Network


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

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where John Ballato is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by John Ballato.


Optics Express | 2008

Silicon optical fiber

John Ballato; Thomas Hawkins; Paul Foy; R. Stolen; B. Kokuoz; M. Ellison; Colin D. McMillen; Jason Reppert; Apparao M. Rao; Murray S. Daw; S. R. Sharma; R. Shori; O. Stafsudd; R. Rice; D. R. Powers

Described herein are initial experimental details and properties of a silicon core, silica glass-clad optical fiber fabricated using conventional optical fiber draw methods. Such semiconductor core fibers have potential to greatly influence the fields of nonlinear fiber optics, infrared and THz power delivery. More specifically, x-ray diffraction and Raman spectroscopy showed the core to be highly crystalline silicon. The measured propagation losses were 4.3 dB/m at 2.936 microm, which likely are caused by either microcracks in the core arising from the large thermal expansion mismatch with the cladding or to SiO(2) precipitates formed from oxygen dissolved in the silicon melt. Suggestions for enhancing the performance of these semiconductor core fibers are provided. Here we show that lengths of an optical fiber containing a highly crystalline semiconducting core can be produced using scalable fiber fabrication techniques.


Optics Express | 2009

Glass-clad single-crystal germanium optical fiber.

John Ballato; Thomas Hawkins; Paul Foy; B. Yazgan-Kokuoz; R. Stolen; Colin D. McMillen; Nick K. Hon; Bahram Jalali; R. Rice

Long lengths (250 meters) of a flexible 150 microm diameter glass-clad optical fiber containing a 15 microm diameter crystalline and phase-pure germanium core was fabricated using conventional optical fiber draw techniques. X-ray diffraction and spontaneous Raman scattering measurements showed the core to be very highly crystalline germanium with no observed secondary phases. Elemental analysis confirmed a very well-defined core-clad interface with a step-profile in composition and nominally 4 weight-percent oxygen having diffused into the germanium core from the glass cladding. For this proof-of-concept fiber, polycrystalline n-type germanium of unknown dopant concentration was used. The measured infrared transparency of the starting material was poor and, as a likely outcome, the attenuation of the resultant fiber was too high to be measured. However, the larger Raman cross-section, infrared and terahertz transparency of germanium over silicon should make these fibers of significant value for fiber-based mid- to long-wave infrared and terahertz waveguides and Raman-shifted infrared light sources once high-purity, high-resistivity germanium is employed.


Optics Express | 2010

Binary III-V semiconductor core optical fiber

John Ballato; Thomas Hawkins; Paul Foy; Colin D. McMillen; Laura Burka; Jason Reppert; Ramakrishna Podila; Apparao M. Rao; R. Rice

For the first time to the best of our knowledge a glass-clad optical fiber comprising a crystalline binary III-V semiconductor core has been fabricated. More specifically, a phosphate glass-clad fiber containing an indium antimonide (InSb) core was drawn using a molten core approach. The core was found to be highly crystalline with some oxygen and phosphorus diffusing in from the cladding glass. While optical transmission measurements were unable to be made, most likely due to free carrier absorption associated with the conductivity of the core, this work constitutes a proof-of-concept that optical fibers comprising semiconductor cores of higher crystallographic complexity than previously realized can be drawn using conventional fiber fabrication techniques. Such binary semiconductors may open the door to future fiber-based nonlinear devices.


Optical Materials Express | 2011

Reactive molten core fabrication of silicon optical fiber

Stephanie Morris; Thomas Hawkins; Paul Foy; Colin D. McMillen; Jiahua Fan; Lin Zhu; R. Stolen; R. Rice; John Ballato

Silicon optical fibers fabricated using the molten core method possess high concentrations of oxygen in the core [Opt. Express 16, 18675 (2008)] due to dissolution of the cladding glass by the core melt. The presence of oxygen in the core can influence scattering, hence propagation losses, as well as limit the performance of the fiber. Accordingly, it is necessary to achieve oxygen-free silicon optical fibers prior to further optimization. In this work, silicon carbide (SiC) is added to the silicon (Si) core to provide an in situ reactive getter of oxygen during the draw process. Scanning electron microscopy (SEM), energy dispersive x-ray spectroscopy (EDX), and powder x-ray diffraction (P-XRD) are used to verify that the glass-clad silicon optical fibers possess very low oxygen concentrations and that the SiC is consumed fully during the reactive molten core fabrication. Optical measurements indicated a reduction in light scattering out of the silicon core as expected. However, the measured attenuation of about 10 dB/cm, which is consistent with existing low-oxygen-content silicon fibers, implies that scattering might not be the dominant source of loss in these molten core-derived silicon fibers. More generally, this work shows that the high temperature processing of optical fibers can be an asset to drive chemical reactions rather than be limited by them.


Optical Materials Express | 2012

Transverse Anderson localization in a disordered glass optical fiber

Salman Karbasi; Thomas Hawkins; John Ballato; Karl W. Koch; Arash Mafi

We report the first observation of transverse Anderson localization in a glass optical fiber. The strong localization happens near the outer boundary of the fiber and no trace of localization is observed in the central regions. However, these observations complement previous reports that the boundary of a disordered medium has a de-localizing effect. Our observations can be explained by considering the non-uniform distribution of disorder in the fiber, where the substantially larger disorder near the outer boundary of the fiber offsets the de-localizing effect of the boundary.


Optics Letters | 2012

Germanium microsphere high-Q resonator

Pengfei Wang; Timothy Lee; Ming Ding; Anirban Dhar; Thomas Hawkins; Paul Foy; Yuliya Semenova; Qiang Wu; J.K. Sahu; Gerald Farrell; John Ballato; Gilberto Brambilla

In this Letter, the fabrication and characterization of a microsphere resonator from the semiconductor germanium is demonstrated. Whispering gallery modes are excited in a 46 μm diameter germanium microsphere resonator using evanescent coupling from a tapered silica optical fiber with a waist diameter of 2 μm. Resonances with Q factors as high as 3.8×10(4) at wavelengths near 2 μm are observed. Because of their ultrahigh optical nonlinearities and extremely broad transparency window, germanium microsphere resonators offer the potential for optical processing devices, in particular at long wavelengths, such as around 2 μm.


Scientific Reports | 2015

Silicon-core glass fibres as microwire radial-junction solar cells.

Fredrik A Martinsen; Benjamin Smeltzer; Magnus Nord; Thomas A. Hawkins; John Ballato; Ursula J. Gibson

Vertically aligned radial-junction solar cell designs offer potential improvements over planar geometries, as carrier generation occurs close to the junction for all absorption depths, but most production methods still require a single crystal substrate. Here, we report on the fabrication of such solar cells from polycrystalline, low purity (99.98%) p-type silicon starting material, formed into silicon core, silica sheath fibres using bulk glass draw techniques. Short segments were cut from the fibres, and the silica was etched from one side, which exposed the core and formed a conical cavity around it. We then used vapour deposition techniques to create p-i-n junction solar cells. Prototype cells formed from single fibres have shown conversion efficiencies up to 3.6%, despite the low purity of the starting material. This fabrication method has the potential to reduce the energy cost and the silicon volume required for solar cell production. Simulations were performed to investigate the potential of the conical cavity around the silicon core for light collection. Absorption of over 90% of the incident light was predicted, over a wide range of wavelengths, using these structures in combination with a 10% volume fraction of silicon.


Journal of Applied Physics | 2011

Annealing of silicon optical fibers

N. Gupta; Colin D. McMillen; R. Singh; Ramakrishna Podila; Apparao M. Rao; Thomas Hawkins; Paul Foy; Stephanie Morris; R. Rice; Kelvin F. Poole; Lin Zhu; John Ballato

The recent realization of silicon core optical fibers has the potential for novel low insertion loss rack-to-rack optical interconnects and a number of other uses in sensing and biomedical applications. To the best of our knowledge, incoherent light source based rapid photothermal processing (RPP) was used for the first time to anneal glass-clad silicon core optical fibers. X-ray diffraction examination of the silicon core showed a considerable enhancement in the length and amount of single crystallinity post-annealing. Further, shifts in the Raman frequency of the silicon in the optical fiber core that were present in the as-drawn fibers were removed following the RPP treatment. Such results indicate that the RPP treatment increases the local crystallinity and therefore assists in the reduction of the local stresses in the core, leading to more homogenous fibers. The dark current-voltage characteristics of annealed silicon optical fiber diodes showed lower leakage current than the diodes based on as-draw...


Optics Express | 2015

Light trapping in horizontally aligned silicon microwire solar cells.

Fredrik A Martinsen; Benjamin Smeltzer; John Ballato; Thomas Hawkins; Max Jones; Ursula J. Gibson

In this study, we demonstrate a solar cell design based on horizontally aligned microwires fabricated from 99.98% pure silicon via the molten core fiber drawing method. A similar structure consisting of 50 μm diameter close packed wires (≈ 0.97 packing density) on a Lambertian white back-reflector showed 86 % absorption for incident light of wavelengths up to 850 nm. An array with a packing fraction of 0.35 showed an absorption of 58 % over the same range, demonstrating the potential for effective light trapping. Prototype solar cells were fabricated to demonstrate the concept. Horizontal wire cells offer several advantages as they can be flexible, and partially transparent, and absorb light efficiently over a wide range of incident angles.


Optics & Photonics News | 2012

Sapphire-Derived All-Glass Optical Fibers

Peter D. Dragic; Thomas Hawkins; Paul Foy; Stephanie Morris; John Ballato

If we could eliminate the phenomenon of stimulated Brillouin scattering (SBS), we could create pulsed laser sources for spectroscopic and coherent lidar applications, as well as multi-kW narrow-linewidth fiber laser sources for coherently phased laser arrays. With that in mind, we used a novel fiber fabrication method known as the moltencore method to realize a new class of optical fibers: all-glass optical fibers free from the effects of SBS.

Collaboration


Dive into the John Ballato'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

Ursula J. Gibson

Norwegian University of Science and Technology

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge