Analysis of Beam Propagation in Optical Fiber Structures With A High Step Index
Analysis of Beam Propagation in Optical Fiber Structures With A High Step Index
Analysis of Beam Propagation in Optical Fiber Structures With A High Step Index
|
|
.
|
\
|
c
y x n
y x
i z
(2)
All derivatives in this equation are substituted for finite
differences. The BPM requires only the values of the E
field in the initial step. In further steps the amplitude is
calculated from the points of the previous step.
Additionally, this method requires proper boundary
conditions at the edge of a calculation frame. The most
commonly used are Transparent Boundary Conditions
(TBC) [5] and used in our simulations Perfect Matched
Layer (PML) [6].
Analysis of beam propagation in optical fiber structures with a high
step index
Krzysztof B. Zegado
*
Faculty of Physics, Warsaw University of Technology, Koszykowa 75, 00-662 Warszawa
and Mirosaw A. Karpierz
Received December 16, 2009; accepted December 29, 2009; published December 31, 2009
doi: 10.4302/plp.2009.4.11 PHOTONICS LETTERS OF POLAND, VOL. 1 (4), 175-177 (2009)
http://www.photonics.pl/PLP 2009 Photonics Society of Poland
176
a)
b)
Fig. 2. Electric field profile in HE
11
mode in a single core optical fiber
with a radius 1
m
for a) low difference of indices n
1
-n
2
= 0.008 and for
b) high difference of indices n
1
-n
2
= 0.5
This method gives a very good approximation for the
weakly guiding case, but for higher contrast it is not
proper because of the E field divergence on the bounds
between cores and cladding. In order to satisfy the
discontinuity of an electric field, one must apply proper
boundary conditions. It can be clearly shown as an exact
analytical solution (Fig. 2.) for HE
11
in a single core
optical fiber.
The second method is a coupled mode theory (CMT)
[7], [8]. It treats Maxwells equations in an analytical way
considering the field as a superposition of waveguide
modes. In the case of 2 cores, the refractive index of a
neighbouring core is treated as a disturbance. This
perturbation causes additional polarization, which is the
source of a field excited in another core. One cylindrical
core has an exact analytical solution (Bessel functions)
and the full form of the field in two cylindrical cores
structure has the form:
( ) ( ) ( ) ( )
z i t i z i t i
e y x E z e y x E z E
+ = , A , A
2 2 1 1
, (3)
where E
1
, E
2
modes of separated waveguides, - the
propagation constant. One has to calculate amplitudes for
both modes as a function of the propagation distance:
n mn m mm m
i i
dz
d
A A A = , (4)
where m, n = 1, 2 and n m . To solve these amplitudes
one has to obtain the coupling constant of two modes:
=
n m mn
E dxdyE
0
(5)
where
2
2
2
1
n n = is perturbation in the second core, and
P is a factor obtained by integrating the vector product of
E
1
and E
2
over the whole calculation frame.
The third method reduces 3-dimensional BPM to 2D
BPM by using the effective index method (Neff) [9].
Each core is divided into small pieces (Fig. 3.) and each
of these pieces is substituted for a planar waveguide with
a corresponding width. The dispersion equation must be
solved and an effective refractive index is obtained for
each of these pieces.
Fig. 3. Neff method applied to the cylindrical core
As a consequence of that, one obtains the distribution
of the refractive index and one can create a two-
dimensional structure with such refractive index
distribution. As it is obviously a 2D problem, the time of
calculation radically decreases.
doi: 10.4302/plp.2009.4.11 PHOTONICS LETTERS OF POLAND, VOL. 1 (4), 175-177 (2009)
http://www.photonics.pl/PLP 2009 Photonics Society of Poland
177
a) 008 . 0 = n
0,0 0,5 1,0
0
200
400
600
800
1000
L
C
[
m
]
d[m]
BPM
CMT
Neff
b) 1 . 0 = n
0,0 0,5 1,0
0
1000
2000
3000
4000
5000
6000
7000
8000
9000
L
C
[
m
]
d[m]
BPM
CMT
Neff
c) 5 . 0 = n
0,0 0,2 0,4
0
3000
6000
9000
12000
15000
18000
d[m]
L
C
[
m
]
BPM
CMT
Neff
Fig. 4. Coupling length as a function of the distance between cores
obtained with the help of 3 methods for the difference of refractive
indices a) 008 . 0 = n , b) 1 . 0 = n and c) 5 . 0 = n
The comparison of results obtained by these three
methods is presented in Fig. 4. This comparison concerns
coupling length L
C
, which is defined as the distance on
which the field in one core decreases from its maximal
value to zero, because of switching to the second core,
and then increases back to its maximal value. In CMT L
C
is given by:
12
1
=
C
L (6)
We show the comparison for three cases, when the
difference of refractive index between cores and cladding
is
2 1
n n n = = 0.008, 0.1 and 0.5 (Fig. 4.). One can see
that the smallest differences in the coupling length are in
the case of index difference 008 . 0 = n , so it is obviously
weakly guiding. For a bigger value of n the results
obtained by these three methods are similar for very small
distance between two cores (cores are close to each
other), but for larger distances there is a big divergence
between the results. One can observe it especially for
5 . 0 = n , which corresponds to silica cores surrounded
by air. BPM and Neff do not yield the results so different
from each other as CMT. Neff and CMT are several times
faster than the 3D BPM algorithm. When the value of n
is not so large, one can use any of these two methods
instead of 3D BPM. Also for a high step index with a
very small distance between cores one can use CMT or
Neff, but for longer distances one should compare all the
three methods so as to obtain the most exact solution of
the problem.
References
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[4] J. E. Midwinter, Optical Fibers for transmission (John Wiley, 1979).
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