To overcome problems of fabricating conventional core-clad optical fibre
from non-silica based (compound) glass, it is proposed to fabricate
non-silica based (compound) glass optical fibre as holey fibre i.e. one
contining Longitudinal holes in the cladding. This removes the
conventional problems associated with mismatch of the physical properties
of the core and clad compound glasses, since a holey fibre can be made of
a single glass composition. With a holey fibre, it is not necessary to
have different glasses for the core and cladding, since the necessary
refractive index modulation between core and cladding is provided by the
microstructure of the clad, i.e. its holes, rather than by a difference
in materials properties between the clad and core glasses. Specifically,
the conventional thermal mismatch problems between core and clad are
circumvented. A variety of fibre types can be fabricated from non-silica
based (compounds) glasses, for example: single-mode fibre; photonic band
gap fibre; highly non-linear fibre; fibre with photosensitivity written
gratings and other refractive index profile structures; and rare-earth
doped fibres (e.g. Er, Nd, Pr) to provide gain media for fibre amplifiers
and lasers.