Optical fibers typically confine light through total internal reflection or through photonic bandgaps. Here we show that light can be perfectly guided in optical fibers through a different mechanism based… Click to show full abstract
Optical fibers typically confine light through total internal reflection or through photonic bandgaps. Here we show that light can be perfectly guided in optical fibers through a different mechanism based on bound states in the continuum (BICs). In fibers with periodic Bragg gratings, we predict bona fide BICs in pure-polarization modes, as well as quasi-BICs in hybrid-polarization modes. These guided modes exist robustly without the need for fine structural tuning, and they persist even with the very small grating index contrasts that are available in conventional fiber Bragg gratings. The suppression of radiation loss arises from the coupling between a weakly-radiating mode and a strongly-radiating one. This finding opens the possibility of guiding light with BICs in optical fibers and their applications in distributed fiber sensors, in-line fiber filters, and high-power fiber lasers.
               
Click one of the above tabs to view related content.