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MARCO CANNAS

Steady-State X-Ray Radiation-Induced Attenuation in Canonical Optical Fibers

  • Authors: De Michele V.; Morana A.; Campanella C.; Vidalot J.; Alessi A.; Boukenter A.; Cannas M.; Paillet P.; Ouerdane Y.; Girard S.
  • Publication year: 2020
  • Type: Articolo in rivista
  • OA Link: http://hdl.handle.net/10447/462997

Abstract

The so-called canonical optical fibers (OFs) are samples especially designed to highlight the impact of some manufacturing process parameters on the radiation responses. Thanks to the results obtained on these samples, it is thus possible to define new procedures to better control the behaviors of OFs in radiation environments. In this article, we characterized the responses, under steady-state X-rays, of canonical samples representative of the most common fiber types differing by their core-dopants: pure silica, Ge, Al, and P. Their radiation-induced attenuation (RIA) spectra were measured online at both room temperature (RT) and liquid nitrogen temperature (LNT), in the energy range [0.6-3.0] eV (2100-410 nm), highlighting the RIA growth kinetics during the fiber exposure up to an accumulated dose of 200 Gy(SiO2) at a constant dose rate of 100 mGy/s at RT. At LNT, the deposited doses varied between 100 and 180 Gy, with a time-dependent dose rate. In order to understand the origin of the excess losses and the difference between the RIA spectral shapes observed at the two temperatures, spectral decomposition of the optical losses has been performed using a set of Gaussian absorption bands related to the already known point defects. As a result, if the RIA in the visible domain is quite well understood, the knowledge of the RIA origin in the near-IR remains incomplete, justifying new and deeper studies to clarify the response of the fibers under steady-state irradiation.