Fiber coupler
US-9557483-B2 · Jan 31, 2017 · US
US9846278B2 · US · B2
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Publication number | US-9846278-B2 |
| Application number | US-201615272694-A |
| Country | US |
| Kind code | B2 |
| Filing date | Sep 22, 2016 |
| Priority date | Jun 8, 2012 |
| Publication date | Dec 19, 2017 |
| Grant date | Dec 19, 2017 |
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A fiber coupler is provided, which includes a tubular enveloping structure and several optical fibers arranged in the enveloping structure, each of which has a fiber core and a fiber cladding surrounding same, in order to conduct laser radiation, and each of which extends from the first as far as the second end of the enveloping structure. The enveloping structure includes a tapering section which is tapered in a first direction from the first as far as the second end. In the tapering section, both a first ratio of the diameter of the fiber core to the diameter of the fiber cladding and also a second ratio of the diameter of the mode field of the laser radiation conducted in the optical fiber to the diameter of the fiber core, increases in the first direction for each optical fiber.
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What is claimed is: 1. A fiber coupler, comprising: a tubular enveloping structure; and a plurality of optical fibers arranged in the enveloping structure, each of which includes a fiber core and a fiber cladding surrounding same, in order to conduct laser radiation, and each of which extends from a first as far as a second end of the enveloping structure, wherein the enveloping structure has a tapering section which is tapered in a first direction from the first as far as the second end, wherein, in the tapering section, both a first ratio of the diameter of the fiber core to the diameter of the fiber cladding and a second ratio of the diameter of the mode field of the laser radiation conducted in the optical fiber to the diameter of the fiber core increase in the first direction for each optical fiber, and wherein the fiber core and fiber cladding each comprise different materials such that a refractive index of the fiber core is different than a refractive index of the fiber cladding. 2. The fiber coupler according to claim 1 , wherein the optical fibers are completely fused with one another at the second end, at least one of directly and via the enveloping structure. 3. The fiber coupler according to claim 2 , wherein the transition from the unfused region to the completely fused region lies at a point in the fiber coupler at which the optical fibers are tapered to at most 80% of their original overall diameter. 4. The fiber coupler according to claim 1 , wherein the optical fibers are completely fused with one another in the tapering section, at least one of directly and via the enveloping structure. 5. The fiber coupler according to claim 4 , wherein the transition from the unfused region to the completely fused region lies at a point in the fiber coupler at which the optical fibers are tapered to at most 80% of their original overall diameter. 6. The fiber coupler according to claim 1 , wherein the maximum value of the second ratio is chosen such that there is an individual beam conduction in each optical fiber in spite of an overlapping of the modes in adjacent optical fibers. 7. The fiber coupler according to claim 1 , wherein at the second end there is a homogeneous refractive index between the cores of the optical fibers, the homogeneous refractive index corresponding to the refractive index of the cladding material. 8. The fiber coupler according to claim 1 , wherein at the second end and about each core of the optical fibers along a cross-section surface which corresponds to the distance to the next adjacent core there is an homogeneous refractive index corresponding to the cladding material of the optical fiber. 9. The fiber coupler according to claim 1 , wherein the diameter of the fiber core decreases in the first direction in order to increase the second ratio. 10. The fiber coupler according to claim 1 , wherein the optical fibers are either fundamental mode or low mode optical fibers. 11. The fiber coupler according to claim 1 , wherein the enveloping structure includes a multicapillary, which has precisely one through bore for each optical fiber. 12. A fiber coupler, comprising: a tubular enveloping structure; and a plurality of optical fibers arranged in the enveloping structure, each of which includes a fiber core and a fiber cladding surrounding same, in order to conduct laser radiation, and each of which extends from the first as far as the second end of the enveloping structure, wherein the enveloping structure has a tapering section which is tapered in a first direction from the first as far as the second end, wherein, in the tapering section, a first ratio of the diameter of a mode field of the laser radiation conducted in the optical fiber to the diameter of the fiber core increases in the first direction for each optical fiber, and wherein the fiber core and fiber cladding each comprise different materials such that a refractive index of the fiber core is different than a refractive index of the fiber cladding. 13. The fiber coupler according to claim 12 , wherein the optical fibers are completely fused with one another at at least one of the second end and in the tapering section, at least one of directly and via the enveloping structure, and wherein the transition from the unfused region to the completely fused region lies at a point in the fiber coupler at which the optical fibers are tapered to at most 80% of their original overall diameter. 14. The fiber coupler according to claim 12 , wherein at the second end there is a homogeneous refractive index between the cores of the optical fibers, the homogeneous refractive index corresponding to the refractive index of the cladding material. 15. The fiber coupler according to claim 12 , wherein at the second end and about each core of the optical fibers along a cross-section surface which corresponds to the distance to the next adjacent core there is an homogeneous refractive index corresponding to the cladding material of the optical fiber. 16. The fiber coupler according to claim 12 , wherein the optical fibers are either fundamental mode or low mode optical fibers.
with pitch conversion between input and output plane, e.g. for increasing packing density · CPC title
2D cross sectional arrangements of the fibres · CPC title
formed or shaped by thermal heating means, e.g. splitting, branching and/or combining elements · CPC title
formed by bundles of fibres (G02B6/24 takes precedence) · CPC title
Optical coupling means (G02B6/36, G02B6/42 take precedence) · CPC title
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