Photonic band-gap fiber gas cell fabricated using femtosecond micromachining

Christopher J. Hensley , Daniel H. Broaddus, Chris B. Schaffer, and Alexander L. Gaeta
Optics Express 15, 6690 (2007)

Femtosecond laser drilling is used to produce a variable-pressure fiber gas cell. Tightly focused laser pulses are used to produce micrometer-diameter radial channels in a hollow-core photonic band-gap fiber (HC-PBGF), and through these microchannels the core of the fiber is filled with a gas. The fiber cell is formed by fusion splicing and sealing the ends of the HC-PBGF to standard step-index fiber. As a demonstration, acetylene is introduced into an evacuated fiber at multiple backing pressures and spectra are measured.

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