EE-566 Presentation: Topic: Fiber Bragg Gratings
EE-566 Presentation: Topic: Fiber Bragg Gratings
EE-566 Presentation: Topic: Fiber Bragg Gratings
Topic: Fiber Bragg Gratings Presented By: Eric Glauber Date: 10/29/03
Telecommunications
Fiber Lasers Fiber Amplifiers Fiber Filters Dispersion Compensators Optical Fiber Phase Conjugator WDM
Multiplexers Demultiplexers
Sensors
Strain Sensors Temperature Sensors
Chemical Sensors
Accelerometers
1978 Hill et. all Phenomenon of photosensitivity in optical fibers Exposed Ge-doped core fibers to intense light at 488 or 514 nm Induced permanent refractive index changes to the core.
FBG is a longitudinal periodic variation of the index of refraction in the core of an optical fiber. The spacing of the variation is determined by the wavelength of the light to be reflected.
Bragg
Bragg
The Bragg Condition is the result of two requirements: 1. Energy Conservation: Frequency of incident radiation and reflected radiation is the same. 2. Momentum Conservation: Sum of incident wave vector and grating wave vector equal the wave vector of the scattered radiation. K + ki = kf The resulting Bragg Condition is:
B = 2L neff
The grating reflects the light at the Bragg wavelength (B) B is a function of the grating periodicity (L) and effective index (neff). Typically; B= 1.5 mm, L = 0.5mm
A general expression for the approximate Full Width Half Maximum bandwidth of a standard grating is given by (S = grating parameter (.5 to 1), N = numbers of grating pains):
0 -10 -20 -30 -40 1570 1572 1574 1576 1578 Reflection Transmission
Loss in dB
Wavelength in nm
The shift in Bragg Wavelength is approximately linear with respect to strain and temperature.
The measured temperature response at a constant strain is found to be: (1/B)dB/ dT = 6.67 x 10-6 oC-1
Sensitivity Rule of thumb at B = 1300nm: 0.009nm/ oC
Bragg grating planes are tilted at an angle to the fiber axis. Light which otherwise would be guided in the fiber core, is coupled into the loosely bound, guided cladding or radiation modes. The bandwidth of the trapped out light is dependent on the tilt angle of the grating planes and the strength of the index modulation. As shown above, the vector diagram is a result of the conservation of momentum and conservation of energy requirement. The results of applying the law of cosines yealds: Cos(b) = K2/v
Bragg grating has a monotonically varying period as illustrated above. These gratings can be realized by axially varying either the period of the grating or the index of refraction of the core or both. The Bragg Condition becomes: B = 2neff(z)(z) The simplest type of chirped grating is one which the grating period varies linearly with axial length: (z) = 0 + (z)
1989 Meltz et. all. Grating written into core by holographic side exposure method Exposure with two beam interference pattern of UV light at 244nm Focal spot is approx. rectangular, 4mm L X 125 mm W.
Laser Beam
Laser Beam
Fiber
L
Interference pattern
Grating
Novel interferometer technique using a right angled prism. Inherently more stable because beams are perturbed similarly by any prism vibration.
Other more complicated grating structures are avaliable. For example cubic dispersion compensation is important in long distance, high bit rate transmission systems.
Extraction of channel k
Insertion of channel k
Chemical Sensor:
FBG is blazed into the core at a tilt angle y. The FBG Tap radiates a beam out of the core and cladding at an angle gB.
Fiber Bragg Gratings - Application Chemical Sensor (Continued): FBG Tap excites fluorescent layer which in turn emits light which is in turn collected by the core (f1).
In WDM, each FBG sensor is assigned a portion of the source spectrum. Enables quasi-distributed sensing of strain, temperature, chemical, etc. No. of FBG is a function of:
Source profile width Grating operational bandwidth
Approx 20 strain sensors can be multiplexed along a single fiber (peak strains of +1000me)