Hollow-core fibers with reduced surface roughness and ultralow loss in the short-wavelength range
Jonas H. Os\'orio, Foued Amrani, Fr\'ed\'eric Delahaye, Ali Dhaybi,, Kostiantyn Vasko, Fabio Giovanardi, Damien Vandembroucq, Gilles Tessier, Luca, Vincetti, Beno\^it Debord, Fr\'ed\'eric G\'er\^ome, Fetah Benabid

TL;DR
This paper introduces a novel fabrication method for hollow-core fibers that significantly reduces surface roughness, leading to ultralow optical losses in the short-wavelength spectrum, surpassing previous fiber performance.
Contribution
The study develops a new fabrication technique applying counter directional gas fluxes to minimize core surface roughness in hollow-core fibers, achieving record low losses at short wavelengths.
Findings
Surface roughness reduced from 0.40 nm to 0.15 nm.
Achieved ultralow loss values as low as 50 dB/km at 290 nm.
Potential for loss reduction orders of magnitude compared to silica-core fibers.
Abstract
While optical fibers display excellent performances in the infrared, visible and ultraviolet ranges remain poorly addressed by them. Obtaining better fibers for the short-wavelength range has been restricted, in all fiber optics, by scattering processes. In hollow-core fibers, the scattering loss arises from the core roughness and represents the limiting factor in reducing their loss regardless of the fiber cladding confinement power. To attain fibers performing at short wavelengths, it is paramount developing means to minimize the height variations on the fiber microstructure boundaries. Here, we report on the reduction of the core surface roughness of hollow-core fibers by modifying their fabrication technique. In the novel process proposed herein, counter directional gas fluxes are applied within the fiber holes during fabrication to attain an increased shear rate on its…
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