Type I fiber Bragg gratings (FBG) written through the coating of various off-the-shelf silica fibers with a femtosecond laser and the phase-mask technique are reported. Inscription through most of the common coating compositions (acrylate, silicone and polyimide) is reported as well as writing through the polyimide coating of various fiber cladding diameters, down to 50 µm. The long term annealing behavior of type I gratings written in a pure silica core fiber is also reported as well as a comparison of the mechanical resistance of type I and II FBG. The high mechanical resistance of the resulting type I FBG is shown to be useful for the fabrication of various distributed FBG arrays written using a single period phase-mask. The strain sensing response of such distributed arrays is also presented.
We report on a splice-free erbium-doped all-fiber laser emitting over 20 W at a wavelength of 1610 nm, with a slope efficiency of 19.6 % and an overall efficiency of 18.3% with respect to the launched pump power at 976 nm. The simple cavity design takes advantage of fiber Bragg gratings written directly in the gain fiber through the polymer coating and clad-pumping from a single commercial pump diode to largely simplify the assembling process, making this cavity ideal for large-scale commercial deployment. Two single-mode and singly erbium-doped silica fibers were fabricated in-house: the first to assess the effects of a high erbium concentration (0.36 mol.% ErO), yielding a low efficiency of 2.5 % with respect to launched pump power, and the second to achieve the improved result mentioned above (0.03 mol.% ErO). Numerical simulations show the link between the performance of each cavity and ion pair-induced quenching.
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