Femtosecond laser welding was extended to optical silica fiber (SMF-28) by focusing through fused silica substrates and ferrules to form all-glass weld seams. Laser radiation was focused into the fiber cladding to create a welding zone, which drove molten glass to fill as much as a 3 𝜇𝑚 gap around a contact line to form a crack free pseudo-continuous welding seams along the contact line. The strong weld seams up to 30 𝜇𝑚 wide were generated in fiber-to-plate and fiber-to-ferrule geometries without inducing photochemical or thermal degradation of a fiber Bragg grating (FBG) positioned only 62.5 𝜇m from the weld zone. Welding was optimized by real-time monitoring of the FBG thermo-optical shift during laser scanning. Four-point bending tests confirmed a high mechanical strength while thermal annealing showed stable mechanical and FBG responses up to 1000 ˚C. Femtosecond laser writing and welding thus demonstrated a flexible means for photonics fabrication and packaging of FBGs, enabling reliable, high frequency vibration sensing suited for high temperature and strain environments.
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