Cleaning of optical fibers is necessary prior to terminating or splicing. A common method involves the use of hand-held pre-soaked individually wrapped alcohol wipes, or the dispensing of alcohol solution onto a lint-free disposable cloth with a spray bottle, and then manually wiping the fiber with either material. A device which could automate the cleaning process is therefor desirable. Such a device would provide improvements in efficiency and effectiveness, in terms of maximizing the potential of cleaning materials and minimizing the time required for the cleaning process, while protecting the fiber from mechanical stress.
The present invention can clean multiple fibers at once. It provides an integration of the fibrous and liquid components of the cleaning regimen and integrates all cleaning functions into one mechanical embodiment. No manual contact with the cleaned optical fiber segment is required. A clamshell conduit router for multiple fibers ensures that the fibers will receive tensile stress along their longitudinal axes, to prevent breaking. Cleaning agent is introduced to the fibrous receiving material on an as-required basis, while the cleaning stand, when closed around the optical fiber, also minimizes evaporative losses of cleaning agent. The material feeds from a rotating axle mounted inside of the cleaning material holder, through a horizontal aperture on its top, to the stationary cleaning surface pad, through a retainer located on the mobile cleaning surface pad, on the way to the pad itself, and finally terminates at a serrated region, located on the mobile cleaning surface, on a side opposite the pad.
To use the device, a roll of cleaning material is installed on the removeable axle, which is mounted internal to the cleaning material holder, through the open rear face of the container. Then material is threaded through the horizontal aperture, located on the front face, over the stationary cleaning pad, through the retainer, and over the mobile cleaning pad, and terminates at the serrated edge on the mobile cleaning surface support stand.
Then the pump dispenser applies cleaning agent to the stationary cleaning pad, the mobile cleaning pad is actuated about the hinges to contact the stationary surface, an action which evenly distributes cleaning agent to both cleaning pads, and then the cleaning stand is opened again.
The fibers to be cleaned are inserted through the fiber routing guides, such that the stripped fiber segment is entirely supported by the cleaning pad, and the jacketed or acrylate-coated fiber segment is supported in the routing guide.
The mobile cleaning pad is then closed over the fibers, to contact the stationary cleaning pad. No external pressure is applied to the mobile cleaning surface when it is closed over the fiber strands.
With the cleaning surface pads closed around the fiber, the ends of the fibers are pulled straight out of the clamshell fiber routing guide conduits, which cleans the ends of the fibers which were in contact with the cleaning pads.
The described components of the present invention can be manufactured from durable polymers, with silicone rubber used for cleaning pads and aperture seals, and hinge hardware fabricated from metal.
The liquid cleaning agent dispenser is configured to only apply cleaning agent to the stationary cleaning surface stand and associated pad; the mobile half of the cleaning surface stand does not directly receive cleaning agent until it contacts the stationary half of the folding cleaning surface stand. In this way, the mobile half of the cleaning surface stand provides a dry cleaning material surface for “wet to dry” cleaning techniques, where a fiber optic end connector is first cleaned with wet solvent, and then wiped with a dry cloth.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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20140123482 | Kanayama | May 2014 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20210379629 A1 | Dec 2021 | US |