Patent classifications
C03B2201/31
Low attenuation fiber with viscosity matched core and inner clad
A single mode optical fiber having a core made from silica and less than or equal to about 6.5 weight % germania and having a maximum relative refractive index .sub.1MAX. The optical fiber also has an inner cladding surrounding the core and having a minimum relative refractive index .sub.2MIN. A difference between a softening point of the core and a softening point of the inner cladding is less than or equal to about 20 C., and .sub.1MAX>.sub.2MIN. The single mode optical fiber may also have an outer cladding surrounding the inner cladding made from silica or SiON. The outer cladding has a maximum relative refractive index .sub.3MAX, and .sub.3MAX>.sub.2MIN. A method for manufacturing an optical fiber includes providing a preform to a first furnace, the preform, drawing the optical fiber from the preform, and cooling the drawn optical fiber in a second furnace.
Optical fiber with reducing hydrogen sensitivity
The present disclosure is directed to a method of making an optical fiber with improved bend performance, the optical fiber having a core and at least one cladding layer, and a chlorine content in the in the last layer of the at least one cladding layer that is greater than 500 ppm by weight. The fiber is prepared using a mixture of a carrier gas, a gaseous chlorine source material and a gaseous reducing agent during the sintering of the last or outermost layer of the at least one cladding layer. The inclusion of the reducing gas into a mixture of the carrier gas and gaseous chlorine material reduces oxygen-rich defects that results in at least a 20% reduction in TTP during hydrogen aging testing.
METHOD TO PREVENT CRACKS IN OPTICAL FIBER PREFORMS
The present disclosure provides optical fiber preforms formed from core canes having large core-clad ratio, intermediate core-cladding assemblies, and methods for making the preforms and core cladding assemblies. The preforms are made with capped core canes. The capping material has a coefficient of thermal expansion less than the coefficient of thermal expansion of the core cane and more closely matched to or lower than the coefficient of thermal expansion of the surrounding cladding monolith in a cane-in-soot process. Presence of the cap reduces stresses that arise from differential thermal expansion of the core cane and cladding materials and leads to preforms having low defect concentration and low probability of failure during subsequent thermal processing steps.
METHOD OF ASSEMBLING OPTICAL FIBER PREFORMS
The present disclosure provides optical fiber preforms formed from core canes having large core-clad ratio, intermediate core-cladding assemblies, and methods for making the preforms and core cladding assemblies. The preforms are made from core canes having a contoured end surface. The contoured end surface(s) include a depression that acts to reduce the stress that develops at the junction of the end surface of the core cane with a soot cladding monolith arising from differences in the coefficient of thermal expansions of the core can and soot cladding monolith. The contoured end surface(s) leads to preforms having low defect concentration and low probability of failure during fiber draw.
Hydrogen-resistant optical fiber
Embodiments of the invention relate to a hydrogen-resistant optical fiber with a core having a central axis. The core may include only silica, or only silica and fluorine, while a cladding region surrounding the core may be made of silica and fluorine, along with at least one of germanium, phosphorus, and titanium.
Apparatus and method for carrying out a plasma deposition process
A method for carrying out a plasma deposition process including the steps of providing a substrate tube, supplying dopant-containing glass-forming gases to the substrate including a main gas flow and one or more secondary gas flows, inducing a plasma in the substrate tube, moving a reaction zone back and forth in strokes between a reversal point near the supply side and a reversal point near the discharge side, and interrupting the secondary gas flow during a portion of each stroke, each interruption having a start point and an end point within the same stroke.
ULTRA-LOW-LOSS OPTICAL FIBER, AND METHOD AND APPARATUS FOR PRODUCING SAME
This ultra-low-loss optical fiber comprises a core having a higher relative refractive index difference than silica and a cladding having a lower relative refractive index difference than silica. The relative refractive index difference of the core with respect to the refractive index of silica is 0.0030 to 0.0055, for example, and the relative refractive index difference of the cladding with respect to the refractive index of silica is 0.0020 to 0.0003. The ultra-low-loss optical fiber has the loss characteristic of simultaneously having optical losses of at most 0.324 dB/km at a wavelength of 1310 nm, at most 0.320 dB/km at a wavelength of 1383 nm, at most 0.184 dB/km at a wavelength of 1550 nm, and at most 0.20 dB/km at a wavelength of 1625 nm. The ultra-low-loss optical fiber is supercooled when the surface temperature of the optical fiber has a temperature range in a glass transition section during drawing.
Preforms for Speckle-Free Output Optical Fibers Having Structured Silica Sections, Methods of Such Preform Manufacture, and Improved Speckle-Free Output Optical Fibers
Preforms are presented which yield, upon drawing, new, improved, speckle-free output optical fibers, providing speckle-free, smooth output with flat top transmission of light from gaussian or few mode sources. The production of these preforms is also presented. The preforms, and the fibers produced in varying core dimensions from about 100 m to above 1000 m, are based on a structured silica section of mode mixing area adjacent to the inner core, or in the case of non-circular core, within the core. Modified Plasma Vapor Deposition process achieves the structured sections. The structured sections include pairs of layers, where a thin down-doped layer is alternated with a much thicker core material layer. The ratio of the thickness of the core layer to the thickness of the down-doped layer is about 3 to 25. The paired layers are between about 8 to 30-layer pairs. Both circular inner core and non-circular core examples are discussed.
HOLLOW CORE OPTICAL FIBER, HOLLOW CORE OPTICAL FIBER PREFORM, AND METHOD OF MAKING THE SAME
A method of manufacturing a hollow core optical fiber including a vapor deposition step comprising vapor depositing a silica soot coating from one or more source materials over an outer surface of a cladding substrate tube of a workpiece that further includes capillary tubes disposed within a cavity of the cladding substrate tube. The compositions of the capillary tubes, the cladding substrate tube, and the silica soot coating can be manipulated with one or more viscosity-raising dopants or one or more viscosity-lowering dopants, or neither, to achieve a desired compositional profile of a hollow core optical fiber preform with a cladding consolidated from the silica soot coating of the workpiece. The desired composition profile results in a viscosity profile that prevents the capillary tubes from contacting each other during a drawing step performed upon the hollow core optical fiber preform.
Plasma chemical vapor deposition process
A method for manufacturing a primary preform for optical fibers via an internal plasma chemical vapor deposition (PCVD) process in a hollow silica substrate tube having a supply side and a discharge side includes depositing doped or non-doped silica layers on the inner surface of the hollow substrate tube by supplying glass-forming gasses to the interior of the hollow substrate tube via the supply side thereof, and by creating a plasma reaction zone in the interior of the hollow substrate tube via microwave radiation having a microwave power, wherein the microwave power is decreased during the depositing.