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Dive into the research topics where Mykhaylo Dubov is active.

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Featured researches published by Mykhaylo Dubov.


IEEE Journal of Selected Topics in Quantum Electronics | 2008

Investigation of Ultrafast Laser--Photonic Material Interactions: Challenges for Directly Written Glass Photonics

Martin Ams; Graham D. Marshall; Peter Dekker; Mykhaylo Dubov; Vladimir Mezentsev; Ian Bennion; Michael J. Withford

Currently, direct-write waveguide fabrication is probably the most widely studied application of femtosecond laser micromachining in transparent dielectrics. Devices such as buried waveguides, power splitters, couplers, gratings, and optical amplifiers have all been demonstrated. Waveguide properties depend critically on the sample material properties and writing laser characteristics. In this paper, we discuss the challenges facing researchers using the femtosecond laser direct-write technique with specific emphasis being placed on the suitability of fused silica and phosphate glass as device hosts for different applications.


IEEE Photonics Technology Letters | 2006

Photoinduced Modifications in Fiber Gratings Inscribed Directly by Infrared Femtosecond Irradiation

Amos Martinez; Mykhaylo Dubov; Igor Khrushchev; Ian Bennion

The structure of fiber Bragg gratings inscribed point-by-point by an infrared femtosecond laser is studied by quantitative phase microscopy. Results show that these gratings present a central region with a depressed refractive index surrounded by an outer corona with increased refractive index. The refractive index profile suggests the presence of microvoids embedded in a region of the core


IEEE Photonics Technology Letters | 2010

Line-by-Line Fiber Bragg Grating Made by Femtosecond Laser

Kaiming Zhou; Mykhaylo Dubov; Chengbo Mou; Lin Zhang; Vladimir Mezentsev; Ian Bennion

In this letter, we report on the inscription of a fourth-order fiber Bragg grating made line-by-line in the optical fiber using a femtosecond laser. Strong Bragg resonance (~17 dB) and low insertion loss (~0.5 dB) were obtained with only 2000 periods. Measured refractive index change of these inscribed lines reaches up to 7 × 10-3. The grating was fully characterized and the low insertion loss together with low polarization-dependent loss were realized compared to gratings made by the point-by-point method. The high temperature annealing experiment shows the grating can survive up to at least 800°C.


Journal of Lightwave Technology | 2006

Bending characteristics of fiber long-period gratings with cladding index modified by femtosecond laser

Thomas D.P. Allsop; Mykhaylo Dubov; Amos Martinez; Filip Floreani; Igor Khrushchev; David J. Webb; Ian Bennion

A femtosecond laser has been used to asymmetrically modify the cladding of fiber containing long-period gratings. Following modification, devices in single-mode fiber are shown to be capable of sensing the magnitude and direction of bending in one plane by producing blue and red wavelength shifts depending upon the orientation of the bend. The resulting curvature sensitivities were -1.62 and +3.82 nmmiddotm. Devices have also been produced using an elliptical core fiber to study the effects of the cladding modification on the two polarization eigenstates. A cladding modification applied on the fast axis of the fiber is shown to affect the light in the fast axis much more significantly than the light in the orthogonal state; this behavior may ultimately lead to a sensor capable of detecting the direction of bending in two dimensions for applications in shape sensing


Laser Physics | 2009

Cascaded nonlinear absorption of femtosecond laser pulses in dielectrics

Andrey Okhrimchuk; Vladimir Mezentsev; Holger Schmitz; Mykhaylo Dubov; Ian Bennion

We investigated the energy deposition process leading to the waveguide inscription in transparent dielectrics both experimentally and theoretically. Parameters of multiphoton absorption process and inscription thresholds were measured in a range of materials including YAG, ZnSe, RbPb2Cl5 crystals, and in fused silica and BK7 glasses.


Optics Express | 2007

Sub-critical regime of femtosecond inscription

Sergei K. Turitsyn; Vladimir Mezentsev; Mykhaylo Dubov; Alexander M. Rubenchik; Michail P. Fedoruk; E.V. Podivilov

We apply well known nonlinear diffraction theory governing focusing of a powerful light beam of arbitrary shape in medium with Kerr nonlinearity to the analysis of femtosecond (fs) laser processing of dielectric in sub-critical (input power less than the critical power of self-focusing) regime. Simple analytical expressions are derived for the input beam power and spatial focusing parameter (numerical aperture) that are required for achieving an inscription threshold. Application of non-Gaussian laser beams for better controlled fs inscription at higher powers is also discussed.


Applied Optics | 2010

Inscription and characterization of waveguides written into borosilicate glass by a high-repetition-rate femtosecond laser at 800 nm

Thomas D.P. Allsop; Mykhaylo Dubov; Vladimir Mezentsev; Ian Bennion

A series of waveguides was inscribed in a borosilicate glass (BK7) by an 11 MHz repetition rate femtosecond laser operating with pulse energies from 16 to 30 nJ and focused at various depths within the bulk material. The index modification was measured using a quantitative phase microscopy technique that revealed central index changes ranging from 5 x 10(-3) to 10(-2), leading to waveguides that exhibited propagation losses of 0.2 dB/cm at a wavelength of 633 nm and 0.6 dB/cm at a wavelength of 1550 nm with efficient mode matching, less than 0.2 dB, to standard optical fibers. Analysis of the experimental data shows that, for a given inscription energy, the index modification has a strong dependence on inscription scanning velocity. At higher energies, the index modification increases with increasing inscription scanning velocity with other fabrication parameters constant.


Journal of Optics | 2008

Point-by-point inscription of 250 nm period structure in bulk fused silica by tightly focused femtosecond UV pulses

Mykhaylo Dubov; Ian Bennion; David N. Nikogosyan; Padraig Bolger; Anatoly V. Zayats

By conducting point-by-point inscription in a continuously moving slab of pure fused silica at the optimal depth (170 μm depth below the surface), we have fabricated a 250 nm period nanostructure with 30 nJ, 300 fs, 1 kHz pulses from a frequency-tripled Ti:sapphire laser. This is the smallest value for the inscribed period yet reported, and has been achieved with radical improvement in the quality of the inscribed nanostructures in comparison with previous reports.


Optics Express | 2015

On the use of the type I and II scheme for classifying ultrafast laser direct-write photonics

Simon Gross; Mykhaylo Dubov; Michael J. Withford

The use of the Type I and Type II scheme, first introduced and used by fiber Bragg grating researchers, has recently been adopted by the ultrafast laser direct-write photonics community to classify the physical geometry of waveguides written into glasses and crystals. This has created confusion between the fiber Bragg grating and direct-write photonics community. Here we propose a return to the original basis of the classification based on the characteristics of the material modification rather than the physical geometry of the waveguide.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2007

Femtosecond laser microfabrication of subwavelength structures in photonics

Vladimir Mezentsev; Jovana Petrović; Mykhaylo Dubov; Ian Bennion; Jürgen Dreher; Holger Schmitz; Rainer Grauer

This paper describes experimental and numerical results of the plasma-assisted microfabrication of subwavelength structures by means of point-by point femtosecond laser inscription. It is shown that the spatio-temporal evolution of light and plasma patterns critically depend on input power. Subwavelength inscription corresponds to the supercritical propagation regimes when pulse power is several times self-focusing threshold. Experimental and numerical profiles show quantitative agreement.

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