Post-melting encapsulation of glass microwires for multipath light waveguiding within phosphate glasses
I. Konidakis, F. Dragosli, A. Cheruvathoor Poulose, J. Ka\v{s}l\'ik,, A. Bakandristos, R. Zboril, E. Stratakis

TL;DR
This paper introduces a simple, low-temperature post-melting method to encapsulate glass microwires within phosphate glasses, enabling multipath light waveguiding for advanced photonic applications.
Contribution
It presents a novel, low-cost encapsulation process for glass waveguides that does not require complex fabrication techniques or ultrafast lasers.
Findings
Waveguides support multipath light transmission.
Silver nanoparticles enhance light transmission.
Multiple microwires enable complex photonic circuits.
Abstract
Glass waveguides remain the fundamental component of advanced photonic circuits and with a significant role in other applications such as quantum information processing, light generation, imaging, data storage, and sensing platforms. Up to date, the fabrication of glass waveguides relies mainly on demanding chemical processes or on the employment of expensive ultrafast laser equipment. In this work, we demonstrate the feasibility of a simple, low-temperature, post-melting encapsulation procedure for the development of advanced glass waveguides. Namely, silver iodide phosphate glass microwires (MWs) are drawn from typical splat-quenched samples. Following this, the MWs are incorporated in a controlled manner within previously prepared transparent silver phosphate glass rectangular prisms. The composition of the employed glasses is chosen so that the host phosphate glass has a lower…
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Taxonomy
TopicsLaser Material Processing Techniques · Glass properties and applications · Photonic Crystals and Applications
