Abstract
Recent progress in the fabrication of Yb-doped silicate fibers with low concentration quenching and low background absorption loss has led to the demonstration of anti-Stokes-fluorescence cooling in several aluminosilicate compositions. This breakthrough is critical to combat deleterious thermal effects due to the quantum defect in fiber lasers and amplifiers. Since cooling efficiencies remain low (1–2.7%), it is paramount to engineer compositions that improve this metric. We report a silica fiber with a core glass heavily doped with aluminum and phosphorus that sets, to our knowledge, a few new records. This few-mode fiber (16-µm core) was cooled in air by −0.25 K from room temperature with ∼0.5 W of 1040-nm power. The measured cooling efficiency is 3.3% at low pump power and 2.8% at the power that produced maximum cooling. The critical quenching concentration inferred from the measured dependence of cooling on pump power and careful calibration of the pump absorption and saturation is 79 wt.%. The inferred background absorption loss is 15 dB/km. Together with the fiber’s average Yb concentration of 4.2 wt.%, these metrics rank among the best reported in a silica glass.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Pages (from-to) | 4501-4504 |
| Number of pages | 4 |
| Journal | Optics Letters |
| Volume | 49 |
| Issue number | 16 |
| Early online date | 2 Aug 2024 |
| DOIs | |
| Publication status | Published - 15 Aug 2024 |
Data Availability Statement
Data underlying the results presented in this paper are not publicly available at this time but may be obtained from the authors upon reasonable request.Acknowledgements
C.-W. Chen thanks Kabish Wisal at Yale, Alex Pietros at UIUC, and Adele Zawada at Stanford for fruitful discussions.Funding
J. E. Sirrine Foundation; Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (RGPIN-2016-05877).
Keywords
- Chemical vapor deposition
- Few mode fibers
- Fiber lasers
- Laser amplifiers
- Silica fibers
- Thermal effects