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August 1, 2013

Novel hollow-core optical fiber to enable high-power military sensors

Hollow-core fiber assembly. Credit: OFS
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Hollow-core fiber assembly. Credit: OFS

The intensity of light that propagates through glass optical fiber is fundamentally limited by the glass itself. A novel fiber design using a hollow, air-filled core removes this limitation and dramatically improves performance by forcing light to travel through channels of air, instead of the glass around it. DARPA's unique spider-web-like, hollow-core fiber, design is the first to demonstrate single-spatial-mode, low-loss and polarization control—key properties needed for advanced military applications such as high-precision fiber optic gyroscopes for inertial navigation.

Although hollow-core fiber has been available from overseas suppliers for years, DARPA's ongoing program has brought design and production capacity inside the United States and developed it to a level that exceeds the state of the art.

A team of DARPA-funded researchers led by Honeywell International Inc. developed the technology. The hollow-core fiber is the first to include three critical performance-enabling properties:

Provided by DARPA

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