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Dive into the research topics where Alexandre Dupuis is active.

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Featured researches published by Alexandre Dupuis.


Optics Express | 2008

Porous polymer fibers for low-loss Terahertz guiding.

Alireza Hassani; Alexandre Dupuis; Maksim Skorobogatiy

We propose two designs of effectively single mode porous polymer fibers for low-loss guiding of terahertz radiation. First, we present a fiber of several wavelengths in diameter containing an array of sub-wavelength holes separated by sub-wavelength material veins. Second, we detail a large diameter hollow core photonic bandgap Bragg fiber made of solid film layers suspended in air by a network of circular bridges. Numerical simulations of radiation, absorption and bending losses are presented; strategies for the experimental realization of both fibers are suggested. Emphasis is put on the optimization of the fiber geometries to increase the fraction of power guided in the air inside of the fiber, thereby alleviating the effects of material absorption and interaction with the environment. Total fiber loss of less than 10 dB/m, bending radii as tight as 3 cm, and fiber bandwidth of approximately 1 THz is predicted for the porous fibers with sub-wavelength holes. Performance of this fiber type is also compared to that of the equivalent sub-wavelength rod-in-the-air fiber with a conclusion that suggested porous fibers outperform considerably the rod-in-the-air fiber designs. For the porous Bragg fibers total loss of less than 5 dB/m, bending radii as tight as 12 cm, and fiber bandwidth of approximately 0.1 THz are predicted. oupling to the surface states of a multilayer reflector facilitated by the material bridges is determined as primary mechanism responsible for the reduction of the bandwidth of a porous Bragg fiber. In all the simulations, polymer fiber material is assumed to be Teflon with bulk absorption loss of 130 dB/m.


Applied Physics Letters | 2007

Ferroelectric all-polymer hollow bragg fibers for terahertz guidance

Maksim Skorobogatiy; Alexandre Dupuis

A method for fabricating a terahertz waveguide comprises forming a multilayer reflector formed of alternating layers of first and second polymer materials with distinct refractive indices, and defining with the multilayer reflector a hollow core through which terahertz radiation propagates. The corresponding terahertz waveguide comprises the multilayer reflector formed of the alternating layers of the first and second polymer materials with distinct refractive indices, and a hollow core defined by the multilayer reflector and through which terahertz radiation propagates.


Applied Physics Letters | 2008

Low loss porous terahertz fibers containing multiple subwavelength holes

Alireza Hassani; Alexandre Dupuis; Maksim Skorobogatiy

We propose a porous polymer terahertz fiber with a core composed of a hexagonal array of subwavelength air holes. Numerical simulations show that the larger part of guided power propagates inside the air holes within the fiber core, resulting in suppression of the bulk absorption losses of the core material by a factor of ∼10–20. Confinement of terahertz power in the subwavelength holes greatly reduces effective refractive index of the guided mode but not as much as to considerably increase modal radiation losses due to bending. As a result, tight bends of several centimeter bending radii can be tolerated.


Optics Express | 2009

Fabrication and THz loss measurements of porous subwavelength fibers using a directional coupler method

Alexandre Dupuis; Jean-François Allard; D. Morris; Karen Stoeffler; Charles Dubois; Maksim Skorobogatiy

We report several strategies for the fabrication of porous subwavelength fibers using low density Polyethylene plastic for low-loss terahertz light transmission applications. We also characterize transmission losses of the fabricated fibers in terahertz using a novel non-destructive directional coupler method. Within this method a second fiber is translated along the length of the test fiber to probe the power attenuation of a guided mode. The method is especially suitable for measuring transmission losses through short fiber segments, a situation in which standard cutback method is especially difficult to perform. We demonstrate experimentally that introduction of porosity into a subwavelength rod fiber, further reduces its transmission loss by as much as a factor of 10. The lowest fiber loss measured in this work is 0.01 cm(-1) and it is exhibited by the 40% porous subwavelength fiber of diameter 380 microm. For comparison, the loss of a rod-in-the-air subwavelength fiber of a similar diameter was measured to be approximately 0.1 cm(-1), while the bulk loss of a PE plastic used in the fabrication of such fibers is >or= 1 cm(-1). Finally, we present theoretical studies of the optical properties of individual subwavelength fibers and a directional coupler. From these studies we conclude that coupler setup studied in this paper also acts as a low pass filter with a cutoff frequency around 0.3 THz. Considering that the spectrum of a terahertz source used in this work falls off rapidly below 0.25 THz, the reported loss measurements are, thus, the bolometer averages over the approximately 0.25 THz-0.3 THz region.


Optics Express | 2011

Polymer microstructured optical fibers for terahertz wave guiding

Bora Ung; Anna Mazhorova; Alexandre Dupuis; Mathieu Rozé; Maksim Skorobogatiy

We outline the most recent technological advancements in the design, fabrication and characterization of polymer microstructured optical fibers (MOFs) for applications in the terahertz waveband. Focusing on specific experimental demonstrations, we show that polymer optical fibers provide a very flexible route towards THz wave guiding. Crucial incentives include the large variety of the low-cost and relatively low absorption loss polymers, the facile fiber preform fabrication by molding, drilling, stacking and extrusion, and finally, the simple fabrication through fiber drawing at low forming temperatures.


Optics Letters | 2007

Prospective for biodegradable microstructured optical fibers.

Alexandre Dupuis; Ning Guo; Yan Gao; Nicolas Godbout; Suzanne Lacroix; Charles Dubois; Maksim Skorobogatiy

We report fabrication of a novel microstructured optical fiber made of biodegradable and water soluble materials that features approximately 1 dB/cm transmission loss. Two cellulose butyrate tubes separated with hydroxypropyl cellulose powder were codrawn into a porous double-core fiber offering integration of optical, microfluidic, and potentially drug release functionalities.


Optics Express | 2006

Drawing of the hollow all-polymer Bragg fibers

Elio Pone; Charles Dubois; Ning Gu; Yan Gao; Alexandre Dupuis; Francis Boismenu; Suzanne Lacroix; Maksim Skorobogatiy

Drawing of the hollow all-polymer Bragg fibers based on PMMA/PS and PVDF/PC materials combinations are demonstrated. Hole collapse during drawing effects the uniformity of a photonic crystal reflector in the resultant fiber. We first investigate how the core collapse effects fiber transmission properties. We then present modelling of fluid dynamics of hollow multilayer polymer fiber drawing. Particularly, hole collapse during drawing and layer thickness non-uniformity are investigated as a function of draw temperature, draw ratio, feeding speed, core pressurization and mismatch of material properties in a multilayer. Both the newtonian and non-newtonian cases are considered assuming slender geometries.


Optics Express | 2010

Spectral characterization of porous dielectric subwavelength THz fibers fabricated using a microstructured molding technique

Alexandre Dupuis; Anna Mazhorova; Frédéric Désévédavy; Mathieu Rozé; Maksim Skorobogatiy

We report two novel fabrication techniques, as well as THz spectral transmission and propagation loss measurements of subwavelength plastic wires with highly porous (up to 86%) and non-porous transverse geometries. The two fabrication techniques we describe are based on the microstructured molding approach. In one technique the mold is made completely from silica by stacking and fusing silica capillaries to the bottom of a silica ampoule. The melted material is then poured into the silica mold to cast the microstructured preform. Another approach uses a microstructured mold made of a sacrificial plastic which is co-drawn with a cast preform. Material from the sacrificial mold is then dissolved after fi ber drawing. We also describe a novel THz-TDS setup with an easily adjustable optical path length, designed to perform cutback measurements using THz fibers of up to 50 cm in length. We fi nd that while both porous and non-porous subwavelength fibers of the same outside diameter have low propagation losses (alpha <or= 0.02 cm(-1)), the porous fi bers exhibit a much wider spectral transmission window and enable transmission at higher frequencies compared to the non-porous fibers. We then show that the typical bell-shaped transmission spectra of the subwavelengths fibers can be very well explained by the onset of material absorption loss at higher frequencies, due to strong confinement of the modal fields in the material region of the fi ber, as well as strong coupling loss at lower frequencies, due to mismatch between the modal field diameter and the size of the gaussian-like beam of a THz source.


Optics Express | 2010

Composite THz materials using aligned metallic and semiconductor microwires, experiments and interpretation

Anna Mazhorova; Jian Feng Gu; Alexandre Dupuis; Marco Peccianti; Ozaki Tsuneyuki; Roberto Morandotti; Hiroaki Minamide; Ming Tang; Yuye Wang; Hiromasa Ito; Maksim Skorobogatiy

We report fabrication method and THz characterization of composite films containing either aligned metallic (tin alloy) microwires or chalcogenide As2Se3 microwires. The microwire arrays are made by stack-and-draw fiber fabrication technique using multi-step co-drawing of low-melting-temperature metals or semiconductor glasses together with polymers. Fibers are then stacked together and pressed into composite films. Transmission through metamaterial films is studied in the whole THz range (0.1-20 THz) using a combination of FTIR and TDS. Metal containing metamaterials are found to have strong polarizing properties, while semiconductor containing materials are polarization independent and could have a designable high refractive index. Using the transfer matrix theory, we show how to retrieve the complex polarization dependent refractive index of the composite films. Finally, we study challenges in the fabrication of metamaterials with sub-micrometer metallic wires by repeated stack-and-draw process by comparing samples made using 2, 3 and 4 consecutive drawings. When using metallic alloys we observe phase separation effects and nano-grids formation on small metallic wires.


Optics Letters | 2007

Guiding in the visible with "colorful" solid-core Bragg fibers.

Alexandre Dupuis; Ning Guo; Bertrand Gauvreau; Alireza Hassani; Elio Pone; Francis Boismenu; Maksim Skorobogatiy

We report on the fabrication and characterization of solid-core all-polymer Bragg fibers consisting of a large-diameter polymethyl methylacrylate (PMMA) core surrounded by 50 alternating PMMA/Polystyrene (PS) polymer layers. By modifying the reflector layer thickness we illustrate that bandgap position can be adjusted at will in the visible. Moreover, such fibers are intensely colored in both the transmission and the outside reflection modes. Potential applications of such fibers are discussed.

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Dive into the Alexandre Dupuis's collaboration.

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Maksim Skorobogatiy

École Polytechnique de Montréal

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Ning Guo

École Polytechnique de Montréal

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Alireza Hassani

École Polytechnique de Montréal

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Charles Dubois

École Polytechnique de Montréal

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Elio Pone

École Polytechnique de Montréal

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Suzanne Lacroix

École Polytechnique de Montréal

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Yan Gao

École Polytechnique de Montréal

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Anna Mazhorova

Institut national de la recherche scientifique

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Bertrand Gauvreau

École Polytechnique de Montréal

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Bryan Burgoyne

École Polytechnique de Montréal

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