In this paper, an electrically tunable LC lens for fiber coupling and variable optical attenuation is proposed and demonstrated. The LC lens electrically changes the lens power in order to adjust the beam size incident on the fiber. When the beam size is closed to the core size of the fiber, the LC lens is operated as a lens coupler. When the beam size increases by reducing the lens power, the LC lens is operated as a VOA. After introducing the operating principles, we use a LC lens to experimentally demonstrate the design concept and the results show that the maximum coupling efficiency can be 0.75 and the maximum attenuation can be as large as18 dB. The concept proposed in this paper is not only for LC lenses, but also for other optical components with electrically tunable focusing properties. The study provides a new way to design an optical device for fiber coupling and variable optical attenuation based on electrically tunable focusing optical components. Figure 1a and 1b depict a typical structure of the LC lens with positive and negative lens operations. We use the hole-patterned LC lens to demonstrate the concept [11,12]. In fact, the concept we proposed here can be applied to other structures of LC lenses. The components of the LC lens included three Indium Tin Oxide (ITO) glass substrates, two Polyvinyl Alcohol (PVA) layers for LC alignment, an insulating layer (Norland product Inc. NOA81), and a 50 μm nematic LC layer (Merck MLC-2070, Δn=0.2609). In order to generate an inhomogeneous electric field, the ITO layer in the middle of the glass substrate was etched with a hole and connected to an applied Alternating Current (AC) voltage of V 1 . PVA layers were coated on the glass substrates and mechanically rubbed in one direction to align the LC molecules. As a result, the LC molecules are aligned parallel to the glass substrate (x-direction in Figure 1) as V 1 =V 2 =0V rms and provide zero lens power (i.e. inverse of the focal length) for x-linearly polarized light.
Mechanism and Operating Principles
AbstractAn electrically tunable Liquid Crystal (LC) lens for both of fiber coupling and variable optical attenuation is demonstrated. The LC lens modulates the beam waist coupling to the fiber by electrically changing the lens power. When the modulated beam waist is close to the core size of the fiber, the LC lens is operated as a lens coupler. When the beam waist increases by reducing the lens power, the LC lens is operated as a Variable Optical Attenuator (VOA) as a result of the corresponding coupling coefficient variation of the transformed beam into a multimode fiber. The study provides a way to design an optical device for fiber coupling and variable optical attenuation based on electrically tunable focusing optical component.