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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
21

Využití optického vlákna jako senzoru pro lokalizaci mechanického chvění / Optical fibre utilization for localization of mechanical vibrations

Parduba, Jiří January 2013 (has links)
The thesis is focused on physical principles of signal transmission by optical fiber and effects that may have influence on such transmission. This knowledge is acquired with regard to future usage of optical fiber as a sensor for detection and localization of mechanical vibration. In the thesis, mentioned knowledge is taken in account and also there are described methods, which allow mechanical vibration for dozens of km. At the conclusion the laboratory sollution is suggested, allowing detection and localization in vast distance with possibility of real test in practice.The testing curcuits are used for measurement and results are processed for purpose of detection and localization of source. The measurement itself was made by testing curcuits and results were processed for purpose of detection and localization of source.
22

Comparative investigation of methods to determine the group velocity dispersion of an endlessly single-mode photonic crystal fiber

Baselt, Tobias, Popp, Tobias, Nelsen, Bryan, Lasagni, Andrés Fabián, Hartmann, Peter 06 September 2019 (has links)
Endlessly single-mode fibers, which enable single mode guidance over a wide spectral range, are indispensable in the field of fiber technology. A two-dimensional photonic crystal with a silica central core and a micrometer-spaced hexagonal array of air holes is an established method to achieve endless single-mode guidance. There are two possible ways to determine the dispersion: measurement and calculation. We calculate the group velocity dispersion GVD based on the measurement of the fiber structure parameters, the hole diameter and the pitch of a presumed homogeneous hexagonal array and compare the calculation with two methods to measure the wavelength-dependent time delay. We measure the time delay on a three hundred meter test fiber with a homemade supercontinuum light source, a set of bandpass filters and a fast detector and compare the results with a white light interferometric setup. To measure the dispersion of optical fibers with high accuracy, a time-frequency-domain setup based on a Mach-Zehnder interferometer is used. The experimental setup allows the determination of the wavelength dependent differential group delay of light travelling through a thirty centimeter piece of test fiber in the wavelength range from VIS to NIR. The determination of the GVD using different methods enables the evaluation of the individual methods for characterizing the endlessly single-mode fiber.
23

Experimental measurement and numerical analysis of group velocity dispersion in cladding modes of an endlessly single-mode photonic crystal fiber

Baselt, Tobias, Taudt, Christopher, Nelsen, Bryan, Lasagni, Andrés Fabián, Hartmann, Peter 06 September 2019 (has links)
The optical properties of the guided modes in the core of photonic crystal fibers (PCFs) can be easily manipulated by changing the air-hole structure in the cladding. Special properties can be achieved in this case such as endless singlemode operation. Endlessly single-mode fibers, which enable single-mode guidance over a wide spectral range, are indispensable in the field of fiber technology. A two-dimensional photonic crystal with a silica central core and a micrometer-spaced hexagonal array of air holes is an established method to achieve endless single-mode properties. In addition to the guidance of light in the core, different cladding modes occur. The coupling between the core and the cladding modes can affect the endlessly single-mode guides. There are two possible ways to determine the dispersion: measurement and calculation. We calculate the group velocity dispersion (GVD) of different cladding modes based on the measurement of the fiber structure parameters, the hole diameter and the pitch of a presumed homogeneous hexagonal array. Based on the scanning electron image, a calculation was made of the optical guiding properties of the microstructured cladding. We compare the calculation with a method to measure the wavelength-dependent time delay. We measure the time delay of defined cladding modes with a homemade supercontinuum light source in a white light interferometric setup. To measure the dispersion of cladding modes of optical fibers with high accuracy, a time-domain white-light interferometer based on a Mach-Zehnder interferometer is used. The experimental setup allows the determination of the wavelengthdependent differential group delay of light travelling through a thirty centimeter piece of test fiber in the wavelength range from VIS to NIR. The determination of the GVD using different methods enables the evaluation of the individual methods for characterizing the cladding modes of an endlessly single-mode fiber.
24

Analysis of polymeric singlemode waveguides for inter-system communication

Weyers, David, Nieweglowski, Krzysztof, Lorenz, Lukas, Bock, Karlheinz 28 March 2022 (has links)
This paper describes simulation, technology- and process development for the manufacturing of single mode polymeric waveguides by photolithography. Simulations for single mode operation in O- and C-band are carried out. Waveguides are directly patterned with UV-photolithography using Ormocere®-material. Fiber to waveguide coupling and near field are characterized.
25

Cryogenic Irradiation and Low Temperature Annealing of Semiconductor and Optical Materials

Reinke, Benjamin T. 09 June 2016 (has links)
No description available.
26

Polymer segmented cladding fibres: cross fibre modelling, design, fabrication and experiment

Yeung, Anson Chi-Ming, Electrical Engineering & Telecommunications, Faculty of Engineering, UNSW January 2009 (has links)
This thesis presents the first research on polymer-segmented-cladding-fibre (PSCF), an emerging class of microstructured- optical-fibres (MOFs), which allows single-mode operation with ultra-large-core area. This research covers the modelling, design, fabrication and experiment of the polymer optical cross-fibre (4-period-SCF) whose cross-sectional view resembles a cross. A new wedge waveguide model has been formulated and applied to demonstrate that for any given parameters, the cross fibre gives the same performance for single-mode operation as the N-period-SCFs (for N = 2, 6 and 8). These fibres behave identically if the high-index segment angle, θ1, is the same and the low-index segment angular width, θ2, is sufficiently large for negligible adjacent mode coupling effects. This remarkable finding has significant ramifications for SCF fabrication, design and performance. Theoretical predictions confirmed by experiments demonstrated that a cross-fibre is all that needed to fabricate a large-core single-mode-fibre with no geometry-induced birefringence. The high-index outer ring effects on the cross fibre single-mode performance have been systematically investigated for the first time. The study reveals that the ring index value higher than its core index has very strong effects on single-mode performance. Within a narrow range of θ1, the minimum fibre length required for single-mode operation is reduced but outside this angle range, longer single-mode length is required. Furthermore, the fibre can be anti-guiding if θ1 exceeds the cutoff angle. Incorporating the fabrication constraints, the optimal cross-fibre design with high-index ring is achieved by optimising the relative index difference, high-index segment angle and core-cladding diameter ratio. Two preform-making techniques developed for the cross-fibres fabrication include the cladding-segment-in-tube method and the core-cladding-segment-in-tube method. The innovative approach in these methods overcomes the problems of bubble formation and fractures, which are related to the fibre structure complexity and the polymer intrinsic properties and their processing. It enables the successful drawing of single-mode fibres. This thesis reports the first experimental demonstration of single-mode operation of large-core cross-fibre. Three experimental studies with different cross-fibre designs have demonstrated (i) large-core single-mode operation, (ii) high-index ring effects on fibre performance and (iii) cross-fibre optimal design trial. Apart from this, the 8-period-SCF fibre performance has been demonstrated experimentally.
27

Experimental multiuser secure quantum communications

Bogdanski, Jan January 2009 (has links)
We are currently experiencing a rapid development of quantum information, a new branch of science, being an interdisciplinary of quantum physics, information theory, telecommunications, computer science, and many others. This new science branch was born in the middle of the eighties, developed rapidly during the nineties, and in the current decade has brought a technological breakthrough in creating secure quantum key distribution (QKD), quantum secret sharing, and exciting promises in diverse technological fields. Recent QKD experiments have achieved high rate QKD at 200 km distance in optical fiber. Significant QKD results have also been achieved in free-space. Due to the rapid broadband access deployment in many industrialized countries and the standing increasing transmission security treats, the natural development awaiting quantum communications, being a part of quantum information, is its migration into commercial switched telecom networks. Such a migration concerns both multiuser quantum key distribution and multiparty quantum secret sharing that have been the main goal of my PhD studies. They are also the main concern of the thesis. Our research efforts in multiuser QKD has led to a development of the five-user setup for transmissions over switched fiber networks in a star and in a tree configuration. We have achieved longer secure quantum information distances and implemented more nodes than other multi-user QKD experiments. The measurements have shown feasibility of multiuser QKD over switched fiber networks, using standard fiber telecom components. Since circular architecture networks are important parts of both intranets and the Internet, Sagnac QKD has also been a subject of our research efforts. The published experiments in this area have been very few and results were not encouraging, mainly due to the single mode fiber (SMF) birefringence. Our research has led to a development of a computer controlled birefringence compensation in Sagnac that open the door to both classical and quantum Sagnac applications. On the quantum secret sharing side, we have achieved the first quantum secret sharing experiment over telecom fiber in a five-party implementation using the "plug & play" setup and in a four-party implementation using Sagnac configuration. The setup measurements have shown feasibility and scalability of multiparty quantum communication over commercial telecom fiber networks.
28

Polymer segmented cladding fibres: cross fibre modelling, design, fabrication and experiment

Yeung, Anson Chi-Ming, Electrical Engineering & Telecommunications, Faculty of Engineering, UNSW January 2009 (has links)
This thesis presents the first research on polymer-segmented-cladding-fibre (PSCF), an emerging class of microstructured- optical-fibres (MOFs), which allows single-mode operation with ultra-large-core area. This research covers the modelling, design, fabrication and experiment of the polymer optical cross-fibre (4-period-SCF) whose cross-sectional view resembles a cross. A new wedge waveguide model has been formulated and applied to demonstrate that for any given parameters, the cross fibre gives the same performance for single-mode operation as the N-period-SCFs (for N = 2, 6 and 8). These fibres behave identically if the high-index segment angle, θ1, is the same and the low-index segment angular width, θ2, is sufficiently large for negligible adjacent mode coupling effects. This remarkable finding has significant ramifications for SCF fabrication, design and performance. Theoretical predictions confirmed by experiments demonstrated that a cross-fibre is all that needed to fabricate a large-core single-mode-fibre with no geometry-induced birefringence. The high-index outer ring effects on the cross fibre single-mode performance have been systematically investigated for the first time. The study reveals that the ring index value higher than its core index has very strong effects on single-mode performance. Within a narrow range of θ1, the minimum fibre length required for single-mode operation is reduced but outside this angle range, longer single-mode length is required. Furthermore, the fibre can be anti-guiding if θ1 exceeds the cutoff angle. Incorporating the fabrication constraints, the optimal cross-fibre design with high-index ring is achieved by optimising the relative index difference, high-index segment angle and core-cladding diameter ratio. Two preform-making techniques developed for the cross-fibres fabrication include the cladding-segment-in-tube method and the core-cladding-segment-in-tube method. The innovative approach in these methods overcomes the problems of bubble formation and fractures, which are related to the fibre structure complexity and the polymer intrinsic properties and their processing. It enables the successful drawing of single-mode fibres. This thesis reports the first experimental demonstration of single-mode operation of large-core cross-fibre. Three experimental studies with different cross-fibre designs have demonstrated (i) large-core single-mode operation, (ii) high-index ring effects on fibre performance and (iii) cross-fibre optimal design trial. Apart from this, the 8-period-SCF fibre performance has been demonstrated experimentally.
29

Modulation formats and digital signal processing for fiber-optic communications with coherent detection

Fickers, Jessica 12 September 2014 (has links)
A débit de données élevé, typiquement supérieur à 10 Gsymboles/s, les lignes de<p>télécommunication optique à fibre monomode souffrent de façon accrue des distorsions<p>inhérentes à la fibre et à l’architecture de transmission. Nous pouvons classer les<p>effets de fibre en plusieurs catégories:<p>– Les effets linéaires. La dispersion chromatique est entraînée par la dépendance en<p>fréquence de l’indice de réfraction de la fibre. Il en résulte un élargissement des<p>bits optiques. La dispersion des modes de polarisation prend son origine dans<p>la biréfringence de la fibre. La modélisation de cet effet est compliquée par son<p>caractère stochastique et variable dans le temps.<p>– Les effets non linéaires prennent leur origine dans un indice de réfraction de<p>fibre qui dépend du champ optique. Ces effets peuvent être classés en deux<p>catégories. Premièrement, les effets intérieurs à un canal dont le plus influant<p>est l’automodulation de phase qui découle de l’effet Kerr optique :l’intensité<p>d’une impulsion lumineuse influence sa propre propagation. Deuxièmement, il<p>existe des conséquences de l’effet Kerr par lesquelles les différents canaux, se<p>propageant au sein de la même fibre, s’influencent mutuellement. Le phénomène<p>le plus influent parmi ces derniers est la modulation de phase croisée :l’intensité<p>d’un canal influence la propagation dans un canal voisin.<p>– Les pertes par diffusion Rayleigh sont compensées par les amplificateurs distribués<p>le long de la ligne de transmission. L’amplification optique par l’intermédiaire<p>d’émission stimulée dans des dispositifs dopés aux ions Erbium est<p>accompagnée d’émission spontanée amplifiée. Ceci entraîne la présence d’un<p>bruit blanc gaussien se superposant au signal à transmettre.<p>– La gestion des canaux dans le réseau optique implique la présence dans les noeuds<p>du réseau de filtres de sélection, des multiplexeurs et démultiplexeurs.<p>Nous examinerons aussi les effets de ligne non inhérents à la fibre mais à l’architecture<p>de transmission. Les modèles de l’émetteur et du récepteur représentent les imperfections<p>d’implémentation des composants optiques et électroniques.<p>Un premier objectif est de définir et évaluer un format de modulation robuste aux<p>imperfections introduites sur le signal par la fibre optique et par l’émetteur/récepteur.<p>Deux caractéristiques fondamentales du format de modulation, determinants pour la<p>performance du système, sont étudiés dans ce travail :<p>– La forme d’ onde. Les symboles complexes d’information sont mis en forme par<p>un filtre passe-bas dont le profil influence la robustesse du signal vis-à-vis des<p>effets de ligne.<p>– La distribution des fréquences porteuses. Les canaux de communication sont<p>disposés sur une grille fréquentielle qui peut être définie de manière électronique<p>par traitement de signal, de manière optique ou dans une configuration hybride.<p>Lorsque des porteuses optiques sont utilisées, le bruit de phase relatif entre lasers<p>entraîne des effets d’ influence croisée entre canaux. En revanche, les limites des<p>implémentations électroniques sont données par la puissance des architectures<p>numériques.<p>Le deuxième objectif est de concevoir des techniques de traitement numérique du<p>signal implémentées après échantillonnage au récepteur afin de retrouver l’information<p>transmise. Les fonctions suivantes seront implémentées au récepteur :<p>– Les techniques d’estimation et d’égalisation des effets linéaires introduits par la<p>fibre optique et par l’émetteur et le récepteur. Le principe de l’égalisation dans<p>le domaine fréquentiel est de transformer le canal convolutif dans le domaine<p>temporel en un canal multiplicatif qui peut dès lors être compensé à une faible<p>complexité de calcul par des multiplications scalaires. Les blocs de symboles<p>émis doivent être rendus cycliques par l’ajout de redondance sous la forme d’un<p>préfixe cyclique ou d’une séquence d’apprentissage. Les techniques d’égalisation<p>seront comparées en termes de performance (taux d’erreurs binaires, efficacité<p>spectrale) et en termes de complexité de calcul. Ce dernier aspect est particulièrement<p>crucial en vue de l’optimisation de la consommation énergétique du<p>système conçu.<p>– Les techniques de synchronisation des signaux en temps/fréquence. Avant de<p>pouvoir égaliser les effets linéaires introduits dans la fibre, le signal reçu devra<p>être synchronisé en temps et en fréquence sur le signal envoyé. La synchronisation<p>est généralement accomplie en deux étapes principales :l’acquisition réalisée<p>avant de recevoir les symboles d’information don’t l’objectif est une première<p>estimation/compensation des effets de manière "grossière", le tracking réalisé en<p>parallèle à l’estimation des symboles d’information dont l’objectif est l’estimation<p>/compensation des effets de manière "fine". Les algorithmes d’acquisition et<p>de tracking peuvent nécessiter l’envoi d’informations connues du récepteur.<p>– Les techniques d’estimation et de compensation des imperfections de fonctionnement<p>de l’émetteur et du récepteur. Une structure de compensation des effets<p>introduits par les composants optiques et électroniques sera développée afin de<p>relâcher les contraintes d’implémentation de l’émetteur et du récepteur.<p>Etant donné la très haute cadence à laquelle les échantillons du signal sont produits<p>(plusieurs dizaines de Gech/s), une attention particulière est portée à la complexité de<p>calcul des algorithmes proposés. / Doctorat en Sciences de l'ingénieur / info:eu-repo/semantics/nonPublished
30

Utilisation de l'optique fibrée pour l'ingénierie quantique: du support passif aux sources / Fiber optics for quantum engineering: from passive media to sources

Brainis, Edouard 20 December 2006 (has links)
La dissertation explore différentes applications des fibres optiques en ingénierie quantique. Deux thématiques sont développées :d'une part l'utilisation des fibres optiques monomodales en silice pour l'implémentation d'algorithmes et de protocoles de communication quantiques et d'autre part l'utilisation de la non-linéarité de ces fibres pour réaliser des sources de paires de photons corrélés. L'étude est à la fois théorique et expérimentale./ The dissertation explores various uses of optical fibers for quantum engineering. Two topics are developed :first the use of single-mode silica fibers for implementing quantum algorithms and communication protocols, second the use of these fibers for generating correlated photon-pairs. / Doctorat en sciences appliquées / info:eu-repo/semantics/nonPublished

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