Abstract

AbstractIn the field of multimaterial optical fibers, the demand for high‐performance single‐crystal core glass‐clad multimaterial optical fibers is increasing. However, the applications of single‐crystal fibers are restricted by the complex fabrication processes and the slow growth of single‐crystal materials. Here, a two‐step method is demonstrated to achieve single‐crystal tellurium (Te) core fibers with high crystal quality over the length of the fiber. This method starts with the thermal drawing of a fiber preform into polycrystalline Te core multimaterial fibers (precursor fibers) that are long and mechanically stable. A 532‐nm continuous laser is then employed to recrystallize the Te core in the precursor fiber into a single crystal state along the entire length of the fiber. Experimental studies of these single‐crystal fibers demonstrate that the single‐crystal Te core fibers possess high transmittance (>90% at 2–10 μm) and high thermoelectric performance (ZT values from 0.03 to 0.13 at 300 K temperature). They are superior to previous reports and our previous work. This method works for fabricating various single‐crystal fibers and has important applications in the field of optical fibers, functional fibers, and their integrated devices.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call