Praj Industries Ltd
- Pune, Maharashtra Pune-411021 India
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- Indegene Lifesystems Pvt. Ltd
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Low-loss hollow-core silica/air photonic bandgap fibre
Charlene M. Smith, Natesan Venkataraman, Michael T. Gallagher, Dirk Müller, James A. West, Nicholas F. Borrelli, Douglas C. Allan & Karl W. Koch
- Corning Incorporated, Sullivan Park, Corning, New York 14831, USA
Correspondence to: Karl W. Koch Email: kochkw@corning.com
Abstract
Photonic bandgap structures use the principle of interference to reflect radiation. Reflection from photonic bandgap structures has been demonstrated in one, two and three dimensions and various applications have been proposed1, 2, 3, 4. Early work in hollow-core photonic bandgap fibre technology5 used a hexagonal structure surrounding the air core; this fibre was the first demonstration of light guided inside an air core of a photonic bandgap fibre. The potential benefits of guiding light in air derive from lower Rayleigh scattering, lower nonlinearity and lower transmission loss compared to conventional waveguides. In addition, these fibres offer a new platform for studying nonlinear optics in gases6. Owing largely to challenges in fabrication, the early air-core fibres were only available in short lengths, and so systematic studies of loss were not possible. More recently, longer lengths of fibre have become available7, 8 with reported losses of 1,000 dB km-1. We report here the fabrication and characterization of long lengths of low attenuation photonic bandgap fibre. Attenuation of less than 30 dB km-1 over a wide transmission window is observed with minimum loss of 13 dB km-1 at 1,500 nm, measured on 100 m of fibre. Coupling between surface and core modes of the structure is identified as an important contributor to transmission loss in hollow-core photonic bandgap fibres.
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