Due to the high transparency, high Verdet constant, as well as easy processing properties, rare-earth ion-doped glasses have demonstrated great potential in magneto-optical (MO) applications. However, the variation in the valence state of rare-earth ions (Tb 3+ to Tb 4+ ) resulted in the decreased effective concentration of the paramagnetic ions and thus degraded MO performance. Here, a strategy was proposed to inhibit the oxidation of Tb 3+ into Tb 4+ as well as improve the thermal stability by tuning the optical basicity of glass networks. Moreover, the depolymerization of the glass network was modulated to accommodate more Tb ions. Thus, a record high effective concentration (14.19 × 10 21 / cm 3 ) of Tb ions in glass was achieved, generating a high Verdet constant of 113 rad/(T•m) at 650 nm. Lastly, the first application of MO glass for magnetic field sensors was demonstrated, achieving a sensitivity of 0.139 rad/T. We hope our work provides guidance for the fabrication of MO glass with high performance and thermal stability and could push MO glass one step further for magnetic sensing applications.
Evanescent wave absorption-based mid-infrared chalcogenide fiber sensors have prominent advantages in multicomponent liquid and gas detection. In this work, a new approach of tapered-fiber geometry optimization was proposed, and the evanescent efficiency was also theoretically calculated to evaluate sensing performance. The influence of fiber geometry (waist radius (Rw), taper length (Lt), waist deformation) on the mode distribution, light transmittance (T), evanescent proportion (TO) and evanescent efficiency (τ) is discussed. Remarkably, the calculated results show that the evanescent efficiency can be over 10% via optimizing the waist radius and taper length. Generally, a better sensing performance based on tapered fiber can be achieved if the proportion of the LP11-like mode becomes higher or Rw becomes smaller. Furthermore, the radius of the waist boundary (RL) was introduced to analyze the waist deformation. Mode proportion is almost unchanged as the RL increases, while τ is halved. In addition, the larger the micro taper is, the easier the taper process is. Herein, a longer waist can be obtained, resulting in larger sensing area which increases sensitivity greatly.
Infrared gradient refractive index (GRIN) material lenses have attracted much attention due to their continuously varying refractive index as a function of spatial coordinates in the medium. Herein, a glass accumulation thermal diffusion method was used to fabricate a high refractive index GRIN lens. Six Ge17.2As17.2SexTe(65−x) (x = 10.5–16) glasses with good thermal stability and high refractive index (n@10 μm > 3.1) were selected for thermal diffusion. The refractive index span (∆n) of 0.12 was achieved in this GRIN lens. After thermal diffusion, the lens still had good transmittance (45%) in the range of 8–12 μm. Thermal imaging confirmed that this lens can be molded into the designed shape. The refractive index profile was indirectly characterized by the structure and composition changes. The structure and composition variation became linear with the increase in temperature from 260 °C to 270 °C for 12 h, indicating that the refractive index changed linearly along the axis. The GRIN lens with a high refractive index could find applications in infrared optical systems and infrared lenses for thermal imaging.
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