Vector description of higher-order modes in photonic crystal fibers
- 1 July 2000
- journal article
- Published by Optica Publishing Group in Journal of the Optical Society of America A
- Vol. 17 (7), 1333-1340
- https://doi.org/10.1364/josaa.17.001333
Abstract
We extensively study the propagation features of higher-order modes in a photonic crystal fiber (PCF). Our analysis is based on a full-vector modal technique specially adapted to accurately describe light propagation in PCF’s. Unlike conventional fibers, PCF’s exhibit a somewhat unusual mechanism for the generation of higher-order modes. Accordingly, PCF’s are characterized by the constancy of the number of modes below a wavelength threshold. An explicit verification of this property is given through a complete analysis of the dispersion relations of higher-order modes in terms of the structural parameters of this kind of fiber. The transverse irradiance distributions for some of these higher-order modes are also presented, showing an excellent agreement with recent experimental measurements. In the same way, the full-vector nature of our approach allows us to analyze the rich polarization structure of the PCF mode spectrum.Keywords
This publication has 15 references indexed in Scilit:
- Holey optical fibers: an efficient modal modelJournal of Lightwave Technology, 1999
- Designing a photonic crystal fibre with flattened chromatic dispersionElectronics Letters, 1999
- Analysis and design of an endlessly single-mode finned dielectric waveguideJournal of the Optical Society of America A, 1998
- Highly increased photonic band gaps in silica/air structuresOptics Communications, 1998
- Biorthonormal-basis method for the vector description of optical-fiber modesJournal of Lightwave Technology, 1998
- Properties of photonic crystal fiber and the effective index modelJournal of the Optical Society of America A, 1998
- Large mode area photonic crystal fibreElectronics Letters, 1998
- Endlessly single-mode photonic crystal fiberOptics Letters, 1997
- Two dimensional quantum chromodynamics as the limit of higher dimensional theoriesPhysics Letters B, 1995
- Accurate theoretical analysis of photonic band-gap materialsPhysical Review B, 1993