Properties of a new rare-earth doped heavy metal oxide containing silicate glass are presented. The glass has potential for fabrication of ultra-short wideband fiber and planar waveguide amplifiers. We report specific results for a fiber amplifier geometry, discussing achieved improvements in device compactness (Giles gain g* = 210 dB/m allowing up to 100 times shorter fiber) and amplification bandwidth (50% more bandwidth in C-/L-band) compared to the conventional EDFA. We also access the potential of this material for fabrication of active planar integrated waveguide devices.
We report the application of nematic liquid crystals for the optical sensing of organic solvents using two different evanescent field probes. Liquid crystals with different nematic ranges are used as sensitive coating materials on integrated optical reflection grating couplers and on integrated optical Mach-Zehnder interferometers as well. A non-linear behavior was observed when the liquid crystal coated IO transducers were exposed to various concentrations of toluene, meta-xylene and para-xylene. The calibration over a wide range pointed out a phase transition of the liquid crystal due to the penetration by the analyte. The birefringend liquid crystal and an isotropic polymer coating are compared by their responses to the xylene isomeres. The data indicate that the liquid crystal's response is mainly given by a decrease of the order parameter S. Furthermore, we take advantage from the non-linearity and the clearing point in order to improve the performance of the sensor system.
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