The present invention relates to an imaging system, and in particular to an annulus to block light in the illumination path of an imaging system to enable viewing of both physical contact (PC) and angled physical contact (APC) fiber ends without the need of angled adaptors.
Loss is incurred, whenever a connector is installed on the end of an optical fiber. A portion of the light lost is reflected directly back down the optical fiber towards the source of the light. The back reflections, known as Optical Return Loss (ORL), will damage the light sources and disrupt the transmitted signal. To minimize loss, the end of the optical fiber is subjected to a variety of polish profiles, depending on the type of fiber and the application.
For single mode fibers, a physical contact (PC) polish results in the fiber ends being polished with a slight curvature, such that when the connectors are mated the fibers touch only at their cores. A typical hand polished PC connector will measure at −30 dB.
To reduce the back reflection of a connector, it can be polished to SPC (Super Physical Contact) polish or UPC (Ultra Physical Contact) polish. Industry standard is a minimum of −40 dB for SPC back reflection measurement and −50 dB for UPC back reflection measurement.
If even less back reflection is required, an Angled Physical Contact (APC) polish, in which an 8° angle is cut into the ferrule, may be required. APC connectors are identifiable by their green color. An APC polished connector has an Industry Standard Minimum f −60 dB ORL measurement, and APC fiber ends have low back reflection even when disconnected.
With reference to
The industry standard for viewing PC and APC fibers with the same microscope, as disclosed in U.S. Pat. Nos. 7,312,859 issued Dec. 25, 2007 to Koudelka et al, and 8,104,976 issued Jan. 31, 2012 to Zhou et al, is to use special adapters to position the APC fiber, such that its face is normal to the imaging system. If an adapter is not used, then a lens with large numerical aperture (NA) is required to capture the light reflected off at 16°. But that large NA results in a depth of field too small to form an image.
An object of the present invention is to overcome the shortcomings of the prior art by providing an imaging system, which enables imaging of PC and APC fiber optic cable faces using the same optical system without incorporating adapters for the APC fiber.
Accordingly, the present invention relates to an imaging system with a longitudinal optical axis for viewing an angled surface of a test element, which is at a first acute angle relative to a plane perpendicular to the longitudinal optical axis, comprising:
a light source providing light to the angled surface;
lensing for directing a portion of the light to the angled surface at a second acute angle, and for directing an image of the angled surface to a viewing plane; and
an annulus including:
a transparent outer ring enabling the portion of the light to pass from the light source to the surface at the second acute angle;
a central transparent section enabling light reflected from the angled surface to pass to the viewing plane along the longitudinal optical axis; and
a first light-blocking ring between the outer ring and the central section for blocking excess light from the light source and reflected from the angled surface.
Another aspect of the present invention relates to an imaging system with a first longitudinal optical axis for viewing an end surface of an optical fiber, which has a second longitudinal optical axis aligned with the first longitudinal optical axis, the end surface being flat or angled at a first acute angle relative to a plane perpendicular to the first and second longitudinal optical axes, the imaging system comprising:
a light source providing light to the end surface;
lensing for directing a first portion of the light to the angled end surface at a second acute angle relative to the second longitudinal optical axis when imaging an angled fiber, and for directing a second portion of the light at the flat end surface normal thereto when imaging a flat fiber;
a collector defining a viewing plane for receiving the first or second portion of the light reflected from the end surface; and
an annulus including:
a transparent outer ring enabling the first portion of the light to pass from the light source to the angled surface at the second acute angle;
a central transparent section enabling light reflected from the angled surface to pass to the collector along the second longitudinal optical axis, and enabling the second portion of the light to pass from the light source to the flat surface, and pass to the collector along the second longitudinal optical axis; and
a first light-blocking ring between the outer ring and the central section for blocking excess light from the light source and reflected from the end surface.
The invention will be described in greater detail with reference to the accompanying drawings which represent preferred embodiments thereof, wherein:
a and 1b are side views of conventional PC and APC optical fiber ends;
With reference to
An annulus 20 is disposed in the illumination light path of the microscope 11, either between the lens 16 and the beamsplitter 18 or between the lens 14 and the beamsplitter 18. The annulus has an NA greater than 0.28, to eliminate the need for special adapters. The annulus 20 creates two transparent apertures: a center/imaging aperture 22, e.g. NA of about 0.15, and a ring light aperture 21, having an NA approximately twice that of the center aperture, e.g. NA of about 0.27 or more, both surrounded by opaque or reflective portions. The center/imaging aperture 22 reduces the overall NA of the lens 16, which creates a usable image for small particle detection. The 0.27 NA ring light aperture 21 sends light to the APC fiber 6 at an acute angle, e.g. twice the angle of the face 8 of the fiber 6 or 16° relative to normal (see
With reference to
With reference to
Light for imaging a PC fiber, with a flat endface, travels from the light source 13, straight through the focusing lens 14, off of the 50/50 beamsplitter 18, through the center hole of the annulus 20, through the imaging lens 16 to the face of optical fiber 1, and then straight back through the imaging lens 16, the center hole of the annulus 20, and the beamsplitter 18 to the collector 17.
The NA of the ring-light aperture is large enough to not adversely affect illumination or imaging of the PC fiber through the center aperture.
With reference to
A filter medium can be used on a clear substrate of ring light aperture 51 and center/imaging aperture 52 to image a surface using a particular wavelength of light from the lightsource 13, while reflecting the rest of the wavelengths.
Alternatively, an annulus 60 can be constructed out of an opaque, non-reflective, material with arcuate or block arc sections 65a, 65b, 65c removed therefrom, forming openings into a ring light aperture 61, and a circular section removed therefrom, forming an opening into the center hole forming a center/imaging aperture 62. Spokes 66 extend from an outer non-reflecting ring 64 to an inner non-reflecting ring 63.
The annulus 20 could also be a projection 70, forming the light blocking rings, coated onto or formed of a separate opaque or non-reflective material mounted onto the beam splitter 18, as illustrated in
The size of the ring-light aperture 21/51/61/71/81 and the center/imaging aperture 22/52/62/72/82 are dependent on the overall optical system (lenses, camera, LED, etc.). The illustrated annulus 20/50/60/70/80 have holes for the center/imaging apertures 22/52/62/72/82 with a radius of greater than 1″ and between 1″ and 3″, e.g. 2″, and a ring light aperture 21/51/61/71/81 with an ID of more than 2× the radius of the center hole for the center imaging aperture 22/52/62/72/82, e.g. 4.4″, and an OD of more than 2× the ID, e.g. 9″.
In general, this same lighting technique could be used to view any angled surface on a fiber or other DUT between 0° and 45° from flat (perpendicular to longitudinal axis), non-inclusive. At 0° the annulus is pointless, and at 45° the system “blows up”. This is the point where system design comes into play. Specifically, as seen in
The light blocking feature of the annulus 20 is needed to prevent too much noise, but how much light to block must be determined by the optical system design. In general, referring to
The present invention claims priority from U.S. Patent Provisional Application No. 61/652,659 filed, May 29, 2012, which is incorporated herein by reference.
Number | Date | Country | |
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61652659 | May 2012 | US |