
- Photonics Research
- Vol. 13, Issue 7, 1997 (2025)
Abstract
1. INTRODUCTION
The concept of chirality is important in many fields, from the study of chiral molecules to quantum optics [1–3]. Chiral phonons are much studied in solids, when the constituent atoms exhibit rotational motion, generating angular momentum in the direction of propagation [4]. As a new degree of freedom for the investigation of vibrational mechanical states, the chiral phonons play an important role for many fundamental fields such as phonon-driven topological states [5], electron-phonon coupling in solids [6], and energy-efficient information processing [3]. Recent works on chiral phonons, either magnetically driven or inherently present in topological materials [7–10] and helically chained biomolecules [11], have created a lot of interest and triggered a series of new explorations and developments in phonon-related physical processes.
In recent years, twisted photonic crystal fiber (PCF)—a versatile chiral material infinitely extended in the direction of the twist—has been shown to robustly preserve circularly polarized optical vortex modes with low loss, enabling novel investigations of linear and nonlinear optical effects in the presence of chirality [12–14]. Chiral PCF offers tight confinement of light in wavelength-scale glass cores, with close to 100% optoacoustic overlap [15], making it an ideal vehicle for investigating chiral forward Brillouin photon-phonon interaction. More importantly, the fibers have a special chiral structure that can stably preserve chiral flexural phonons (CFPs) and enable the efficient generation and stable propagation of CFP via the Brillouin scattering effect. Although in recent years there has been a series of studies of backward intervortex Brillouin scattering in twisted PCF [16–18], the excited phonons propagated as one-dimensional longitudinal waves that were non-chiral.
Here, we report the use of intervortex forward stimulated Brillouin scattering (FSBS) to optically excite and read out CFP in twisted PCF. The beat-note between co-propagating pump and Stokes modes during FSBS drives the creation of CFPs that robustly propagate as rotating single-spiral cork-crew flexural waves carrying vortices. Phase-matching and angular momentum conservation has the consequence that CFP created by FSBS in the twisted PCF can be used for intervortex frequency conversion at a widely separated wavelength in the backward direction. The intervortex FSBS opens a new path to advanced Brillouin scattering by controlling the chiral flexural modes for mode conversion. These modes represent a new version of acoustic phonons that can spatiotemporally modulate the optical vortices, with potential for use in vortex lasers or communication systems. The results offer a new perspective for topology photonics and Brillouin scattering, with potential applications in inter-band frequency conversion [19–21] and manipulation of vortex states in classical and quantum regimes [22,23].
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2. TWISTED PCF AND VORTEX-CARRYING HELICAL BLOCH MODES
Chiral PCFs with -fold rotational symmetry support helical Bloch modes (hBMs) [24,25], whose -th order azimuthal harmonic carries an optical vortex of order , where is the number of complete periods of phase progression around the azimuth for fields expressed in cylindrical components and is the principal azimuthal order. Note that is always an integer and is robustly conserved. In chiral PCF it is found, both experimentally and by numerical modeling, that the fields are almost perfectly circularly polarized, under which circumstances the topological charge (the number of on-axis discontinuities for fields evaluated in Cartesian coordinates) is linked to the azimuthal order by , where is the spin [ for left-circular (LCP) and for right-circular (RCP) polarization states]. Here, we use the shorthand to denote the parameters of an hBM, where for ease of notation the principal topological order is defined as . In chiral PCF, hBMs with equal and opposite values of are generally non-degenerate in index, i.e., topologically birefringent, while modes with opposite spin but the same value of typically display weak circular birefringence [12].
A three-dimensional sketch of the chiral PCF used in the experiments is shown in Fig. 1(a). The fiber has a three-fold rotationally symmetric structure with one on-axis and three satellite cores [see also scanning electron micrograph in Fig. 1(b)]. The twist pitch is 5 mm, the diameter of the hollow channels is 1.58 μm, and the distance between adjacent channels is 1.79 μm, yielding of 0.88, which results in tight confinement of both acoustic and optical fields and strong optoacoustic coupling (see Appendix B for more details). Finite element analysis of the chiral PCF in a helicoidal frame yields the near-field intensity patterns in Fig. 1(b), showing good agreement between experiment and theory. The measurements of polarization maintaining ability were made after propagation along an 8 m length of the fiber, where the modulus of the Stokes parameter of and modes was higher than 0.98 at the output, showing very good preservation of the circular polarization state. Such robust circular polarization transmission in the chiral PCF also means that the vortex modes stably propagate with low crosstalk, since the topological charges and spin orders are always associated together with azimuthal order by , as mentioned above. Any deviations from integer values of spin orders are caused by the crosstalk among vortex modes, and vice versa. The fiber loss at 1550 nm, measured by a cut-back method, was 0.195 dB/m for the modes and 0.262 dB/m for the modes. More details about polarization maintaining and fiber loss measurements are shown in Appendix C.
Figure 1.(a) Sketch of a short length of the three-fold rotationally symmetric PCF. The small circles mark the positions of the hollow channels, embedded in fused silica. (b) Left to right: scanning electron micrograph of the PCF structure. Upper: measured near-field intensity patterns of the
Figure 2.Experimental setup for FSBS and frequency conversion between vortex modes. SSBM, single-sideband modulator; IM, intensity modulator; EDFA, erbium-doped fiber amplifier; FPC, fiber polarization controller; VGM, vortex generation module; CPBS, circular-polarizing beam splitter; BS, beam splitter; LIA, lock-in amplifier; OSA, optical spectrum analyzer; PM, power meter; NBA, near-field scanning Brillouin analyzer. A coherent population of CFP is written in the twisted PCF by forward-propagating pump and Stokes modes, and read out in the backward direction at a different wavelength, determined by a special phase-matching condition.
3. CHIRAL PHOTON-PHONON INTERACTION VIA INTERVORTEX FSBS
A. Theory
Firstly, we establish the theories of chiral FSBS and optically excited CFP. Note that throughout the paper quantities related to the pump and Stokes are subscripted and , and we adopt the usual convention that the pump always has a higher frequency than the Stokes. In the Cartesian laboratory frame, the transverse field of a circularly polarized hBM can be written as [26]
In the absence of any perturbation ( and constant), the expression in Eq. (1) is itself a solution of Maxwell’s equations in the chiral PCF. In the presence of a dielectric constant perturbation in the form
Then we evaluate the in a coupled-mode description. Assuming slowly varying power-normalized amplitudes, a separately excited CFW (i.e., no FSBS), conservation of topological charge, i.e., , and collecting terms with the slowest rates of phase progression, we obtain (see Appendix A.2 for details)
Then the coupled FSBS equations for complex slowly varying field amplitudes that scale with the square-root of the modal power () can be written in the form
With the good approximation (commonly used in SBS) that , Eq. (4) can be recast in the form
Multiplying Eq. (5a) by and Eq. (5b) by and adding each equation to its complex conjugate, we obtain the coupled power equations
B. Writing of ℓph = ±1 Chiral Flexural Phonons
In the experiment of CFP writing/excitation, a fixed frequency pump signal is launched into the mode, along with a frequency-tunable Stokes signal in the mode, where . Interference between these two co-propagating signals creates a spiraling interference pattern that, through electrostriction at the phase-match frequency, excites CFP with topological charge of [see Fig. 3(a)]. Photons are converted from pump to Stokes () via chiral FSBS, with the energy defect going to excite phonons. This CFW induces a spiraling three-fold rotationally symmetric pattern of linear birefringence, which acts back on the optical fields, coupling together two orthogonal circularly polarized vortex lights as explained above and in Appendix A.
Figure 3.(a) Dispersion curves for (from left to right)
We start the experiment by demonstrating chiral FSBS between and modes and generation of CFP. Some simulations were preformed beforehand to estimate the acoustic frequency. Figure 3(a) shows the diagram for the six hBMs considered in this paper, calculated by the finite element method (FEM) and plotted over the spectral regions of interest. There is strong topological birefringence between modes with different topological charges (the calculated refractive index differences at 1550 nm are and ). In addition, the simulations confirm that modes with the same topological charge but opposite spins display weak circular birefringence, of order . Any deviations from integer values of topological charge are caused by the polarization state not being perfectly circular [24]. Figure 3(b) shows the diagram for three acoustic flexural modes in an untwisted fiber over the frequency range where the maximum SBS gain is seen in the experiments for pump to Stokes conversion. Efficient FSBS only occurs when phase matches and the optoacoustic overlap is high. Theory predicts that these conditions are fulfilled at the marked points in Figs. 3(a) and 3(b), corresponding to a frequency difference of and an acoustic propagation constant of 0.0465 rad/μm, i.e., an acoustic wavelength of 139 μm. The acoustic dispersion in the vicinity of this point is 0.0037 rad/μm per MHz, while the optical dispersion is negligible. In the chiral PCF the acoustic wavevector will differ for by approximately , which only slightly alters the phase-matching condition and is neglected.
The experimental setup is sketched in Fig. 2. The acoustic phonons are first written (i.e., excited) by FSBS between the forward pump and Stokes modes, and then read out at a different wavelength by a backward (or ) signal, which is down-shifted (or up-shifted) into an (or ) signal. For the detailed descriptions on the experimental setup see Appendices E and F. In the case of chiral FSBS between and modes, the CFW must supply a topological charge of , depending on which mode the pump is in. Transmitted pump and Stokes signals were separated at a circularly polarizing beam splitter and monitored using a power meter or OSA. Peak conversion is seen at 98.5 MHz (in good agreement with a theoretical value of 95.8 MHz), at which point the transmitted Stokes and pump powers were 1.89 and 0.71 W, respectively, as shown by the red circles in Fig. 3(c). In the absence of SBS, after taking the optical loss into account, these powers are 1.39 and 1.23 W.
Numerically solving the coupled power equations [Eq. (9)] for and adjusting the gain until the results agree with the experiment, we are able to plot the power in each mode as a function of position along the PCF [Fig. 3(c)]. The loss coefficients of pump and Stokes used in the calculation are 0.195 and 0.262 dB/m, which are obtained from experiments. The red circles in Fig. 3(c) mark the experimental measurements, and the dashed curves show the behavior with . The green dotted curve shows the length dependence of the optoacoustic coupling, which is directly proportional to and takes the value at . Excellent agreement with theory is obtained for .
Figure 3(d) shows the measured Stokes power (red circles) as a function of frequency difference, together with a theoretical fitting from Eq. (9). The calculated pump power as a function of frequency difference is also shown. The pump wave is depleted while the Stokes wave is amplified and both reach their minimum/maximum at the frequency of 98.5 MHz. The measured half-width at half-maximum bandwidth is 1.9 MHz [Fig. 3(d)], and the lineshape fits quite well to a Lorentzian, as predicted by Eq. (6). For strong dephasing, the transmission reverts to the dashed curves in Fig. 3(c), as expected. The pronounced shoulder on the high frequency side is attributed to excitation of acoustic modes with higher frequency cut-offs [Fig. 3(b)], which have lower overlap with the optical modes. Detuning from is dominated by the acoustic dispersion, which at the phase-matching frequency is 0.0037 rad/μm per MHz [Fig. 3(b)]. At 1.9 MHz detuning the dephasing rate is and the gain is half of its peak value, i.e., , corresponding to a 1/e acoustic power decay length of 70 μm. This in turn allows us to estimate . In the experiment, the phonon lifetime is 42 ns, which is calculated from the experimentally measured Brillouin linewidth with the formula . The acoustic power decay length is 86.52 μm, which can be calculated by and the flexural acoustic velocity . The experimentally estimated acoustic power decay length is very close to 70 μm, which verifies the assumptions regarding the phase-matching conditions in the theoretical model.
C. Read-Out of ℓph = ±1 Chiral Flexural Phonons at Different Wavelengths
Once the CFPs are excited by a forward pump and Stokes, modal dispersion means that they can be used for phase-matched conversion in the backward direction at a shifted wavelength, as illustrated in Fig. 4(a), enabling frequency conversion of vortex states. The black arrows represent the phonons. The experimental setup of the reading process is also shown in Fig. 2 and detailed in Appendix E. In the absence of group velocity dispersion, the frequency shift at which this occurs is [27], where and are the group index of the mode P and mode S (note that if the pump and Stokes modes are swapped, the frequency shift will change sign). In our case, however, there is significantly higher order dispersion, so that this simple condition is not accurate. Numerical calculations of the error ,
Figure 4.(a) Schematic illustrating the principle of phase-matched backward read-out of CFW excited by chiral FSBS, at a different wavelength band. The frequency shift
Figure 5(a) shows the read-out spectra recorded by a high resolution (20 MHz) OSA when a pump signal was launched backwards into the fiber at the phase-match frequency, in the presence of strong intervortex chiral FSBS. The horizontal scale corresponds to the frequency shift of the backward pump signal relative to the forward pump signal. Strong intervortex conversion between backward pump and Stokes frequencies is observed (blue curve) when . The Brillouin frequency shift is identical in both directions. On the right are the modal intensity profiles of backward pump signal recorded by a CCD camera and backward Stokes signal by the NBA, confirming that the launched pump is in the mode and Stokes read-out in the mode. When the pump signal is launched forwards, only very weak conversion to the backward Stokes is seen (magenta curve), 42 dB weaker than the previous case. We attribute this signal to Rayleigh scattering and weak reflections at the fiber output face. Figure 5(b) shows the reverse process, when a Stokes signal is launched backwards into the fiber at the phase-matching point and converted to the mode with a frequency up-shift of 98.5 MHz. When the pump signal is launched in forward direction, only very weak conversion to the Stokes is seen: 42 dB weaker than in the backward case (magenta curve), showing strong non-reciprocity. This is due to the phase-mismatching of the read-out process in the forward direction, as illustrated by the blue arrow in Fig. 4(a). The acoustic wave couples the backward pump and Stokes of different frequencies during the read-out process, while the coupling with the same frequency is prohibited in the forward direction, due to wavenumber mismatching [27]. The and are the group indices of pump and Stokes modes. For conversion between and modes, the is calculated to be . In the experiment, the Brillouin frequency between pump and Stokes is so small that each signal cannot be well-resolved by OSA, which from time to time caused double peaks around the signal central frequencies due to pixelation. The recorded modal patterns confirm that the backward pump signal is in the mode.
Figure 5.(a) Read-out spectra recorded by high resolution OSA when a
The read-out process (subscript ) can be conveniently modeled using Eq. (5):
D. Writing and Read-Out of ℓph = ±2 Chiral Flexural Phonons
Next, we show the results about writing and read-out of CFPs, with interaction between and optical modes. An expanded view of the calculated diagram for the four vortex-carrying hBMs is shown in Fig. 6(a), revealing a refractive index difference of between the and modes at 1550 nm, or a propagation constant difference of 0.00132 rad/μm. Figure 6(b) shows the diagram of the acoustic mode having the highest overlap with two optical modes (the inset shows the curves of six other acoustic modes that have moderately high overlap with the optical modes, with cut-off frequencies in the range of 1.1–1.6 GHz). The open circles in Figs. 6(a) and 6(b) mark the points where phase-matching occurs, predicting maximum gain at a Brillouin frequency shift of for the forward writing process of CFP. The mode in Fig. 6(b) comes in two degenerate orthogonal forms, which when superimposed with a frequency shift produce the rotating displacement patterns as shown in Fig. 6(c) (see
Figure 6.(a) Dispersion curves for (from left to right)
Figure 6(d) shows the transmitted power in the Stokes mode during the writing process, measured by the LIA, plotted as a function of frequency difference between pump and Stokes. Figure 6(e) shows the power in the backward Stokes signal during the read-out process by a backward pump signal, measured as a function of detuning from the phase-matching frequency of 187.2 THz (), which is shifted 6.21 THz () from the writing wavelength (1550 nm). This is the first time, as far as we know, to observe such large frequency shifting with the mediation of acoustic phonons in the Brillouin scattering.
Although a clear signal was observed at this wavelength in the experiment, confirming that it is possible to create and scatter off flexural phonons, it was difficult to theoretically characterize the process by numerical calculation because the response of to scattering was very weak. This is because the optoacoustic overlap of the optical mode with the higher order phonon modes is smaller, which results in a smaller phonon population, when compared with the cases of intervortex FSBS with acoustic modes. The parasitic phonon modes that exist around the Brillouin peak frequency [Fig. 6(b)] are also detrimental for efficient scattering and therefore decrease the peak conversion efficiency. For detailed descriptions, please see Appendix B.
4. DISCUSSION AND CONCLUSIONS
Chiral intervortex FSBS between circularly polarized optical vortex modes in a three-fold rotationally symmetric twisted PCF enables robust all-optical excitation of CFPs, which are vibrational mechanical states carrying angular momentum. Gain is seen when co-propagating pump and Stokes modes are orthogonally polarized, under which circumstances a rotating pattern of linear birefringence is induced, which has the correct symmetry to couple the pump and Stokes signals. In the case studied, the excited CFW has a strain field that resembles a rotating single-spiral corkscrew and may be viewed as the superposition of two orthogonal flexural waves with a frequency difference equal to the Brillouin shift. A combination of finite-element modeling and analytical theory produces results that agree very well with experiment, yielding a Brillouin gain of in the twisted PCF studied.
The CFPs created by FSBS in twisted PCF helically change the optical properties of the material and induce dynamic vortex gratings that spatiotemporally back-act on the optical waves, enabling frequency conversion of vortex states. The phase-matching condition and annular momentum conservation control the whole process, while the CFPs provide necessary OAM to make this happen. Once the phonons have been excited by the forward-propagating “writing” signals, they can be used, within their coherence time, for non-reciprocal backward conversion of vortex modes at a wavelength that can be spectrally distant (51.5 nm in the experiments) from the “writing” wavelength. This large spectral separation far exceeds what has been achieved in micro-resonators [29] and conventional linear-polarization maintaining fibers [30], using non-chiral optical and acoustic modes. The equivalent read-out process in the forward direction is strongly dephased and 42 dB weaker. The launched backward signals can be up-shifted or down-shifted by the Brillouin frequency, corresponding respectively to anti-Stokes or Stokes scattering.
The conversion efficiency can be potentially increased by raising the writing beam power and optimizing the fiber structure, such as and core size. Generally, to improve the conversion efficiency of FSBS, the should be increased so that the phonon modes can be confined into the core region as much as possible. But the large air hole size will induce more loss due to the Rayleigh scattering effect, which is difficult to be estimated due to the uncertainties in fiber fabrication. Increasing the twist rate and reducing the core size will also improve the conversion efficiency, but this will in turn introduce more difficulties on the fiber fabrication and may further increase fiber loss. Therefore, the fabrication technique of chiral PCF is essential in practical experiments and is still under optimization.
The backward conversion efficiency depends not only on the frequency of the read-out mode [Fig. 5(d)], but also on the frequency difference between the forward pump and Stokes seed signals, which must lie within the Brillouin gain band. In addition, the topological charge and polarization state of the backward read-out mode also affect the conversion efficiency, as dictated by angular momentum conservation. For example, if the forward pump and Stokes modes are set as and , theory predicts that backward conversion is possible not only between and modes (observed experimentally), but also between the and [0,1] modes.
It is possible to observe chiral photon-phonon interactions in any medium that is able to support stable optical vortex states, such as longitudinal homogeneous ring-core fibers (RCFs) [31,32]. However, the generation of chiral flexural phonons in such fibers has not been reported, due to the fact that the acoustic modes therein are distributed over the entire cross-section of the fiber rods, while the optical modes are only in the core, which results in a very low optoacoustic overlap. Recently, as the first step towards chiral Brillouin interaction, the inter-circular-polarization coupling through backward SBS in nano-tapers was demonstrated [33], with the mediation of spin-orbit interaction [34] and excitation of chiral longitudinal acoustic phonons. However, our work is the demonstration of intervortex coupling and fundamentally different from the above studies in terms of Brillouin coupling mechanisms and phonon properties. Firstly, the work in Ref. [33] with a nano-taper is based on backward Brillouin scattering with the mediation of longitudinal acoustic modes, while our work is about forward Brillouin scattering with flexural acoustic waves. They are physically different and the realization of the latter one is in general substantially more difficult because of the low interaction efficiency with mostly transverse acoustic waves. Secondly, the nano-taper is incapable of preserving circular polarization states. While inter-circular-polarization coupling can be observed in their case, the polarization states of both pump and Stokes have to be controlled precisely during the experiment. In contrast, the chiral PCF has great ability of mode maintenance and acoustic confinement, enabling stable and efficient chiral Brillouin inter-modal scattering (either backward or forward scattering) that is almost impossible to achieve in other platforms.
The intervortex FSBS and chiral phonons mediated frequency conversion can also be scaled for higher order vortex modes, by using some other specially designed chiral PCFs, such as six-fold rotationally symmetric chiral PCFs [18]. The three-fold rotationally symmetric chiral PCFs used here can only preserve and modes, and the loss of higher order modes is at least two orders of magnitude larger. This means that there is very little possibility that the injected light couples to modes. Lastly, the pure circular polarization states (Appendix C) at the fiber output indicate that there is almost no mode crosstalk in the experiment.
Intervortex FSBS incorporating spatial optical and acoustic vortices stands for a further step (compared with inter-polarization FSBS [30]) towards multi-dimensional Brillouin scattering, with potential to be used in new applications. For example, the unidirectional intervortex scattering can be used in the design of vortex isolators or narrowband vortex lasers, which are essential in multimode fiber communications [22]. The chiral flexural waves can be used in the large capacity light storage [35–39], where the buffers are multiple vortex-carrying acoustic modes of different topological charges, each one mediating a specific write-read process; they can also be employed for three-dimensional vectorial Brillouin sensing with orbital angular momentum of light, enabling structural torsion sensing and ambient acoustic vortex sensing [40–42]. The results of light-driven CFPs provide another perspective for fundamental research in chiral physics and might be of interest in the manipulation of vortex states in both classical and quantum regimes [22,23], and the lifetime of chiral flexural phonons should be sufficient for the latter application. Lastly, the theory of optoacoustic coupling between vortex modes also provides new insight into recent work on circular-polarization-sensitive SBS [33,43].
Acknowledgment
Acknowledgment. The authors thank Michael H. Frosz for providing the chiral PCF, and Dr. Hagai Diamandi and Dr. Yosef London for helpful discussions concerning the experiments.
APPENDIX A: THEORY OF CHIRAL INTERVORTEX FSBS
Two orthogonal circularly polarized plane waves of different frequencies can be coupled together by a weak acoustic wave that induces a rotating linear birefringence. The dielectric constant of such a system can be written as
We now extend this analysis to coupling between circularly polarized helical Bloch modes (hBMs) carrying optical vortices and guided in an -fold rotationally symmetric chiral PCF. In the Cartesian laboratory frame, the transverse field of such an hBM can be written as a superposition of Bloch harmonics, each of which carries an optical vortex [
In the absence of any perturbation ( and constant), the expression in Eq. (
Evaluating in a coupled-mode description, assuming slowly varying power-normalized amplitudes, a separately excited acoustic wave (i.e., no SBS), conservation of topological charge, i.e., , and collecting terms with the slowest rates of phase progression, we obtain
The quantity is the dephasing rate, is the propagation constant and the phase index of mode , and , where is a dimensionless parameter that is proportional to the amplitude overlap integral and the induced linear birefringence. Note that the optoacoustic overlap integral is calculated using the entire field of each helical Bloch mode, i.e., the sum over all harmonics.
In solving Eq. (
The coupled SBS equations for power-normalized field amplitudes can be written in the form
With the good approximation (commonly used in SBS) that , Eq. (
Multiplying the first by and the second by and adding each equation to its complex conjugate, we obtain the coupled power equations
Although, because energy is lost to phonons, these equations no longer exactly conserve power for , they do (as required) conserve photon flux:
Equation (
Equation (
To analyze backward coupling, which is essentially a linear scattering process, we need to know the strength and phase of the CFW at every point along the fiber. This requires a solution of the SBS amplitude equations [Eq. (
Given the complexity of the PCF structure, standard approaches to electrostriction are not valid and numerical techniques must be used [
The read-out process can be analyzed by extracting the coupling term in Eq. (
APPENDIX B: CALCULATION OF CHIRAL ACOUSTIC MODES AND OPTOACOUSTIC OVERLAPS
In the simulation, the full-vectorial wave equations were independently solved by the finite element method (FEM) in COMSOL Multiphysics software. We used the Electromagnetic Waves module to solve the optical modes and Solid Mechanics module to solve the acoustic modes. The simulations were carried out at a fixed optical wavelength of 1550 nm, and other parameters, such as fiber geometry, refractive index, and photoelastic tensors, are shown in Table Fiber and Material Parameters in SimulationsAir holes diameter 1.61 μm Hole-to-hole pitch 1.828 μm Core diameter 1.8 μm Cladding diameter (for 230 μm Cladding diameter (for 20 μm Refractive index 1.444 Fiber twist rate 628 rad/m Density ( 2203 Young’s modulus (GPa) 73 Poisson ratio 0.17 Viscosity tensor Viscosity tensor Photoelastic tensor (0.121, 0.27, −0.0745)
Figure 7.(a) Fiber cross-section used in the calculation of
Figure 8.Total displacements of three acoustic modes at 95.8, 101.3, and 109.4 MHz. All of them have similar displacement distributions in the core region, but the one at 98.5 MHz is the most tightly confined (35.8%) to the core and has highest overlap with the optical modes. The other two modes are less tightly confined (25.4% and 13.6%) to the core and are distributed over the whole fiber cross-section.
Figure 9.The strain energy density and transverse and axial displacements of all six labeled CFWs in Fig.
Note that those calculations are only valid for uniaxial flexural acoustic modes in an untwisted PCF. Chiral flexural acoustic modes can then be formed by the superposition of two orthogonal, -out-of-phase, uniaxial flexural modes with different frequencies. In the chiral PCF the acoustic modes are expected to display some topological birefringence, which although not discussed here will have some small effect on the phase-matching conditions.
APPENDIX C: MEASUREMENTS OF CIRCULAR POLARIZATION MAINTAINING AND FIBER LOSS
Figure
Figure 10.(a) The measurement of polarization
APPENDIX D: FIBER FABRICATION
The chiral PCF was fabricated by spinning the preform during fiber drawing [
The first step before starting to rotate the preform is to obtain the desired fiber structure. Once this has been achieved, the rotation speed is gradually increased while adjusting all the parameters to keep the structure consistent. The microstructure can be fine-tuned by the pressure system while the preform is rotating. In order to minimize the problem of preform vibration, it is important to keep the preform mounted tightly and straight in the center of the motor axis. At high rotational speeds, even a slight deviation from the center can damage the preform due to strong centrifugal forces.
Fabricating a chiral PCF requires some special attention. It is very important to keep the preform mounted tightly and straight in the center of the motor axis so that the rotational symmetry can be maintained during twisting; otherwise the fibers are likely to break during drawing and the fabricated fibers will have stress-induced linear birefringence, which will make the eigen-polarization states elliptical rather than purely circular [
In our case, the fiber shows robust maintenance ability on circular polarization states and vortex modes, with the Stokes parameter after 8-m-long fiber higher than 0.98. Nevertheless, the fabrication process still needs to be constantly optimized, as the fiber is not always perfect and tiny structural distortions happen from time to time.
APPENDIX E: EXPERIMENTAL SETUP
A custom-built setup was used to investigate chiral FSBS (Fig.
In the chiral phonons read-out step, the output from a frequency tunable CW laser was launched into the fiber in the backward direction, keeping the forward pump and Stokes switched on with their frequency difference set to the peak of the Brillouin gain. A VGM was optionally used to create circularly polarized vortex states. The backward pump/Stokes was frequency-tuned until conversion to a frequency-shifted Stokes/pump was observed, due to the presence of the already-written acoustic wave. The power and spectrum of the backward pump and Stokes signals were measured during read-out by a power meter and a high resolution OSA. Again, the lock-in detection scheme was optionally used to measure backward intervortex conversion if the signal response was too weak, as was the case in to conversion. A near-field scanning Brillouin analyzer (NBA) [
APPENDIX F: MODE PROFILES MEASUREMENT
As Fresnel reflections and Rayleigh scattering made direct measurement of the near-field mode profiles of the read-out signals difficult, we employed a near-field scanning Brillouin analyzer (NBA). This consists of an objective lens, a fiber raster scanning stage controlled by a computer with closed-loop feedback, a narrow-band filter, and signal detection equipment (e.g., OSA or PM). Light from the fiber was collected pixel by pixel by the fiber raster scanning stage. The signal was then filtered to remove unwanted light, detected, and analyzed. The NBA was also used to measure the topological charge, requiring only the addition of a cylindrical lens in front of it to create the patterns characteristic of OAM.

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