1Northwestern Polytechnical University, School of Physical Science and Technology, MOE Key Laboratory of Material Physics and Chemistry Under Extraordinary Conditions, and Shaanxi Key Laboratory of Optical Information Technology, Xi’an, China
2Shenzhen University, Collaborative Innovation Centre for Optoelectronic Science and Technology, Key Laboratory of Optoelectronic Devices and Systems of Ministry of Education and Guangdong Province, Shenzhen, China
Cylindrical vector beams and vortex beams, two types of typical singular optical beams characterized by axially symmetric polarization and helical phase front, possess the unique focusing property and the ability of carrying orbital angular momentum. We discuss the formation mechanisms of such singular beams in few-mode fibers under the vortex basis and show recent advances in generating techniques that are mainly based on long-period fiber gratings, mode-selective couplers, offset-spliced fibers, and tapered fibers. The performances of cylindrical vector beams and vortex beams generated in fibers and fiber lasers are summarized and compared to give a comprehensive understanding of singular beams and to promote their practical applications.
In the past decades, spatially modulated structured light has captured a great deal of research interest and found a variety of applications.1–5 Spatially modulated structured light refers to light beams with special intensity, phase, or polarization distributions in the spatial domain, such as Bessel beams, Airy beams, cylindrical vector beams (CVBs), and vortex beams (VBs). Ideally, the Bessel beam represents a perfect diffraction-free optical field with a sharply defined central maximum, and thus the transverse intensity distribution is independent of the propagation distance.6 Airy beam is another type of diffraction-free waves and displays a distinctive self-accelerating property during the propagation.7 CVBs are generally characterized by axially symmetric polarizations and can be classified as an azimuthally polarized beam (APB), a radially polarized beam (RPB), and a hybridly polarized beam.8,9 VBs are characterized by helical wavefronts10–13 and are capable of carrying orbital angular momentum (OAM) because their equiphase surfaces rotate around the propagation direction, enabling the potential to develop OAM multiplexing communications.14–16 As CVBs and VBs possess a polarization singularity and phase singularity, respectively,9 they are also termed as singular beams and exhibit a similar doughnut-like intensity profile with a dark area at the center.17,18
Spatially modulated structured light was first generated in free space based on discrete bulk-state elements. Durnin et al.19 demonstrated a zero-order Bessel beam by illuminating collimated light on a circular slit located in the focal plane of a lens. Siviloglou et al.20 achieved an Airy beam by imposing a cubic phase to a broad Gaussian beam with a computer-controlled liquid crystal spatial light modulator. Simultaneously, various techniques and elements were developed to generate CVBs and VBs. For instance, spatial light modulators,21,22 axial birefringent components,23–25 specially designed laser cavities,26–28 interferometric methods,29–32 and nanostructured holograms33 have been proposed to convert Gaussian beams into CVBs or to directly emit CVBs. At the same time, photopatterning of liquid crystals,34,35 spiral phase plates,36,37 computer generated holograms,38 microresonators or subwavelength gratings,39 helically twisted fibers,40 as well as plasmonic metasurfaces41–44 were developed to generate VBs. However, most of these beam conversion or modulation systems are based on discrete components, and the complexity in optical alignment makes them difficult to use in constructing compact, low-loss, and long-haul systems.
Recently, the generation and modulation of CVBs/VBs in few-mode fibers and fiber lasers have attracting rising interests as such components or systems are compatible with optical fiber links, and this article reviews the important advances of the new emerging field. Section 2 is a brief introduction of CVBs and VBs and compares the two singular beams with several typical light beams. Following the brief introduction, Sec. 3 reviews the generation of CVBs in fibers and fiber lasers, which mainly focuses on formation principles, experimental setups, and output properties of the singular beams. In Sec. 4, we discuss corresponding contents of VBs in fibers and fiber lasers. Section 5 is a summarization of this review and discusses the perspective of CVBs and VBs in fiber-based systems.
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2 Brief Introduction of CVBs and VBs
2.1 Cylindrical Vector Beams
In general, natural light has a randomly distributed polarization state as the phase and wave vector of each lightwave evolve independently in the observed spatial plane, as shown in Fig. 1(a). However, laser beams emitted from typical cavities usually exhibit identical polarization states. For example, the output beams can be linearly polarized [Fig. 1(b)], elliptically polarized, or circularly polarized, and all of them have fixed polarization orientations in the spatial plane. Different from standard laser beams or natural lights, CVBs exhibit axially symmetric polarizations in the spatial domain.45–47 As shown in Figs. 1(c)–1(e), depending on the spatial distribution of the polarization, CVBs can be classified as RPBs, APBs, and hybridly polarized beams. As the polarization direction cannot be determined at the beam center, the CVBs show a polarization singularity and have a doughnut-like intensity profile. The focusing properties of linearly polarized Gaussian beams and RPBs are quite different when they pass through a high-numerical-aperture lens. The focused RPB has a strong longitudinal electric-field component, and the spot size reaches which is much smaller than the focused Gaussian beam ().48 Attributing to the unique focusing property, RPBs have found numerous practical applications, such as the particle manipulation,49 plasmonic nanofocusing,50 high-resolution optical microscopy,51 and high-sensitivity Z-scan techniques.52
Figure 1.Polarization distribution of (a) natural, unpolarized light, (b) linearly polarized beam, (c) RPB, (d) APB, and (e) hybridly polarized beam.
It is well known that plane lightwaves and spherical lightwaves exhibit plane and spherical equiphase surfaces. Unlike the plane wave or the spherical wave, VBs have a helical phase given by , where is the azimuthal angle, and is the topological charge that indicates the winding number of the phase front in a single optical cycle. Figures 2(a)–2(c) show the phase evolution of VBs, plane waves, and spherical waves during propagation in an isotropic medium. The equiphase surface of a VB rotates around the propagation direction, and thus a VB carries OAM in the spatial domain.53,54 As the phase is undetermined at the beam center, a VB shows a phase singularity and is therefore termed as a phase singular beam. Although the CVB and VB exhibit a similar doughnut-like intensity profile, they are intrinsically two different types of beams. In general, the polarization distribution of a CVB is tested by passing it through a rotating linear polarizer, while the phase property of VB is investigated by interfering it with a plane lightwave or a spherical lightwave. It should be pointed out that VBs can be linearly polarized,55 circularly polarized,56 and cylindrically polarized.57 Due to the distinct phase and intensity distributions, VBs have also found widespread applications in mode division multiplexing,58–61 optical imaging,62 optical micromanipulation,63–65 fabrication of magnetic three-dimensional tubular micromotors,66 or twisted metal nanostructures,1,67 quantum optics,68 rotation detection,69,70 etc. The generation methods and applications of CVBs and VBs in free space have been discussed and summarized exhaustively by several reviews and articles.9,13,17,71–74 The following parts of this review mainly focus on the generation and application of CVBs and VBs based on few-mode fibers and fiber lasers.
Figure 2.Phase evolution of (a) VB, (b) plane wave, and (c) spherical wave.
Generation of CVBs in fibers and fiber lasers is mainly based on the exciting and extracting of desired eigenmodes in few-mode fibers such as two-mode fiber (TMF) and four-mode fiber. The spatial properties of TMF lasers are completely different from fiber lasers based on a single-mode fiber (SMF).75–79 As shown in Fig. 3, taking TMF as an example, it can guide the mode and mode in the scalar approximation. When accounting for the polarization distribution, the mode includes two degenerate fundamental modes ( and ) that have the same effective refractive index but orthogonal polarization states. The mode includes four vector modes,81 i.e., , , and . Among them, and are strictly degenerated modes with the same effective refractive index while orthogonal polarization states, and and modes are separated by modes and have slightly different effective refractive indices.
Because and modes are exactly RPB and APB, respectively, the generation of CVBs in fibers and fiber lasers comes down to the excitation and extraction of the or mode. The mode couplers are key elements to generate CVB and VB, and the fiber-based mode couplers mainly include long period fiber gratings (LPFGs), fiber-fused mode-selective couplers, offset-spliced fibers, and tapered fibers. The properties of these mode couplers and performances of CVBs are discussed in the following parts.
3.1 Long Period Fiber Grating for Generating CVBs
When the refractive index of the fiber is periodically modulated along the propagation direction of light, the fundamental mode can be coupled into the copropagating high-order modes based on the following coupling equations:83,84where and represent complex amplitudes of the fundamental mode and the desired high-order mode, and is the coupling coefficient between two modes. is the mismatch of two wave vectors and can be expressed as , in which and are propagation constants while and are effective refractive indices of the fundamental mode and high-order mode. is the wavelength, and is the wave vector of the fiber grating with a period of .
To realize effective coupling of the fundamental mode and the desired high-order mode, the phase match condition must be satisfied so that the coupling coefficient reaches critical coupling state. Thus, the mismatch should be zero, and the period of fiber grating is . As the difference () of effective refractive indices between two modes is relatively small ( to ), the period of the fiber grating for mode conversion is hundreds of micrometers at the wavelength of .
The coupling coefficient between and the first group high-order vector modes (, , and ) can be expressed as80,84where and are the transverse electric fields of the fundamental mode and the desired high-order mode, respectively, is the refractive index of fiber core, and and are the permittivity and permeability of vacuum, respectively. By substituting Eq. (2) into Eq. (4), the coupling coefficient between and () is obtained as
If the modulation of the refractive index evolves independently with the azimuthal angle and radius such that , the coupling coefficient takes the form:80
Similarly, the coupling coefficient (), (), (), (), (), (), () are
From Eqs. (6) and (7), one can find that two integrals affect the coupling coefficient and should be non-zero simultaneously. Actually, an acoustic flexural wave propagating in the direction with vibration along the axis can introduce an asymmetric refractive index modulation with respect to the vibration direction in an unjacketed fiber.80 The asymmetric refractive index distribution at the cross section of such acoustically induced LPFG is
Therefore, the coupling coefficients between the fundamental mode and the high-order mode in the acoustically induced LPFG can be further expressed as where , , and both of them are constants for a certain acoustically induced LPFG. Thus, RPB and APB can be obtained by coupling the to and to , respectively.
Figures 4(a) and 4(b) show the experimental setup for generating a CVB at the wavelength of 1550 nm using the acoustically induced LPFG.80 First, the laser was amplified by an erbium-doped fiber amplifier (EDFA), and the output beam was linearly polarized or mode after passing through a polarizer and polarization controller (PC). Then, the laser entered the TMF and was further purified as the mode by a mode stripper. After that, the mode conversion was implemented with an acoustically induced LPFG of which one end was glued to the tip of an acoustic transducer and the other end was fixed on a fiber clamp. The acoustic wave was imposed on the TMF with an acoustic transducer. The operation was switchable between RPB and APB via adjusting the PC, and the phase matching condition was satisfied via tuning the frequency of the acoustic wave. Figure 4(c) shows the intensity patterns of RPB and APB at the wavelength of 532, 633, and 1550 nm before and after passing a linear polarizer. The SMF-28 fiber was used as a TMF to generate CVBs at 532 and 633 nm, while the TMF (OFS: two mode step-index fiber) was used to generate CVBs at 1550 nm. This type of mode converter is capable of delivering high-purity CVBs with broadband wavelength tunability, while the entire system is quite complicated and costly for practical applications.
Based on the similar mode coupling principle, Dong and Chiang85 fabricated a mode converter by directly writing the LPFG on TMF with a laser. The asymmetrical index distribution in the fiber core induced by the laser enabled the coupling of the fundamental mode to the high-order cylindrical vector mode. The LPFG with 15 grating periods exhibited a conversion efficiency higher than 99% from 1529.1 to 1563.1 nm. The broad conversion bandwidth was induced by the slight variation of the grating period during the fabrication. By adjusting the polarization state of the input mode, four cylindrical vector modes (, , , ) can be obtained from the LPFG. Furthermore, the cascading chirped LPFGs and dual-resonance LPFG were proposed to enlarge the bandwidth of the mode converter, enabling the capability of wavelength-tunable CVB generation in fibers or fiber lasers.86–88 Such LPFG-based mode converters possess obvious advantages of low loss, small reflection, and high fabrication flexibility.
In the aforementioned works, the CVBs were formed external to the laser cavity by modulating the transverse modes in TMFs. By incorporating the LPFG into a fiber resonator, CVBs can also be directly generated from fiber lasers. Chen et al89 demonstrated an all-fiber laser delivering CVBs based on the combination of an LPFG and a two-mode fiber Bragg grating (TMFBG). The mode conversion was realized by the LPFG, and the mode purity of CVBs was higher than 98%. In their scheme, the TMFBG played double roles of a mode selector to extract the CVBs from hybrid modes and a spectral filter to fix the laser wavelength. The lasing threshold and slope efficiency of the laser were 24.5 mW and 35.41%, respectively. The authors have also demonstrated that the resonance efficiency of the cylindrical vector laser experienced a sudden increase from 13.26% to 32.48% when the pump reached a threshold power, and this phenomenon was attributed to the transversal hole burning effect in the double-clad Yb-doped fiber.90
3.2 Mode-Selective Coupler for Generating CVBs
Micronano fiber is an important element for ultrafast fiber lasers and micronano optics,91–93 and it can also be used to actualize mode-selective couplers based on the coupling of evanescent field. The typical mode-selective couplers include fiber-polished couplers and fiber-fused couplers, and both of them are based on the mode coupling of closely spaced fibers.94–96 For fiber-fused couplers, as shown in Fig. 5, the coupling equation is presented as Eq. (10), which is similar to Eq. (3) but has different mismatch parameters.97 It should be noted that Eq. (10) is only suitable for weakly fused fibers. In this case, and , where and are previously defined propagation constants of the fundamental mode and the high-order mode, respectively, and are self-coupling coefficients, and is the mutual-coupling coefficient. The self-coupling coefficient only results in the change of the effective index and thus the phase matching condition, while it has no impact on the coupled power between modes. To realize effective mode coupling, the phase matching condition should also be satisfied (),97 indicating that should be equal to . However, SMF and TMF have different parameters, and generally, the two propagation constants and have different values.
Figure 5.Mode-selective coupler based on tapered SMF and TMF.
Based on the finite element simulation, Wan et al.97 demonstrated that the best diameter ratio between the SMF and TMF should be 0.63 to satisfy the phase-matching condition. To simplify the calculation, they assumed that four high-order vector modes had the same propagation constant and coupling efficiency. In their experiment, the diameter of the SMF was pretapered to , and the mode-selective coupler was fabricated by a weak fusion technique. At the wavelength of 1550 nm, the purity of the vector mode was measured to be about 97% by the tight bend approach. When incorporating the mode-selective coupler into a figure-8 fiber laser, both RPB and APB have been obtained from the TMF terminal of the mode-selective coupler through adjusting the polarization state. The central wavelength, spectral bandwidth, pulse duration, and repetition rate were 1556.3 nm, 3.2 nm, 17 ns, and 0.66 MHz, respectively. With the assistance of a carbon nanotube saturable absorber, they have achieved femtosecond dual-wavelength soliton mode locking in a ring fiber laser, further confirming the broadband operating characteristics of the mode-selective coupler.98 After that, they demonstrated an all-fiber CVB laser based on a symmetric TMF coupler for both high-order mode excitation and splitting.99
In the aforementioned CVB fiber lasers,97,98,100 the fiber resonators were composed of SMF components, and the fundamental mode was converted into the high-order mode by the mode-selective coupler. Wang et al.101 proposed a wavelength division-multiplexing mode-selective coupler that converted the mode in the SMF to the mode in the TMF and combined the modes in the TMF at wavelengths of 980 and 1550 nm. In the fabrication process, the diameter of the SMF was pretapered to , carefully aligned with the TMF, and then fused together with the flame brushing technique. As shown in Fig. 6, based on the TMF components of the EDF, coupler, and WDM, they constructed an all-fiber laser and observed the mode and CVBs with a modal purity higher than 95%. By injecting a picosecond laser pulse into the cavity with a mode-selective coupler, they observed a direct oscillation of the mode with an output power of 4 mW in the all TMF laser. Based on the similar mode-selective couplers, several high-order modes including CVBs and VBs have been achieved at the wavelength of in all-fiber Yb-doped lasers.102
3.3 Offset-Spliced Fiber and Tapered Fiber for Generating CVBs
For mode-selective couplers and LPFGs, the parameters such as the fiber diameter and grating period should be precisely controlled to generate the desired CVBs. According to the mode matching theory, when the input mode in the SMF deviates from the axial symmetry with respect to the TMF, a part of the fundamental mode will couple into high-order modes. The coupling efficiency is obtained via calculating the overlap between the modes in the SMF and TMF.103 Thus, offset splicing the SMF and TMF can work as a simple and effective mode-coupling element. By offset aligning the SMF and TMF, Grosjean et al.104 excited the RPB while still observing the residual fundamental mode. The fundamental mode can be greatly reduced to heighten the purity of the RPB with the enhancement of the mismatch between two fibers. However, the loss also enlarged exponentially with the increase of the mismatch, which limited the conversion efficiency of the device.
We investigated the coupling behavior of the offset-spliced SMF and TMF based on the finite element analysis method.105Figure 7(a) shows the sketch map of the offset-spliced fiber, in which the light is injected from the SMF terminal and output from the TMF terminal. Figures 7(b) and 7(c) show that the coupling efficiency from the fundamental mode to the or modes dramatically increased with the enlargement of the mismatch distance when . Taking mode as an example, when approached , the electric field of the mode strongly overlapped with that of and there existed a maximal coupling efficiency of 20.7%. When the mismatch distance increased further, the coupling efficiency decreased gradually due to the subsiding overlap of the two electric fields.
After the offset-spliced fiber, the fundamental mode and high-order modes coexisted in the TMFs. The mode purity can be improved by reflecting back the fundamental mode while transmitting high-order modes with a TMFBG.106–110 The blue curve in Fig. 8(a) shows a typical reflection spectrum of the TMFBG, which had three reflection peaks at 1056.0, 1054.5, and 1053.0 nm, respectively.108 For FBGs, the reflection wavelength , where and were the effective refractive index of each mode and the grating period, respectively. As the effective refractive index was different for the and modes, the TMFBG displayed three reflection peaks. Peak 1 related to the coupling of to mode, peak 2 represented that of to mode, and peak 3 denoted that of to mode, respectively. When the laser spectrum was fixed by a single-mode fiber Bragg grating (SMFBG) [red curve in Fig. 8(a)] at peak 1, the fundamental mode was reflected back and the desired high-order mode was exported from the TMFBG.111 Based on the offset-spliced fiber and TMFBG, Sun et al. constructed the figure-8 fiber laser,108 linear-cavity fiber laser,106,112,113 and ring fiber laser109,114 to directly generate RPB and APB. In the temporal domain, these cylindrical vector fiber lasers were capable of delivering continuous waves, microsecond pulses, nanosecond pulses, and picosecond pulses.
With a carbon nanotube saturable absorber, we have constructed an ultrafast all-fiber CVB laser at based on an offset-spliced fiber and TMFBG.105 The ultrafast CVB can be switched between radially and azimuthally polarized states and the pulse duration reached 6.87 ps. For the optimized lateral displacement of , the coupling efficiency of the fundamental mode to or was about 20% while the insertion loss was higher than 3 dB, which limited the emission efficiency and output power of the laser. Based on the mode coupling of the tapered SMF and TMF, we proposed a new mode converter with an insertion loss of 0.36 dB to replace the offset-spliced fibers.115 For tapered fibers, the coupling efficiency of the fundamental mode to was 14.0%/20.6%, which was comparable with that of offset-spliced fibers. The insertion loss of the SMF-TMF taper is much lower than that of the offset-spliced fibers. The output power of the CVB laser based on tapered fibers reached , which was almost 1.5 to 2 times higher than that based on offset-spliced fibers. Similar to that of offset-spliced fibers, the laser was switchable between the radially and azimuthally polarized states by adjusting the input polarization in SMF, as shown in Figs. 9(a) and 9(b). In the temporal domain, the operation was tunable among continuous-wave, Q-switched, and mode-locked states by changing the pump strength and saturable absorber. Figures 9(c)–9(f) show the optical spectra, pulse trains, evolution of Q-switched lasers, and autocorrelation traces of the mode-locked pulses. The duration of Q-switched RPB/APB spanned from 10.4/10.8 to by tuning the pump power, while that of the mode-locked pulse varied from 39.2/31.9 to by controlling the laser bandwidth with an SMFBG.
Except for the aforementioned methods, several new techniques have been developed to generate CVBs in fibers or fiber lasers. Yang et al.116 obtained a CVB with an arbitrary polarization rotation angle from its radial direction by manipulating either the polarization orientation or mode profile orientation of two linearly polarized Hermite–Gaussian modes in different elliptical-core few-mode fibers before their spatial superposition.
3.4 Summary of CVBs Generated in Fibers and Fiber Lasers
The generation systems and performances of CVBs using different schemes are summarized in Table 1 for a clear comparison. Each scheme has its advantages and application fields. Among them, LPFGs can be used external to the cavity or incorporated into the fiber laser, and the output CVBs exhibit the highest mode purity, typically larger than 98%. The mode-selective couplers have a broadband optical response and are frequently incorporated into fiber lasers to generate continuous-wave or pulsed CVBs, while the output power is relatively small due to the low coupling coefficient of the high-order modes. The offset-spliced fiber and tapered fiber are usually combined with TMFBGs to generate CVBs in fiber lasers. Due to the limited reflection bandwidth of TMFBGs, the duration of the pulse is usually higher than several picoseconds. By utilizing TMF with a large propagation constant difference, the first reflection spectrum of chirped TMFBGs can be broadened and is capable of supporting femtosecond pulses. Compared with the pretapered mode-selective coupler that must be precisely designed, the offset-spliced fiber, tapered fiber, and TMFBG can be easily fabricated, and the mode purity mainly depends on the reflectivity of TMFBG.
It is apparent that the obtained VBs are linearly polarized along the - and -axes, respectively.55 The phase difference of can be easily induced by a PC. According to the theoretical analysis, the formation of VBs is also based on the coupling and superposition of fiber eigenmodes. As a result, the mode couplers mentioned previously can be modified to generate VBs (Fig. 10).
Figure 10.Formation mechanism of VBs in TMF. (a1)–(a4) mode distribution of , , , and modes. Mode distribution, phase, and polarization of (b1)–(b3), (c1)–(c3) circularly polarized VBs and (d1)–(e3), (e1)–(e3) linearly polarized VBs.
Dashti et al.84 demonstrated that the OAM of the acoustic vortex can be transferred to a circularly polarized fundamental optical mode. They have created the stable -order VBs directly in the TMF by coupling the fundamental mode to high-order modes using two flexural acoustic waves with orthogonal vibration directions. After that, our group analyzed the coupling behavior of the fundamental mode to four high-order modes to generate VBs based on an acoustically induced LPFG.118 As shown in Fig. 11, the output beam delivered from a tunable laser was amplified by an EDFA and then divided into two branches by a 3-dB optical coupler. One branch was used to generate the VB while the other was a reference beam to interfere with the generated VB. For the branch of generating the VB, the beam was first coupled into a section of SMF and then passed through a tunable attenuator as well as a polarizer. After that, the linearly polarized beam was converted to a circularly polarized mode () by a PC. The TMF was directly spliced to the SMF, and a mode stripper ensured the purity of circularly polarized fundamental mode. Then, the fundamental mode entered the acoustically induced LPFG and was converted to the VB () when the phase matching condition was satisfied. Simultaneously, Lu et al. reported mode-switchable generation of modes and -order VBs based on an acoustically induced LPFG.119 The proposed scheme can also be used to generate linearly polarized femtosecond VBs.55
Li et al.120 demonstrated a controllable all-fiber VB converter in which a mechanical LPFG was employed to transform the fundamental mode to higher-order modes, and two flat slabs stressed the TMF to introduce the phase difference between two higher-order modes, as shown in Fig. 12(a). Figures 12(b1) and 12(b3) show the field distributions of the generated VBs, which have the typical annular profiles with a dark center. Figures 12(b2) and 12(b4) show coaxial interference patterns of the generated VBs with the Gaussian beam. The counterclockwise and clockwise spiral interference patterns can be clearly observed from the figures, indicating that -order VBs were successfully achieved from the TMF. They have also investigated the generation, conversion, and exchange of VB using helical gratings.121 The conversion efficiency and conversion bandwidth were about 100% and 10 nm, respectively. After that, Zhao et al.122 proposed a mode converter based on an LPFG written in the TMF to directly deliver VB and CVB.
For LPFG based on a TMF, only first-order VBs can be generated due to the limitation of the available transverse modes. Wu et al. fabricated a strong modulated LPFG written in a four-mode fiber to generate -order VBs.123 Han et al.124 demonstrated controllable generation of circularly polarized - and -order VBs with two cascaded LPFGs for realizing mode conversions in four-mode fiber. After that, Zhao et al.125 proposed an all-fiber VB generator based on a second-order helical LPFG written in a few-mode fiber, which enables direct transforming of the fundamental mode to -order vortex modes with an efficiency of . More recently, -order VBs were demonstrated by employing an asymmetric LPFG fabricated on six-mode fiber.126
4.2 Mode-Selective Coupler for Generating VBs
The typical fused fiber coupler consists of two parallel optical fibers that have been twisted, stretched, or fused together so that the fiber cores are very close to each other and the power couples from one fiber to another fiber.100,127 The principle of the mode-selective coupler is to phase match the fundamental mode in the SMF with high-order modes in a few-mode fiber and achieve mode conversion from the fundamental mode to the desired high-order modes. In the SMF and few-mode fiber terminals, the output beams are the fundamental and the high-order modes, respectively. The fabrication method of a mode-selective coupler for generating VB is similar to that of CVBs.128 Wang et al.100 demonstrated femtosecond optical VBs in an all-fiber mode-locked laser using a mode-selective coupler. The mode converter could couple the mode to () mode in a broadband wavelength range. They have obtained linearly polarized ()-order VBs by combining () and () with the phase difference. The durations of -order VBs and -order VBs are 273 and 140 fs, respectively. By employing a microknot resonator as the comb filter, they reported direct generation of wavelength-switchable VBs from 1546.95 to 1562.29 nm in an all-fiber erbium-doped fiber laser.129 Recently, Yao et al.127 found that the mode purity of the VBs was wavelength-sensitive if the input polarization of fundamental mode kept unchanged.
4.3 Fiber Taper Combined with TMFBG for Generating VBs
Continuous-wave and picosecond VBs can also be generated by exploiting SMF-TMF taper as the mode coupler and TMFBG as the mode selector.130 In the coupling region, the light in the SMF taper couples into the TMF taper due to the strong evanescent field. Since the light field in the TMF taper deviates from the axial symmetry, parts of the and modes are converted into the and modes while the residual mode is the fundamental mode. After that, the high-order modes are transformed into VBs by a PC, while the TMFBG works as a transverse mode selector to reflect the residual fundamental mode and export VBs. We have achieved continuous-wave and mode-locked VBs in an erbium-doped fiber laser based on three different schemes in which the mode couplers and reflectors were LPFG and fiber mirror, fiber taper, and fiber Bragg grating, and LPFG and fiber Bragg grating, respectively.130 The operation was switchable between -order VBs by tuning the intracavity PC, as shown in Fig. 13. For the mode-locked VBs, the pulse duration was several picoseconds, which was mainly limited by the bandwidth of the TMFBG. For the continuous-wave operation, the output power exceeded 35 mW, and the VBs can directly work as optical tweezers to manipulate rhenium diselenide nanosheets.
4.4 Summary of VBs Generation in Fibers and Fiber Lasers
The aforementioned techniques are mainly focused on mode modulation in few-mode fibers or fiber lasers. Similar to the principle of the offset-splicing scheme for generating CVBs, fiber-to-fiber butt coupling was proposed to realize high-order fiber mode conversion for creating -order VBs.131 Recently, Fu et al.132 reported - and -order VBs by twisting a solid-core hexagonal photonic crystal fiber during hydrogen-oxygen flame heating process. Xie et al. developed an integrated fiber-based mode converter to generate VBs by attaching vortex gratings onto the facets of a few-mode fiber.133 The grating at the input terminal of the fiber converted the Gaussian beam into the VBs, while the grating at the output terminal converted the VBs into a Gaussian beam. Such integrated (de)multiplexer has been applied for OAM fiber communication. By directly fabricating a metasurface onto the facet of a large-mode-area fiber, Zhao et al.134 realized the excitation of both linearly polarized and circularly polarized VBs from 1480 to 1640 nm with a purity above 93%.
The mode purity and conversion efficiency are frequently adopted to evaluate the performance of generation methods. Bozinovic and Ramachandran et al. defined mode purity as the energy ratio of the desired mode to all modes in the fiber and proposed a measuring method by analyzing fiber output projections onto left circular and right circular polarization states.82 The conversion efficiency is usually defined as the ratio of the output power of the desired mode to the input power of the fundamental mode (i.e., launched pump power), which is slightly different from the mode purity due to the insertion loss of the converter.135 The generation methods and performances of VBs are summarized in Table 2. Among them, the purity of VBs based on an LPFG is higher than those of other techniques, which is similar to that of CVBs. Due to the broadband response, the mode-selective coupler can be incorporated into fiber lasers to generate ultrafast VBs. Except for a PC that is used to introduce the phase difference, the coupling devices and generation systems of VBs are quite similar to that of CVBs, as summarized in a recent review article.136
Coupling device
Output element
Wavelength (nm)
Mode purity
Output power (mW)
Pulse duration
Generation system
Supplementary information
Ref.
LPFG
TMF
1520 to 1570
/
/
TMF
Acoustically induced LPFG
84
LPFG
TMF
1530 to 1625
97%
/
/
TMF
Mechanically induced LPFG
120
LPFG
TMF
1527
97%
/
/
Ring-shaped fiber
Mechanically induced LPFG
82
LPFG
TMF
1540 to 1560
95%
/
/
TMF
Acoustically induced LPFG
118
LPFG
LPFG
1560
95%
/
0.384 ps
TMF
Acoustically induced LPFG
55
LPFG
TMF
1548.6/1548.9
/
34.77/35.28
6.96/6.01 ps
Fiber ring laser
Mechanically induced LPFG
130
LPFG
Fiber mirror
1547.4/1547.5
/
8.9/6.99
0.90 to 5.28/0.84 to 5.28 ps
Fiber ring laser
Mechanically induced LPFG
130
Helical LPFG
Helical LPFG
1550
/
/
TMF
/
121
Helical LPFG
Helical LPFG
1550
90%
/
/
Four-mode fiber
Helical LPFG inscribed by laser
125
Mode-selective coupler
FMF
1547.4
/
5.5
273 fs; 140 fs
Fiber ring laser
/
100
Mode-selective coupler
TMF
1550
90%
/
/
TMF
/
127
Tapered fiber
TMFBG
1547.4/1547.5
/
32.9/35.89
6.47/6.38 ps
Fiber ring laser
/
130
Vortex grating
TMF
/
95%
/
/
TMF
Vortex grating on fiber facet
133
Table 2. Generation systems and performances of VBs based on different schemes.
During the propagation in TMF, the stability of CVBs and VBs depends on the degeneracy of the four vector modes.137 For CVBs and VBs generated in conventional TMFs or TMF lasers, the beam stability is sensitive to the experimental environment. For example, the fiber vibration and temperature fluctuation may affect the coupling behavior and thus influence the purity and power of desired beams. The operation state of CVB rests with the excited eigenmodes and is switchable between APB and RPB by changing the input polarization state. For VBs, the chirality can be controlled by tuning the phase differences between the excited high-order eigenmodes.
In polarization maintaining fibers, when the effective refractive index difference , the orthogonal polarizations of modes remain stable over the propagation length of 100 m.138 Similar to the principle of the polarization maintaining fiber, the coupling coefficient between adjacent modes in TMF decreases with the increase of . For standard TMFs, the typical value is in the magnitude of , and the mode purity of CVBs and VBs decreases significantly during propagation due to the coupling of constituent vector modes. Ramachandran et al.117 demonstrated that a fiber with light field and field gradients at index steps gave a wellseparated propagation constants of the , , and modes. Based on this guideline, they fabricated a ring-shaped fiber whose profile mirrored the mode distribution to realize long-distance propagation of CVB and VB. The of adjacent modes was higher than , for example, the mode was separated by at least from any other guided modes of the TMF. In this case, the separation of each grating resonant wavelength was larger than 80 nm, and four high-order modes can be excited independently in the vortex fiber by selecting the appropriate grating period.
The singularity beams generated in ring-shaped fiber are intrinsic solutions of the fiber transmission equation and can be transmitted in fiber for a long distance in a steady state. With the assistance of the LPFG, robust CVBs117 and VBs82 have been generated and propagated over 20 m in the as-prepared TMFs. For an input VB with a purity of 97%, the purity decreased only by over propagation in the ring-shaped TMF. Based on a 1.1 km ring-shaped fiber, data transmission using four angular momentum modes at a single wavelength, and using two VBs modes over 10 wavelengths were achieved, indicating that VBs could provide an additional degree of freedom for data multiplexing in fiber networks.61 In addition, this group has also proposed two methods to measure the mode purity of CVB117 and VB82 in TMFs and developed an air-core optical fiber that can support 12 distinct higher-order VBs over several kilometers.139 Recently, Kim et al.140 also demonstrated a highly germanium-doped-core optical fiber with a step-index profile that was capable of stably guiding the RPB and APB over a wide spectral range. Due to the constraints of fiber boundary conditions, the types of singular light beams in fiber are not as abundant as that in free space, and the excitation as well as extraction of desired higher-order modes in fiber remains a long-term challenge. For example, complex polarized CVBs and high-order VBs () are difficult to be formed in few-mode fiber unless using specially designed fibers.141–143
CVBs and VBs formed in fibers and fiber lasers have found lots of special applications, such as nonlinear frequency conversion,144–146 flattop beam generation,147 quantum entanglement,148 optical micromanipulation,149,150 stimulated emission depletion (STED) microscopy,151 optical sensing,152 and mode-division multiplexing.61,95,133 Furthermore, we have theoretically and experimentally presented the nanofocusing characteristic of several metal-coated fiber tips under RPB excitation in the visible band, providing an effective guideline for designing the background-free tip-enhanced Raman spectroscopy system.153–155 Combining the azimuthal polarization characteristics of APB with the spatial symmetry characteristics of the silver nanoprism arrays,156 the sensitivity of surface-enhanced Raman spectroscopy has been enhanced by a factor of . In addition, in the fields of fiber communications, Ryf et al. demonstrated mode-division multiplexing based on six CVBs or VBs that carried a signal over 96 km in few-mode fiber,157 and it significantly increases the transmission capacity of fiber communication systems.
Compared with standard Gaussian beams, CVBs and VBs have unique polarization and/or phase distributions, and few-mode fibers and other specially designed fibers offer alternative media for propagating or generating such beams. We expect that special spatiotemporal optical fields can be formed by simultaneously modulating the polarization, phase, and temporal properties in few- or multiple-mode fibers and fiber lasers, and such optical fields can be further applied in fields of nonlinear fiber optics158–164 and ultrafast strong field physics.165–169 Compared with modulation/generation methods that have been intensively investigated, the nonlinear effects of CVB or VB are still less addressed when propagating in fibers or fiber lasers. With co-actions of mode/chromatic dispersion and nonlinearity, such CVBs or VBs may be shaped into special types of wavepackets such as spatiotemporal optical solitons.
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