Fiber Property Characterization based on Electrostriction
Shannon Blunt
Shima Fardad
Electrostriction in an optical fiber is introduced by the interaction between the forward propagated optical signal and the acoustic standing waves in the radial direction resonating between the center of the core and the cladding circumference of the fiber. The response of electrostriction is dependent on fiber parameters, especially the mode field radius. A novel technique is demonstrated to characterize fiber properties by means of measuring their electrostriction response under intensity modulation. As the spectral envelope of electrostriction-induced propagation loss is anti-symmetrical, the signal-to-noise ratio can be significantly increased by subtracting the measured spectrum from its complex conjugate. It is shown that if the transversal field distribution of the fiber propagation mode is Gaussian, the envelope of the electrostriction-induced loss spectrum closely follows a Maxwellian distribution whose shape can be specified by a single parameter determined by the mode field radius.