Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Fanting Kong is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Fanting Kong.


Optics Express | 2013

Impact of fiber outer boundaries on leaky mode losses in leakage channel fibers.

Guancheng Gu; Fanting Kong; Thomas Hawkins; Paul Foy; Kanxian Wei; Bryce Samson; Liang Dong

In a leakage channel fiber, the desired fundamental mode (FM) has negligible waveguide loss. Higher-order modes (HOM) are designed to have much higher waveguide losses so that they are practically eliminated during propagation. Coherent reflection at the fiber outer boundary can lead to additional confinement especially for highly leaky HOM, leading to lower HOM losses than what are predicted by conventional FEM mode solver considering infinite cladding. In this work, we conducted, for the first time, careful measurements of HOM losses in two leakage channel fibers (LCF) with circular and rounded hexagonal boundary shapes respectively. Impact on HOM losses from coiling, fiber boundary shapes and coating indexes were studied in comparison to simulations. This work, for the first time, demonstrates the limit of the simulation method commonly used in the large-mode-area fiber designs and the need for an improved approach. More importantly, this work also demonstrates that a deviation from circular fiber outer shape may be an effective method to mitigate HOM loss reduction from coherent reflection from fiber outer boundary, even in double-clad fibers, with HOM losses in excess of 20 dB/m measured in the hexagonal LCF with ~50 µm core diameter while keeping FM loss negligible.


Optics Express | 2012

Mode area scaling with all-solid photonic bandgap fibers

Fanting Kong; Kunimasa Saitoh; Devon Mcclane; Thomas Hawkins; Paul Foy; Guancheng Gu; Liang Dong

There are still very strong interests for power scaling in high power fiber lasers for a wide range of applications in medical, industry, defense and science. In many of these lasers, fiber nonlinearities are the main limits to further scaling. Although numerous specific techniques have studied for the suppression of a wide range of nonlinearities, the fundamental solution is to scale mode areas in fibers while maintaining sufficient single mode operation. Here the key problem is that more modes are supported once physical dimensions of waveguides are increased. The key to solve this problem is to look for fiber designs with significant higher order mode suppression. In conventional waveguides, all modes are increasingly guided in the center of the waveguides when waveguide dimensions are increased. It is hard to couple a mode out in order to suppress its propagation, which severely limits their scalability. In an all-solid photonic bandgap fiber, modes are only guided due to anti-resonance of cladding photonic crystal lattice. This provides strongly mode-dependent guidance, leading to very high differential mode losses. In addition, the all-solid nature of the fiber makes it easily spliced to other fibers. In this paper, we will show for the first time that all-solid photonic bandgap fibers with effective mode area of ~920?m2 can be made with excellent higher order mode suppression.


Optics Express | 2014

Ytterbium-doped large-mode-area all-solid photonic bandgap fiber lasers

Guancheng Gu; Fanting Kong; Thomas Hawkins; Joshua Parsons; Maxwell Jones; Christopher Dunn; Monica T. Kalichevsky-Dong; Kunimasa Saitoh; Liang Dong

Single-mode operation in a large-mode-area fiber laser is highly desired for power scaling. We have, for the first time, demonstrated a 50μm-core-diameter Yb-doped all-solid photonic bandgap fiber laser with a mode area over 4 times that of the previous demonstration. 75W output power has been generated with a diffraction-limited beam and an efficiency of 70% relative to the launched pump power. We have also experimentally confirmed that a robust single-mode regime exists near the high frequency edge of the bandgap. These fibers only guide light within the bandgap over a narrow spectral range, which is essential for lasing far from the gain peak and suppression of stimulated Raman scattering. This work demonstrates the strong potential for mode area scaling of in single-mode all-solid photonic bandgap fibers.


Optics Express | 2013

Flat-top mode from a 50 µm-core Yb-doped leakage channel fiber

Fanting Kong; Guancheng Gu; Thomas Hawkins; Joshua Parsons; Maxwell Jones; Christopher Dunn; Monica T. Kalichevsky-Dong; Kanxian Wei; Bryce Samson; Liang Dong

We demonstrate for the first time a flat-top mode from a 50 µm-core Yb-doped leakage channel fiber (LCF). The flat intensity distribution leads to an effective mode area of ~1880 µm(2) in the straight fiber, an over 50% increase comparing to that of regular LCF with the same core diameter. The flat-top mode was achieved by using a uniform Yb-doped silica glass in the core center with an index of ~2 × 10(-4) lower than that of the silica background. The fiber was also tested in a laser configuration, demonstrating an optical-to-optical efficiency of ~77% at 1026 nm with respect to the pump at 975 nm.


Optics Express | 2015

Extending mode areas of single-mode all-solid photonic bandgap fibers

Guancheng Gu; Fanting Kong; Thomas Hawkins; Maxwell Jones; Liang Dong

Mode area scaling of optical fiber is highly desirable for high power fiber laser applications. It is well known that incorporation of additional smaller cores in the cladding can be used to resonantly out-couple higher-order modes from a main core to suppress higher-order-mode propagation in the main core. Using a novel design with multiple coupled smaller cores in the cladding, we have successfully demonstrated a single-mode photonic bandgap fiber with record effective mode area of ~2650µm(2). Detailed numeric studies have been conducted for multiple cladding designs. For the optimal designs, the simulated minimum higher-order-mode losses are well over two orders of magnitudes higher than that of fundamental mode when expressed in dBs. To our knowledge, this is the best higher-order-mode suppression ever found in fibers with this large effective mode areas. We have also experimentally validated one of the designs. M(2)<1.08 across the transmission band was demonstrated.


Optics Express | 2016

Large-mode-area fibers operating near single-mode regime

Fanting Kong; Christopher Dunn; Joshua Parsons; Monica T. Kalichevsky-Dong; Thomas Hawkins; Maxwell Jones; Liang Dong

Lower NA in large-mode-area fibers enables better single-mode operation and larger core diameters. Fiber NA has traditionally been limited to 0.06, mostly due to the control tolerance in the fabrication process. It has been recognized recently that transverse mode instability is a major limit to average power scaling in fiber lasers. One effective method to mitigate this limit is to operate nearer to the single-mode regime. Lower fiber NA is critical in this since it allows relatively larger core diameters which is the key to mitigate the limits imposed by nonlinear effects. We have developed a fabrication process of ytterbium-doped silica glass which is capable of highly accurate refractive index control and sufficient uniformity for LMA fibers. This process is also capable of large-volume production. It is based on a significant amount of post-processing once the fiber preforms are made. We have demonstrated 30/400 and 40/400 LMA fibers with a NA of ~0.028 operating very close to the single-mode regime. The second-order mode cuts off at ~1.2μm and ~1.55µm respectively. We have also studied issues related to bend losses due to the low NA and further optimization of LMA fibers.


Optics Express | 2015

Highly efficient ytterbium-doped phosphosilicate fiber lasers operating below 1020nm

Guancheng Gu; Zhengyong Liu; Fanting Kong; Hwa-Yaw Tam; Ramesh K. Shori; Liang Dong

Highly-efficient high-power fiber lasers operating at wavelength below 1020 nm are critical for tandem-pumping in >10 kW fiber lasers to provide high pump brightness and low thermal loading. Using an ytterbium-doped-phosphosilicate double-clad leakage-channel fiber with ~50 µm core and ~420 µm cladding, we have achieved ~70% optical-to-optical efficiency at 1018 nm. The much larger cladding than those in previous reports demonstrates the much lower required pump brightness, a key for efficient kW operation. The demonstrated 1018 nm fiber laser has ASE suppression of ~41 dB. This is higher than previous reports and further demonstrates the advantages of the fiber used. Limiting factors to efficiency are also systematically studied.


Optics Letters | 2015

400-W near diffraction-limited single-frequency all-solid photonic bandgap fiber amplifier

Benjamin Pulford; Thomas Ehrenreich; Roger Holten; Fanting Kong; Thomas Hawkins; Liang Dong; Iyad Dajani

An ytterbium-doped large-mode area photonic bandgap fiber is used to demonstrate 400 W of single-frequency output at 1064 nm with excellent beam quality and minimal stimulated Brillouin scattering. The fiber possesses all-solid microstructures embedded in the cladding and a core composed of phosphosilicate with a diameter of ∼50  μm. As the signal power is pushed beyond 450 W, there is degradation in the beam quality due to the modal instability. We briefly discuss techniques to alleviate this problem in future designs. To the best of our knowledge, the 400-W single-frequency near diffraction-limited output far exceeds the current state-of-the-art from such type of fiber amplifier.


Optics Express | 2014

Quantitative mode quality characterization of fibers with extremely large mode areas by matched white-light interferometry.

Fanting Kong; Guancheng Gu; Thomas Hawkins; Joshua Parsons; Maxwell Jones; Christopher Dunn; Monica T. Kalichevsky-Dong; Stephen P. Palese; Eric Cheung; Liang Dong

Quantitative mode characterization of fibers with cores much beyond 50µm is difficult with existing techniques due to the combined effects of smaller intermodal group delays and dispersions. We demonstrate, for the first time, a new method using a matched white-light interferometry (MWI) to cancel fiber dispersion and achieve finer temporal resolution, demonstrating ~20fs temporal resolution in intermodal delays, i.e. 6µm path-length resolution. A 1m-long straight resonantly-enhanced leakage-channel fiber with 100µm core was characterized, showing ~55fs/m relative group delay and a ~29dB mode discrimination between the fundamental and second-order modes.


Optics Express | 2015

Polarizing ytterbium-doped all-solid photonic bandgap fiber with ~1150µm 2 effective mode area

Fanting Kong; Guancheng Gu; Thomas Hawkins; Joshua Parsons; Maxwell Jones; Christopher Dunn; Monica T. Kalichevsky-Dong; Benjamin Pulford; Iyad Dajani; Kunimasa Saitoh; Stephen P. Palese; Eric Cheung; Liang Dong

We demonstrate an Yb-doped polarizing all-solid photonic bandgap fiber for single-polarization and single-mode operation with an effective mode area of ~1150µm(2), a record for all-solid photonic bandgap fibers. The differential polarization mode loss is measured to be >5dB/m over the entire transmission band with a 160nm bandwidth and >15dB/m on the short wavelength edge of the band. A 2.6m long fiber was tested in a laser configuration producing a linearly polarized laser output with a PER value of 21dB without any polarizer, the highest for any fiber lasers based on polarizing fibers.

Collaboration


Dive into the Fanting Kong's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Benjamin Pulford

Air Force Research Laboratory

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Iyad Dajani

Air Force Research Laboratory

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge