학술논문

Microstructured Optical Fiber Made From Biodegradable and Biocompatible Poly(D,L-Lactic Acid) (PDLLA)
Document Type
Periodical
Source
Journal of Lightwave Technology J. Lightwave Technol. Lightwave Technology, Journal of. 41(1):275-285 Jan, 2023
Subject
Communication, Networking and Broadcast Technologies
Photonics and Electrooptics
Polymers
Preforms
Optical device fabrication
Optical attenuators
Biomedical optical imaging
Optical polymers
Optical fiber losses
Biodegradable materials
microstructured polymer optical fiber
optical fibers
optical polymers
plastic optical fiber
Language
ISSN
0733-8724
1558-2213
Abstract
We have fabricated and characterized microstructured biodegradable and biocompatible polymer optical fibers using commercially available poly(D,L-lactic acid) (PDLLA). We first report on the preparation of the preforms by means of a novel technique based on transfer molding and on the fiber manufacturing using a regular heat-drawing process. We address the influence of the polymer processing on the decrease of the molar mass of PDLLA following the preform fabrication and the fiber optic drawing process. We investigate the in vitro degradation of the fabricated fibers in phosphate buffered saline (PBS) that reveals 21, 25 and 43% molar mass loss over a period of 105 days for fibers with diameters of 400, 200 and 100 μm, respectively. Cutback measurements return an attenuation coefficient as low as 0.065 dB/cm at 898 nm for a microstructured fiber with a diameter of 219 ± 27 μm. Due to immersion in PBS at 37 °C, the optical loss increases by 0.4 dB/cm at 950 nm after 6 h and by 0.8 dB/cm after 17 h.