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Dive into the research topics where M. F. Churbanov is active.

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Featured researches published by M. F. Churbanov.


Inorganic Materials | 2009

High-purity chalcogenide glasses for fiber optics

G. E. Snopatin; V.S. Shiryaev; V. G. Plotnichenko; E. M. Dianov; M. F. Churbanov

The data on the present degree of purity of chalcogenide glasses for fiber optics, on their methods of production and on the properties, which are essential for their actual application, are generalized. The content of limiting impurities in the best samples of chalcogenide glasses is 10–100 ppb wt.; of heterophase inclusions with size of about 100 nm is less than 103 cm−3. On the basis of chalcogenide glasses the multimode and single mode optical fibers are produced with technical and operation characteristics sufficient for a number of actual applications. The minimum optical losses of 12–14 dB/km at 3–5 µm are attained in the optical fiber from arsenic-sulfide glass. The level of losses in standard chalcogenide optical fibers is 50–300 dB/km in 2–9 µm spectral range. The factors, affecting the optical absorption of glasses and optical fibers, are analyzed, and the main directions in further development of chalcogenide glasses as the materials for fiber optics are considered.


Optics Express | 2011

Demonstration of CO 2 -laser power delivery through chalcogenide-glass fiber with negative-curvature hollow core

Alexey F. Kosolapov; Andrey D. Pryamikov; Alexander S. Biriukov; V.S. Shiryaev; Maxim Astapovich; G. E. Snopatin; V. G. Plotnichenko; M. F. Churbanov; Evgeny M. Dianov

A technologically simple optical fiber cross-section structure with a negative-curvature hollow-core has been proposed for the delivery of the CO2 laser radiation. The structure was optimized numerically and then realized using Te20As30Se50 (TAS) chalcogenide glass. Guidance of the 10.6 µm СО2-laser radiation through this TAS-glass hollow-core fiber has been demonstrated. The loss at λ=10.6 μm was amounted ~11 dB/m. A resonance behavior of the fiber bend loss as a function of the bend radius has been revealed.


Journal of Non-crystalline Solids | 2003

Chalcogenide glasses doped with Tb, Dy and Pr ions

M. F. Churbanov; Igor V. Scripachev; V.S. Shiryaev; V. G. Plotnichenko; S. V. Smetanin; E. B. Kryukova; Yu. N. Pyrkov; B I Galagan

Abstract Optically homogeneous As–Se and As–S–Se glasses doped with the ions of rare-earth elements (REE), i.e. praseodymium, dysprosium and terbium up to 9000 wt. ppm were synthesized. A technique for introduction of REE into chalcogenide glasses (CG) is based on solidification of the melt of glass-forming compounds with the dopants of REE iodide and the time–temperature modes minimizing glass crystallization and dopant clustering. Microhomogeneity and absorption of the produced samples of the doped glasses were studied in the middle IR range. A spectral dependence of absorption by REE ions was investigated and the extinction coefficients were determined for the most intensive absorption bands of the ions of praseodymium, dysprosium and terbium. Luminescence properties of CG doped with Tb3+ were investigated at 4–5 μm. The optical fibers based on arsenic selenide doped with terbium were manufactured with optical losses of 1.5 dB/m at 6–9 μm and a bending strength of 0.6 GPa.


Journal of Non-crystalline Solids | 1995

High-purity chalcogenide glasses as materials for fiber optics

M. F. Churbanov

Abstract Scientific investigations and applied work, carried out in recent years, prove the efficiency of application of chalcogenide glasses as materials for fiber optics in the mid-infrared range. Production of optical fibers with high operational features requires an increase of chemical and phase purity of the glasses and an improvement in the technology of the glasses and optical fibers. This paper considers the effect of impurities of hydrogen, carbon, oxygen and heterophase impurity inclusions on optical losses in chalcogenide optical fibers. The problem of crystallization of chalcogenide glasses is discussed as one of the main technological problems in production of optical fibers for the spectral range 8–12 μm.


Optics Letters | 2005

Raman band intensities of tellurite glasses

V. G. Plotnichenko; V. O. Sokolov; V. V. Koltashev; E. M. Dianov; Igor A. Grishin; M. F. Churbanov

Raman spectra of TeO2-based glasses doped with WO3, ZnO, GeO2, TiO2, MoO3, and Sb2O3 are measured. The intensity of bands in the Raman spectra of MoO3-TeO2 and MoO3-WO3-TeO2 glasses is shown to be 80-95 times higher than that for silica glass. It is shown that these glasses can be considered as one of the most promising materials for Raman fiber amplifiers.


Optical Materials Express | 2015

Low loss Ge-As-Se chalcogenide glass fiber, fabricated using extruded preform, for mid-infrared photonics

Zhuoqi Tang; V.S. Shiryaev; David Furniss; Lukasz Sojka; S. Sujecki; Trevor M. Benson; Angela B. Seddon; M. F. Churbanov

Chalcogenide glass fibers have attractive properties (e.g. wide transparent window, high optical non-linearity) and numerous potential applications in the mid-infrared (MIR) region. Low optical loss is desired and important in the development of these fibers. Ge-As-Se glass has a large glass-forming range to provide versatility of choice from continuously varying physical properties. Recently, broadband MIR supercontinuum generation has been achieved in chalcogenide fibers by using Ge-As-Se glass in the core/clad. structure. In the shaping of chalcogenide glass optical fiber preforms, extrusion is a useful technique. This work reports glass properties (viscosity-temperature curve and glass transition) and optical losses of Ge-As-Se fiber fabricated from an extruded preform. A robust cut-back method of fiber loss measurement is developed and the corresponding error calculation discussed. MIR light is propagated through 52 meters of a fiber, which has the lowest loss yet reported for Ge-As-Se fiber of 83 ± 2 dB/km at 6.60 μm wavelength. The fiber baseline loss is 83-90 dB/km across 5.6-6.8 μm, a Se-H impurity absorption band of 1.4 dB/m at 4.5 μm wavelength is superposed and other impurity bands (e.g. O-H, As-O, Ge-O) are ≤ 20 dB/km. Optical losses of fiber fabricated from different positions of the extruded preform are investigated.


Journal of Non-crystalline Solids | 2001

Optical fibers based on As–S–Se glass system

M. F. Churbanov; V.S. Shiryaev; Igor V. Scripachev; G. E. Snopatin; V. V. Gerasimenko; S.V Smetanin; I.E Fadin; V. G. Plotnichenko

The core-clad optical fibers with polymer coating based on As-S-Se glass have been manufactured with the aim of measuring their optical and strength parameters for potential use in the middle infrared. The glass compositions, As 40 S 30 Se 30 and As 40 S 33 Se 27 , were chosen as a core and a clad, respectively. To prepare sulfoselenide glasses and fibers we used two main variants, i.e., the direct melting of initial elements and using arsenic monosulfide as an arsenic-containing component. The core-clad-optical fibers were drawn by the double-crucible method with the ratio of core/ cladding diameters (in μm) 300/400, 200/400 and 100/400. The minimum loss measured by the two-point method was equal to 0.7 dB m 1 at 5.5 μm. It is the best result on As-S-Se core-clad fibers with comparable content of sulfur and selenium. The numerical aperture (NA), found as the sine of half of the angle of the power spatial distribution in the far zone, has also been measured in 2 fibers and is 0.35 and 0.2. The average mechanical bending strength was equal to 0.8 GPa.


Inorganic Materials | 2007

High-Purity As-S-Se and As-Se-Te Glasses and Optical Fibers

M. F. Churbanov; V.S. Shiryaev; A. I. Suchkov; A. A. Pushkin; V. V. Gerasimenko; R. M. Shaposhnikov; E. M. Dianov; V. G. Plotnichenko; V. V. Koltashev; Yu. N. Pyrkov; Jacques Lucas; Jean-Luc Adam

We describe a procedure for the preparation of As-S-Se and As-Se-Te glasses with low contents of gas-forming impurities (hydrogen, oxygen, and carbon) via melting of extrapure-grade elements in an evacuated silica ampule and purification of the melt by chemical distillation. The impurity concentrations in the glasses thus prepared have been reduced to the following levels: hydrogen, <0.02; oxygen, 0.2; carbon, <0.02; silicon, <0.4 ppm by weight. Using the double-crucible method, we have fabricated glass fibers with various ratios of the core and cladding diameters (1: 25 to 9: 10), protected with a tetrafluoroethylene/1,1-difluoroethylene copolymer coating, which have an average bending strength of 0.5–1 GPa. The minimal optical losses are 150 dB/km at 6.6 μm in multimode As-Se-Te glass fibers and 60 dB/km at 4.8 μm in As-S-Se glass fibers. The effect of microinhomogeneities in the melt on the optical performance of arsenic sulfoselenide glass fibers fabricated by the double-crucible method is examined.


Inorganic Materials | 2003

Single-mode As-S glass fibers

E. M. Dianov; V. G. Plotnichenko; Yu. N. Pyrkov; I. V. Smol'nikov; S. A. Koleskin; G. G. Devyatykh; M. F. Churbanov; G. E. Snopatin; I. V. Skripachev; R. M. Shaposhnikov

Single-mode As–S glass fibers with a core diameter from 3 to 20 μm and a clad diameter of 125 μm are prepared by the double-crucible method. The cutoff wavelength of the fibers is 0.9–6 μm. The lowest transmission losses in the fibers at 2.2–2.3 μm are ∼100 dB/km, and their mean bending strength is 800–1000 MPa.


Journal of Non-crystalline Solids | 1999

Recent developments in As-S glass fibres

G.G. Devyatykh; M. F. Churbanov; Igor V. Scripachev; G. E. Snopatin; E. M. Dianov; V. G. Plotnichenko

Abstract Recent developments in As–S glass fibres showed that increase in degree of purity of As–S glasses allowed optical fibres to be fabricated with minimum optical losses of multimode optical fibres 23–45 dB/km at 2.2–2.7 μm, 50–70 dB/km at 3.2–3.6 μm, 200–300 dB/km at 4.1–4.7 μm and 300–500 dB/km at 5.0–5.5 μm. The bending strength of optical fibres with diameter of 400 μm increased from ∼0.5 to >1.2 GPa. Core and clad glass compositions were As40S60 and As38S62, respectively.

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V. G. Plotnichenko

Russian Academy of Sciences

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G. E. Snopatin

Russian Academy of Sciences

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V.S. Shiryaev

Russian Academy of Sciences

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G. G. Devyatykh

Russian Academy of Sciences

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Evgenii M Dianov

Russian Academy of Sciences

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I. V. Skripachev

Russian Academy of Sciences

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E. M. Dianov

Russian Academy of Sciences

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A. I. Suchkov

Russian Academy of Sciences

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A.P. Velmuzhov

Russian Academy of Sciences

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M.V. Sukhanov

Russian Academy of Sciences

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