Abstract
Ultrasmall light modulators have been made by sandwiching a
polymer-dispersed liquid crystal (PDLC) between two ferrules with
optical fibers. The device can modulate light independent of the
state of polarization, because the PDLC becomes transparent or opaque
when either sufficient or no voltage is applied to the film. The
PDLC was prepared by mixing and annealing a prepolymer and nematic
liquid crystal with large anisotropy. An optical fiber modulator
with a 30-μm thick PDLC film had an extinction ratio of
8:1–33:1, an insertion loss of 1.3 dB, and rise and decay times of 4
ms at a wavelength of 1.3 μm.
© 1998 Optical Society of America
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