The spectral region between 1600 and 1800 nm is still a band where optical amplifiers struggle to achieve satisfactory gain and output power levels. The output power typically does not exceed few tens of milliwatts, what severely limits some applications. In this paper, the bismuth-doped fiber amplifier (BDFA) operating beyond 1600 nm is presented. We demonstrate the in-house developed BDFA capable of providing output powers that exceed 200 mW for wavelengths near 1700 nm. The performance of the amplifier is discussed and various properties of the device are presented such as gain characteristics and noise figure.
A bismuth-doped fiber amplifier (BDFA) operating between 1650 nm and 1700 nm will be presented. This wavelength region is particularly interesting due to potential application is laser-based methane detection. However, typical output power from laser diodes operating in this spectral region is only between 5 and 15 mW which may limit sensitivity and/or detection range in some spectroscopic systems. Application of fiber amplifiers could help to overcome these limitations. BDFA presented in this paper provides output powers up to 80 mW at 1651 nm and 100 mW at 1687 nm. We analyze the noise at the output of the amplifier and demonstrate its application to photothermal spectroscopy of methane near 1651 nm.
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