Compact, high resolution and wide-angle infrared imaging systems are the paragons for security and situational awareness applications. Coherent fiber bundles (CFB) provide a platform to relay curved images, formed by optical systems such as a monocentric lens, to flat focal plane arrays so that image flattening is decoupled from image formation. This enables hundredfold increase in resolution per unit volume for wide angle lenses. We present hybrid chalcogenide/polymer CFB for mid-wave infrared (MWIR) image relay. We design the lens system and the AR coating for the bundle, and finally demonstrate a stack-and-draw process to yield 10μm pitch CFBs with about 8,000 cores.
Beam confinement or “no free-space optics” via fiber transmission can achieve improved reliability, lower cost, and reduced component count for active sensing systems. For midinfrared delivery, mechanically robust chalcogenide (arsenic sulfide) single-mode fibers are of interest. A 12-μm core diameter fiber is shown to transport >10 W at 2053 nm, and a 25-μm core diameter fiber enables single-mode beam transport from a 4550-nm quantum cascade laser. As midinfrared sources continue to increase their output power capabilities, chalcogenide fibers will eventually be limited in their power-handling capacity due to optical nonlinearities or thermal failure. These limitations are discussed and analyzed in the context of single-mode chalcogenide fibers in order to provide a framework for power transmission limitations in various operating regimes.
Defense sensing systems must be both productive and robust to accomplish their mission. Active infrared sensing devices consist of many components such as the active medium, mirrors, beam-splitters, modulators, gratings, detectors, etc. Each of these components is subject to damage by the laser beam itself or environmental factors. Misalignment of these components due to vibration and temperatures changes can also reduce performance. The result is a complex and expensive system subject to multiple points of degradation or complete failure. However, beam confinement or “no free-space optics” via fiber transmission and even component assembly within the fiber itself can achieve reliability and low cost for sensing systems with reduced component count and less susceptibility to misalignment.
We present measurements of high-power infrared laser beam transmission in chalcogenide fibers. The fiber compositions were As39S61 for the core and As38.5S61:5 for the cladding, resulting in a numerical aperture of 0.2. A polyetherimide jacket provided structural support. Multiwatt CW transmission was demonstrated in near single-mode 12 micron core fiber. Efficient coupling of quantum cascade lasing into anti-reflection coated chalcogenide fiber was also demonstrated. Efficient beam transport without damage to the fiber required careful coupling only into core modes. Beams with M2 ≥ 1.4 and powers higher than 1 W produced damage at the fiber entrance face. This was most likely due to heating of the highly absorptive polymer jacket by power not coupled into core modes. We will discuss current power limitations of chalcogenide fiber and schemes for significantly increasing power handling capabilities.
Due to the intrinsic absorption edge in silica near 2.4 μm, more exotic materials are required to transmit laser power in the IR such as fluoride or chalcogenide glasses (ChGs). In particular, ChG fibers offer broad IR transmission with low losses < 1 dB/m. Here, we report on the performance of in-house drawn multi-material chalcogenide fibers at four different infrared wavelengths: 2053 nm, 2520 nm and 4550 nm. Polymer clad ChG fibers were drawn with 12.3 μm and 25 μm core diameters. Testing at 2053 nm was accomplished using a > 15 W, CW Tm:fiber laser. Power handling up to 10.2 W with single mode beam quality has been demonstrated, limited only by the available Tm:fiber output power. Anti-reflective coatings were successfully deposited on the ChG fiber facets, allowing up to 90.6% transmission with 12.2 MW/cm2 intensity on the facet. Single mode guidance at 4550 nm was also demonstrated using a quantum cascade laser (QCL). A custom optical system was constructed to efficiently couple the 0.8 NA QCL radiation into the 0.2 NA ChG fiber, allowing for a maximum of 78% overlap between the QCL radiation and fundamental mode of the fiber. With an AR-coated, 25 μm core diameter fiber, >50 mW transmission was demonstrated with > 87% transmission. Finally, we present results on fiber coupling from a free space Cr:ZnSe resonator at 2520 nm.
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