Low-Loss Optical Nanofibers with Submicron Waist Diameters and Millimeter-Scale Waist Lengths
Abstract
Optical nanofibers with subwavelength diameters generate strong evanescent fields, enabling efficient light-matter interactions for optical sensing, spectroscopy, and cold-atom experiments. We report a heat-and-pull system for fabricating low-loss optical nanofibers with controllable waist dimensions and investigate the fabrication limits for achieving small waist diameters and long waist lengths. We study factors that influence fabrication performance, including flame geometry, nanofiber dimensions, and surface contamination. Using a multi-hole torch tip that provides a relatively large and uniform heating region, we achieve reproducible fabrication with optical transmission above 99.9\% for waist diameters as small as 200 nm for a 1-mm waist length and 250 nm for a 50-mm waist length. We also develop a preparation procedure for fiber splicing and cleaning to minimize transmission loss caused by surface contamination. In addition, we measure long-term transmission degradation due to dust accumulation in a typical laboratory environment and find that nanofibers fabricated in an enclosed setup maintain transmission above 85\% for more than 1 hour for nanofibers with a 300-nm waist diameter and waist lengths ranging from 1 to 30 mm. Our work provides practical guidelines for constructing nanofiber fabrication platforms and producing low-loss nanofibers for optics and atomic physics applications.
Turn this paper into a full lesson
ArcXiv compiles a staged curriculum from this paper: 8-12 lessons across beginner → advanced, synthesised section guides, visuals, flashcards, a quiz, exercises, and on-demand deep dives per section. Grounded in the abstract, never invented.