Title :
Fundamental limitations of the McCumber relation applied to Er-doped silica and other amorphous-host lasers
Author :
Digonnet, Michel J F ; Murphy-Chutorian, Erik ; Falquier, Dario G.
Author_Institution :
Edward L. Ginzton Lab., Stanford Univ., CA, USA
fDate :
12/1/2002 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
The approximate McCumber procedure is often used to predict the emission cross-section spectrum of the 1.5-μm transition of Er-doped glass fibers from the transition´s measured absorption spectrum. By applying this procedure to a large number of published Er-doped fiber absorption spectra, we demonstrate that its accuracy is actually statistically quite low: it tends to overestimate the peak cross-section (by up to 75%) and predicts an emission spectrum that is erroneously depressed in the S band (below ∼1530 nm) and inflated in the C and L bands. Error levels are substantial and yield unacceptably large errors when modeling Er-doped fiber devices. We provide analytic evidence that this failure is rooted in part in the approximations inherent to the procedure, and in part in a fundamental limitation of the underlying McCumber relation. Specifically, when applied to broad optical transitions, the McCumber relation yields poor predictions of the emission cross-section spectral shape, the error worsening in the L and S bands, with increasing homogeneous broadening, and with increasing bandwidth. The McCumber relation should be avoided for broad laser transitions, which includes most rare-earth transitions in many amorphous hosts.
Keywords :
Stark effect; erbium; fibre lasers; impurity absorption spectra; laser transitions; optical fibre amplifiers; oscillator strengths; photoluminescence; spectral line broadening; 1.5 micron; 1530 nm; C band; Er-doped fiber absorption spectra; Er-doped fiber lasers; Er-doped glass fibers; L band; McCumber relation limitations; S band; Stark sublevels; absorption spectrum; amorphous-host lasers; broad laser transitions; broad optical transitions; emission cross-section spectral shape; emission cross-section spectrum; error levels; homogeneous broadening; oscillator strengths; peak cross-section; rare-earth transitions; Absorption; Bandwidth; Failure analysis; Fiber lasers; Glass; Laser transitions; Optical fiber devices; Silicon compounds; Spectral shape; Stimulated emission;
Journal_Title :
Quantum Electronics, IEEE Journal of
DOI :
10.1109/JQE.2002.805111