We present a numerical investigation of the generation of an ultra-broadband optical similariton spectrum in a photonic crystal fiber (PCF) with a carbon disulfide core through Raman amplification. The proposed PCF has an extremely high nonlinear coefficient of 4519 W−1km−1 at a telecommunication wavelength of 1550 nm and exhibits near-zero ultraflattened normal dispersion of −1.5(ps/nm/km) as well as low confinement loss of about 10−9 dB/m at 1550 nm. The numerical study was conducted using full vectorial finite-element method with a circular perfectly matched layer as a boundary condition. The similariton generated in the proposed PCF has an ultra-broadband and flat spectrum centered at 1550 nm, which spans from 1383 to 1719 nm via 14 mW input peak power and over a fiber length of only 83 cm. This continuum spectrum covers both C and L bands and can be divided into several narrow bands centered at the wavelengths of the wavelength division multiplexing channels.
The tailoring of the group velocity dispersion (GVD) of an optical fiber is critical in many applications, influence on the bandwidth of information transmission in optical communication systems, successful utilization of nonlinear optical properties in applications such as supercontinuum generation, wavelength conversion and harmonic generation via stimulated Raman scattering ...In this work, we propose a design of ultra-flattened photonic crystal fiber by changing the diameter of the air holes of the cladding rings. The geometry is composed of only four rings, hexagonal structure of air holes and silica as background of the solid core. As a result, we present structures with broadband flat normal dispersion on many wavelengths bands useful for several applications. We obtain flat normal dispersion over 1000 nm broadband flat normal dispersion below -7 [ps/nm.km], and ultra-flat near zero normal dispersion below -0.2 [ps/nm.km] over 150 nm. The modeled photonic crystal fiber would be valuable for the fabrication of ultra-flattened-dispersion fibers, and have potential applications in wide-band high-speed optical communication systems, supercontinuum generation and many other applications.
We investigate analytically and numerically the effect of the higher order dispersion on the dynamic of a photonic crystal fiber resonator pumped continuously by a coherent injected beam. The linear stability analysis shows that the fourth order dispersion bounds the zone of modulation instability between two pump power levels and predict a motion of solution induced by the broken symmetry mediated by the third order dispersion. We perform a weakly non linear analysis on the vicinity of the first threshold associated with modulation instability. The amplitude and the non linear correction of velocity of periodic structures are estimated. This analysis allowed us to determine the threshold of apparition of bright localized structures and we have also shown that dark localized structures can be stabilized on the neighborhood of the second threshold of modulation instability. Numerical solutions of the governing equations are in close agreement with analytical predictions.
We are arrived in this work to apply the SC-FEM to PCF to determine the modal field distribution and other
important characteristics as normalized frequency, numeric aperture and chromatic dispersion according to the
optogeometric parameters of the fiber. We could vanish the chromatic dispersion in the PCF at many low
wavelengths because of its large degree of liberty.
Access to the requested content is limited to institutions that have purchased or subscribe to SPIE eBooks.
You are receiving this notice because your organization may not have SPIE eBooks access.*
*Shibboleth/Open Athens users─please
sign in
to access your institution's subscriptions.
To obtain this item, you may purchase the complete book in print or electronic format on
SPIE.org.
INSTITUTIONAL Select your institution to access the SPIE Digital Library.
PERSONAL Sign in with your SPIE account to access your personal subscriptions or to use specific features such as save to my library, sign up for alerts, save searches, etc.