Abstract
A novel single-polarization photonic crystal fiber wavelength splitter based on hybrid-surface plasmon resonance is proposed. A full-vector finite-element method is applied to analyze the guiding properties. Numerical simulations show that the proposed splitter, which is only several hundred microns in length, gives single polarization in the 1.31-\mu\hbox{m} and 1.55-\mu\hbox{m} bands. The loss of the unwanted polarized mode is 102.6 and 245.0 dB/cm in the two aforementioned communication windows, respectively, and the corresponding insertion loss is as low as 3.5 and 1.7 dB/cm, respectively. Moreover, the dependence of the bandwidth on the fiber length is given, and according to that function, the bandwidth can reach 40 nm (1.31-\mu\hbox{m} band) and 100 nm (1.55-\mu\hbox{m} band) when the fiber length is up to 1 mm. Additionally, the tolerances for a realistic fabrication are analyzed. In the last part, we discuss other methods to deal with an anticrossing phenomenon in detail. © 2009-2012 IEEE.
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Chen, L., Zhang, W., Zhang, Z., Liu, Y., Sieg, J., Zhang, L., … Yan, T. (2014). Design for a single-polarization photonic crystal fiber wavelength splitter based on hybrid-surface plasmon resonance. IEEE Photonics Journal, 6(4). https://doi.org/10.1109/JPHOT.2014.2331237
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