We investigate the fluorescence characteristics of bismuth doped silica fibres with and without A1 co-dopant which are fabricated by means of modified chemical vapour deposition (MCVD) technique, and find that the f...We investigate the fluorescence characteristics of bismuth doped silica fibres with and without A1 co-dopant which are fabricated by means of modified chemical vapour deposition (MCVD) technique, and find that the fluorescences in the red region (centred around 750nm) and in the infrared region (centred around llOOnm) may originate from different emission sites in the fibre. Strong upconversion phenomena are observed in both Al-codoped and non A1 codoped bismuth fibres when the fibres are excited by an acoustic-optic Q-switched Nd:YVO4 laser. Both the aspects indicate that the upper energy level absorption reported in the work of the bismuth doped silica fibre lasers may result from the fluorescence emission sites that are not responsible for the infrared emission. It is thus expected that optimizing the compositions and the fabrication conditions of the fibre and then transferring more fluorescence emission centres are helpful for the infrared emission.展开更多
基金Supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China under Grant No 60577026, the Programme for NCET in University, and the National Basic Research Programme of China (2007CB307003).
文摘We investigate the fluorescence characteristics of bismuth doped silica fibres with and without A1 co-dopant which are fabricated by means of modified chemical vapour deposition (MCVD) technique, and find that the fluorescences in the red region (centred around 750nm) and in the infrared region (centred around llOOnm) may originate from different emission sites in the fibre. Strong upconversion phenomena are observed in both Al-codoped and non A1 codoped bismuth fibres when the fibres are excited by an acoustic-optic Q-switched Nd:YVO4 laser. Both the aspects indicate that the upper energy level absorption reported in the work of the bismuth doped silica fibre lasers may result from the fluorescence emission sites that are not responsible for the infrared emission. It is thus expected that optimizing the compositions and the fabrication conditions of the fibre and then transferring more fluorescence emission centres are helpful for the infrared emission.