Paper
9 July 1986 The Effect Of Facets On The Stability Of DFB Lasers
R. G. Plumb, C. J. Armistead, A. J. Collar, B. R. Butler, P. A. Kirkby
Author Affiliations +
Proceedings Volume 0587, Fiber Optic Sources and Detectors; (1986) https://doi.org/10.1117/12.951196
Event: 1985 International Technical Symposium/Europe, 1985, Cannes, France
Abstract
Optical communications systems increasingly need to make use of single longitudinal mode (SLM) lasers so that fibre dispersion does not degrade system performance. At gigabaud rates over long distances with conventional Fabry Perot lasers dispersion will limit performance even in the low dispersion 1.3 μm windows, or at 1.5 μm with dispersion-shifted fibre. Various single frequency laser structures have been used, but the distributed feedback (DFB) laser and variants of it using internal gratings for feedback have become the most popular SLM devices. It is desirable that an SLM laser should operate stably to high output powers; we show here for the first time that high power DFB operation is limited by asymmetric longitudinal spatial hole burning effects which are critically dependent on facet reflectivity and phase.
© (1986) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
R. G. Plumb, C. J. Armistead, A. J. Collar, B. R. Butler, and P. A. Kirkby "The Effect Of Facets On The Stability Of DFB Lasers", Proc. SPIE 0587, Fiber Optic Sources and Detectors, (9 July 1986); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.951196
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KEYWORDS
Reflectivity

Laser damage threshold

Spatial light modulators

Hole burning spectroscopy

Semiconductor lasers

Telecommunications

Control systems design

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