Abstract

In this study, we propose a new design based on photonic crystal fibers (PCFs) for broadband dispersion compensation in telecommunication networks. The proposed design has a hexagonal structure arrangement of air-holes rings of different diameters between the silica core and the cladding. The PCF properties like effective area, nonlinearity, dispersion slope, confinement loss, and birefringence are reported and discussed. For the best performance we present three designs A, B and C. Simulation results show that the three designs cover the six-telecommunication optical bands O-, E-, S-, C-, L- and U- bands (wavelengths ranging from 1260 to 1675 nm). Design A achieves a large negative dispersion value of about − 1716 ps/(nm.km) with relative dispersion slope equals to that of conventional single-mode optical fibers (SMFs) of about 0.0036 nm−1, which makes it very suitable for long-haul DWDM transmission systems. With a little modification in the core, designs B and C achieve much higher confinement ability and achieve a very large birefringence value for polarization mode dispersion and sensing applications. Design C is engineered to have exact opposite dispersion of SMF with zero dispersion at the wavelength 1310 nm, which makes it a promising design in CWDM transmission system. The numerical values have been investigated using the full vector finite element method.

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