The present invention relates to optical fiber. More particularly, the present invention relates to a metal-coated optical fiber, and techniques for manufacturing same. Optical fiber is typically constructed having a polymer coating, but some applications necessitate the use of metal-coated optical fiber. Current metal-coated optical fibers are typically manufactured by a liquid freezing method or metal plating method. The liquid freezing method is described in detail in A. Mendez & T. F. Morse, Specialty Optical Fibers Handbook, Academic Press (2007), at pages 491-510 (“Metal-Coated Fibers”), which is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety for all purposes. As a brief description of the liquid freezing method, optical fiber is coated with metal by the fiber passing though a die filled with liquid metal or molten metal in line with a fiber drawing process.
Particularly when the thickness of metal coating is decreased to less than ten micron, this freezing process has the possibility of mechanical contact of optical fiber with the coating die due to small fluctuation of the drawing tower or environmental conditions (such as temperature change, wind, vibration, etc.). A bare fiber without a thick polymer coating is fragile against handling or mechanical contact with any hard material. (A thin carbon layer is sometimes coated in line with drawing as a hermetic barrier. It will be appreciated that an optical fiber with a carbon layer less than one micron without any additional coating is still fragile against normal handling.) So any mechanical contact with hard material can cause mechanical damage on the optical fiber surface and can degrade long term mechanical reliability.
In order to avoid mechanical contact of fiber with the coating die, the typical coating thickness of metal-coated fiber made by a liquid freezing method is larger than ten micron to obtain enough mechanical strength. However, the transmission loss of fiber with a thicker metal coating is larger due to thick metal thermal contraction. In particular, the contraction of the metal layer causes microbending loss when metal shrinks from liquid phase to solid phase due to thermal expansion coefficient.
For metal-coated fiber exhibiting lower losses, thicker glass diameter needs to be selected (e.g., more than about 200 micron) to resist microbending due to metal contraction. But thick diameter of 200 micron or greater limits bending radius due to larger bending strain.
Referring now to
Referring now to
Optical fiber cannot be coated using the same coating process that has been used with metal wire. If the bare fiber is prepared and enters into wet baths by contacting with pulleys, the pulleys can damage the fiber. In particular, such pulleys are typically made of plastic or metal on the surface, which is hard and can damage the fibers through contact. Even if the pulleys are made of soft material, small dust of hard particles such as silica or metal or any solids may cause damage to the optical fiber's surface due to fiber tension when some such particles exist between fiber and pulley. The bare fiber travels along path line in contact with some pulleys and therefore mechanical damage is caused at some points along the fiber length statistically. So bare fiber is not applicable to metallic continuous plating process to achieve long metal-coated optical fiber. As a result, most application of metal plating to optical fiber is metallization of short ends of optical fiber.
The present invention recognizes the foregoing considerations, and others, of the prior art.
In accordance with one aspect, the present invention provides apparatus and method for producing metal-coated optical fiber. One step of such a method comprises providing a length of optical fiber having a glass fiber with or without a carbon layer surrounded by a polymeric, thermoplastic resin or wax coating. The optical fiber is passed through a series of solution baths such that the fiber will contact the solution in each bath for a predetermined dwell time, the series of solution baths or thermal tooling effecting removal of the polymer, thermoplastic resin or wax coating and subsequent electroless plating of metal on the glass fiber. The optical fiber is collected after metal plating so that a selected quantity of said metal-coated optical fiber is gathered. At least one of the solution baths comprises a coiled tube containing the process solution through which the glass fiber passes. Aspects of the present invention are also applicable to conventional metal wire where it is desirable to reduce physical length of the process line.
Other objects, features and aspects of the present invention are provided by various combinations and subcombinations of the disclosed elements, as well as methods of practicing same, which are discussed in greater detail below.
A full and enabling disclosure of the present invention to one of ordinary skill in the art, is set forth more particularly in the remainder of the specification, including reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
Repeat use of reference characters in the present specification and drawings is intended to represent same or analogous features or elements of the invention.
It is to be understood by one of ordinary skill in the art that the present discussion is a description of exemplary embodiments only, and is not intended as limiting the broader aspects of the present invention, which broader aspects are embodied in the exemplary constructions.
The present invention provides various improvements in metal-coated optical fiber and methods of making the same, as well as improvements in the processing of conventional metal wire. In particular, metal plating may be applied along continuous lengths of optical fiber (such as lengths up to ten kilometers) with sufficient mechanical strength along the whole length. According to an important aspect of the present invention, metal-coated optical fibers may be coated by a continuous plating process in which a bare fiber enters into several liquid baths one or more of which are adapted to reduce physical equipment length.
Referring now to
At feed pulley 20, the fiber will preferably have a typical polymer coating which prevents contact between the optical fiber glass and the pulley. The polymer is stripped in cleaning bath 22 using a suitable solvent in the cleaning solution, such as acetone, MEK, etc. Sometimes another bath soaking such as acids, alkalis, surface treatment chemicals may be added for etching or cleaning of particular residuals. At take-up pulley 30, the fiber has been sufficiently strengthened by the metal coating in order to contacted again. One skilled in the art will appreciate that the fiber's duration of transit through the process and the geometry of the respective baths are set so that the fiber will have sufficient dwell time in each bath.
Copending PCT application serial no. PCT/US2014/028151, entitled “METHOD AND APPARATUS FOR FABRICATION OF METAL-COATED OPTICAL FIBER, AND THE RESULTING OPTICAL FIBER” and published Sep. 25, 2014 as WO 14/152896, describes one configuration of an arrangement for each of the baths in the process of
Thus, length of the bath where fiber goes through straight without contact to any hard material needs to be increased when higher line speed is considered for productivity. But usually straight line length for production is limited by existing room length or other reasons. So line speed is limited by physical length of plating line. For example, deposit speed of one micron thickness for electroless copper plating will take 15-20 minutes. This means that 15-20 m of soaking length is necessary for the case of line speed of 1 m/min. As noted above, fiber typically goes through several baths successively for pre-treatment, rinsing and additional plating. In total, more than 50 m of line length seems necessary for straight line plating.
Referring now also to
Various type of manifold could be applicable. An important consideration for design of the manifold is to decrease the back flow of liquid from the inlet of fiber as much as possible. Also, the liquid flow at the manifold should not bend the optical fiber by turbulence at yielding region. The guide tube which protects bending and reduces back flow is effective. The number of liquid input is preferably at least two for circumferentially even flow.
Referring again to
In addition, the fluid flowing due to pump 70 will preferably have sufficient pressure to pull fiber 18 through and out of the coiled tube. For example, fiber 18 may be paid off of feed pulley 20 at a constant speed which is equal to or less than the desired feeding speed of fiber through coiled tube 54. The feeding speed is a function of pressure of liquid, tube diameter, tube length and tube material. In accordance with preferred methodology, the following parameters are believed to produce acceptable results: Pump pressure 7.2 PSI, coiled tube: ⅜ inch inner diameter, 48 foot length, made of HDPE, coil diameter 14 inches (the coil diameter was chosen from the viewpoint of allowable space). Such parameters produced 0.92 flow rate at outlet and 0.2 m/min feed speed. If longer length or faster feed speed is desired, this can be achieved using higher pump pressure. Embodiments utilizing a horizontal coiled loop are also contemplated.
One skilled in the art will appreciate that various advantages are achieved by a system configured in accordance with the present invention. Notably:
(1) Coiled tube contributes space savings because plating will occur along a tube.
(2) Tube filled with chemicals for plating is good for loading factor because of its compactness.
(3) Flow of chemicals along tube will drive a wire along tube. This driving force will determine the soaking time as passing time. The line speed is controlled by flow rate or pressure in tube.
While preferred embodiments of the invention have been shown and described, modifications and variations may be made thereto by those of ordinary skill in the art without departing from the spirit and scope of the present invention. For example, while the “wire” is described above as an optical fiber, one skilled in the art will appreciate that aspects of the present invention are also applicable to electroless plating of conventional metal wire. In addition, it should be understood that aspects of the various embodiments may be interchanged both in whole or in part. Furthermore, those of ordinary skill in the art will appreciate that the foregoing description is by way of example only, and is not intended to be limitative of the invention as further described in the appended claims.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/US15/34883 | 6/9/2015 | WO | 00 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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62009546 | Jun 2014 | US |