Not applicable.
Within a fiber optic network, information from a source, in the form of an electrical signal, is converted to an optical signal that can then be transmitted along a fiber optic cable to the intended destination where it is converted back to an electrical signal. In the modern world of Internet access, facsimiles, multiple telephone lines, modems, and teleconferencing, an incredible burden is placed on telecommunications networks to meet the ever-increasing demand for information transmission services. Unaware of the capacities that would be required of fiber optic cables, relatively narrow bandwidths were calculated using classical engineering formulas, such as Poisson and Reeling. The increased service needs imposed upon these cables have resulted in fiber exhaustion and a concomitant need for layered bandwidth management. For information on telecommunications networks, see generally:
(1) www.webproforum.com/lucent3
One option for meeting the increased demand for information transmission is to lay additional optical fiber cable. This option can be expensive, however, and is generally only practicable where the increased demand is relatively small. Another method for dealing with this problem is called time division multiplexing (TDM). This method increases the speed at which the data is transmitted, speed being measure in bits per second (bps). The bit rate is increased by slicing time into smaller increments such that a greater number of bits can be transmitted per unit time (e.g., per second). A drawback to this approach is that the detector temporal frequency response limits the number of bits that can be transmitted per unit time.
Because of the limitations associated with TDM, another technique was devised for carrying increased data load over existing fibers called wavelength division multiplexing (WDM). WDM involves slicing up the laser diode transmitter output wavelengths into multiple increments, each increment being modulated separately to increase the number of bits that can be transmitted per second. When the number of slices increases past a certain point, the system is referred to as a DWDM (Dense Wave Division Multiplexing) system.
DWDM increases capacity by assigning incoming optical signals to specific frequencies within a designated frequency band, multiplexing the resulting signals, and transmitting the resulting multiplexed signal via a single fiber. The signals are thus transmitted as a group over a single fiber. Spacing between the increments also is decreased using TDM with DWDM so that a greater number of bits are transmitted per second. The signals then are demultiplexed and routed by individual cables to their destination. The transmitted signals can travel within the fiber optic cable at different speeds and in different formats, and the amount of information that can be transmitted is limited only by the speed at which the signals travel and the number of frequencies, or channels, available within the fiber.
A number of technological advances have made DWDM possible. Once such advance was the discovery that by using fused biconic tapered couplers, more than one signal can be sent on the same fiber. The result of this discovery was an increase in the bandwidth for one fiber. Another important advance was the use of optical amplifiers. By doping a small strand of fiber with a rare earth element, usually erbium, an optical signal can be amplified without converting it back to an electrical signal. Optical amplifiers now are available which provide more efficient and precise flat gain with significant total power output of about 20 dBm.
Narrowband lasers have also contributed to the increased capacity of telecommunications networks. These lasers provide a narrow, stable, and coherent light source, each source providing an individual “channel.” Generally, 40 to 80 channels are available for a single fiber. Researchers are working on creating new methods for increasing the number of channels available for each fiber. Lucent Technology's Bell Laboratories has demonstrated a technique for multiplexing, or combining, 300 channels within an 80 nm segment of the spectrum using a femtosecond laser. See:
(2) Brown, Chappell, “Optical Interconnects Getting Supercharged,” Electronic Engineering Times, May 25, 1998; pp. 39-40.
Given the greater number of channels, and corresponding signals, which can be carried on a single optical fiber, multiplexing and demultiplexing has become increasingly important. Current methods for multiplexing and demultiplexing include the use of thin film substrates or fiber Bragg gratings. For the first method, a thin film substrate is coated with a layer of dielectric material. Only signals of a given wavelength will pass through the resulting substrate. All other signals will be reflected. See, for example, U.S. Pat. No. 5,457,573. With fiber Bragg gratings, the fiber optic cable is modified so that one wavelength is reflected back while all the others pass through. Bragg gratings are particularly used in add/drop multiplexers. With these types of systems, however, as the number of transmitted signals increases, so does the number of required films or gratings for multiplexing and demultiplexing. See U.S. Pat. No. 5,748,350 and U.S. Pat. No. 4,923,271. Therefore, more efficient, less expense methods for multiplexing and demultiplexing transmitted signals continue to be sought.
A method and apparatus particularly useful for telecommunications applications, such as switching, multiplexing and demultiplexing, is disclosed. The method commences by directing a source of input optical signal(s) (10) onto a movable diffractive optical element or MDOE. A rotatable diffractive optical element (RDOE) provides the most efficient type of MDOE. Each of the optical signals is associated with a particular wavelength. Next, one or more output station(s) are supplied. Finally, the RDOE (12) generates output optical signal(s) and distributes them among the output station(s). The corresponding system for treating the optical signals from a source thereof includes a source carrying one or more input optical signals, each of the signals being associated with a particular wavelength. Also included is a movable diffractive optical element positioned to intercept the source optical signals for producing one or more diffracted output optical signals. Finally, one or more output stations are positioned to receive the one or more diffracted output optical signals from the MDOE. “Diffractive Optical Elements” for use in the present invention bear diffraction gratings for achieving their optical diffraction properties.
For a fuller understanding of the nature and objects of the present invention, reference should be made to the following detailed description taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings, in which:
The drawings will be described in detail below.
The present invention provides a simple and elegant method for distributing optical signals which may be utilized in a variety of uses, such as multiplexing, demultiplexing, switching, or any other application where it is desirable to separate, combine or direct optical signals. Use of a movable diffractive optical element (RDOE) eliminates the need for optical apparatus, such as mirrors, filters, and thin films, which optical apparatus add complexity and expense proportionally as the number of optical signals to be treated increases.
Referring to the drawings,
(a) λ=d(sin ι+sin δ)
where,
For a fixed d and a fixed λ, rotation of the RDOE in effect varies ι to allow different wavelengths to be diffracted at different angles, δ, thereby generating output optical signals. Specific characteristics and embodiments of the RDOE 12 will be discussed in greater detail later.
Three output stations are provided, as at 14, 16 and 18, for receiving the diffracted output optical signals, λ1 and λ2, as shown at 20 and 22, respectively. With RDOE 12 at a first position as depicted in FIG. 1., output stations 14 and 16 receive output optical signals 20 and 22.
Table I, below, illustrates the distribution of input optical signals, λ1, λ2, λ3, and λ4, to the four output stations, 32, 34, 36 and 38, depending on the three different rotational positions of RDOE 12 as shown in
When RDOE 12 is in its first position, 58, λ1 is directed toward output station 34; signal λ2 is directed toward output station 36; and signal λ3 is directed toward output station 38. No output optical signal is received by output station 32. With the RDOE 12 in its second position, 60, in
Optical connectors positioned to receive the diffracted output optical signals are spatially located along the surface of a hemisphere shown generally at 116. Output stations 110, 112, and 114 are located on lines of equal latitude on hemisphere 116. Four optical connectors are located along each latitude of output stations 110, 112, and 114. One wavelength is diffracted to all optical connectors located along each line of latitude. For example, output station 110, having optical connectors 130, 132, 134, and 136 will receive diffracted output optical signal λ1. Output station 112, having optical connectors 138, 140, 142, and 144, will receive output optical signal λ2. Output station 114, having optical connectors 146, 148, 150, and 152, will receive output optical signal λ3. λ3 will have a longer wavelength than λ2 which will have a longer wavelength than 1.
While the output stations have been described as being along equal lines of latitude for efficiency, it will be appreciated by one skilled in the art that the output station(s) may be located along non-parallel latitudes so long as the optical connectors located thereon are non-intersecting. Further, the spatial positioning of the output station(s) have been described as being along the surface of a hemisphere, however, this shape is intended to be illustrative and not limiting of the present invention. Positioning of the output station(s) around the RDOE may be in any desired configuration.
A conventional combiner (not shown) connects each output station's optical connectors to an output fiber or cable. If there are n output fibers, then there must be n combiners, i.e., one for each output station. For the example shown in
Looking to
Table II shows the optical signal combinations for each of the eight positions to which RDOE 12 is rotatable.
When directing n input optical signals from source 10 to n output stations, there must be n·2n optical connectors, to permit all combinations of the n signals. Each of the n combiners will combine 2n−1 optical connections. The resolution of RDOE 12, i.e., the number of positions to which it may be rotated, must be 360°/2n.
If the system depicted in
The present invention, then, includes directing of output optical signal(s) to one or more output stations by varying the effective spacing of a diffractive optical element through rotation. One embodiment for RDOE 12 involves the use of a diffraction grating on a thin film that is connected to an energy source, energizable for movement of the film. Such movement changes the effective spacing of the diffraction grating on the film. A diffractive grating or hologram may be embossed on the thin film to form the diffractive grating. The film may be PVDF or any other piezoelectric film that deforms by a small amount when subjected to an electric field. The diffractive grating or hologram embossed on the thin film is rotated about a pivot point located at any position along the thin film. This pivot point may be, for example, at either end or at the center of gravity. The energy source, energizable to move the thin film, may be provided in any number of electromagnetic configurations. One such configuration includes the combination of an energizable coil, or multiple coils, with the thin film, the combination being pivoted at the center. Magnets are located either below or to the sides of the film such that when the coils are energized, a magnetic flux is created and the film with its diffractive grating rotates about the pivot axis. Such structures are described in further detail in U.S. Pat. No. 5,613,022, entitled “Diffractive Display and Method Utilizing Reflective or Transmissive Light Yielding Single Pixel Full Color Capability,” issued Mar. 18, 1997, which hereby is expressly incorporated herein by reference.
Looking now to
With current flowing through wire 188, a magnetic field is created which exerts a force on magnet 184. Because magnet 184 is not in a permanently fixed position, the force created by the current in wire 188 will cause magnet 184, and associated diffractive grating 182, to rotate about pivot 186. The direction of rotation of magnet 184, and associated diffractive grating, about pivot 186 depends on the direction of the magnetic field associated with magnet 184 and the direction of current flowing through wire 188. Reversing the polarity of the current in wire 188 changes the direction of the force created, causing the magnet to rotate in the opposite direction. Electromagnetic shielding 192 is provided to prevent the interaction of fields generated by external sources. This shielding may be composed, for example, of SAE 1010 steel. As will be obvious to one skilled in the art, alternative configurations can be envisioned to electromagnetically couple magnet 184 and coil 188 for movement of the magnet. Several illustrative configurations are described in greater detail later.
Stops 194 and 196 prevent the rotation of magnet 184 beyond desired bounds. A portion of magnet 184 has been cut away to reveal the presence of stop 194. Stop 194 may include a capacitance probe or sensor which senses the presence of a capacitor (not shown), for example, composed of aluminized Mylar®, which is located below magnet 184 and indicates the position of magnet 184. Once the magnet has been driven to a desired position, it is held in place by the magnetic fields surrounding ferromagnetic pins 198 and 200. Because of the presence of these pins, magnet 184 may be held in position with little or no current flowing in wire 188.
Turning now to
In addition to RDOEs involving manipulated films or pivoted magnets or coils, the present invention may be implemented using one of a number of planar rotational embodiments of RDOE 12. For each of these embodiments, an array of facets may be achieved on the RDOE by providing a single diffraction grating of constant spacing or an array of diffraction gratings, each of which may have a different spacing wherein each diffraction grating element of the array may be disposed in juxtaposition or may be spaced apart, or by using a holographic diffraction grating array wherein the array of facets are superimposed. With a single diffraction grating, a facet is associated with each rotational position of the FRE, thus creating an array of facets to an observer. Where each facet of the array is a separate diffraction grating, the facets may be non-uniformly or uniformly placed along or across RDOE 12, however, the location of each facet within the array is known, for example, each location can be stored in the memory of a microprocessor. With the location of each facet in the array know, the RDOE may be rotated such that input signal(s) illuminate select facet(s). Thus, desired output signal(s) are generated and directed to appropriate output station(s).
Movement of plate 220 can come from at least two different sources. Plate 220 could be attached at its center 218 to the spindle of a stepper motor (not shown) that may conveniently be manufactured to have a 0.1° resolution, for rotation of plate 220 about axis 218 to bring each of the posts, 222a-222d, into position to intercept source 228. A linear actuator also may be pivotally attached to plate 220 to cause its rotation about axis 218. Alternatively, plate 220 could bear magnets that interact with energizable coils 224a-224d, again for rotating plate 220 about center 218. Alternately, plate 220 could bear the coils and one or more permanent magnets could replace the coils as depicted in
Looking to
Preferably, an array of facets may be provided across the surface of plate 230 by using a holographic diffraction grating array wherein the array of facets are superimposed, each facet being angularly oriented or offset with respect to each other. Thus, the holographic film is developed such that at a given position of plate 230 with respect to the source, a particular output signal is generated and directed to a select output station. For example, if plate 230 is rotated 2°, i.e. from an initial position of 0°, incident light of wavelength λ1, is diffracted and the generated output signal directed to a first output station. By rotating plate 230 to another position, for example 9° from the initial position, input signal λ1 is diffracted and the generated output signal directed to a second output station. For each position of the RDOE, multiple facets may be illuminated simultaneously by multiple input signals to direct multiple output signals to multiple output stations. Rotation of plate 230 may be effected as previously described. Utilizing any of these rotational approaches, the number of output signals that may be generated by RDOE 12 is limited by the number of positions to which the RDOE may be rotated.
While the foregoing description has been addressed to the use of an RDOE, a movable diffractive optical element (MDOE) could be used for movement of a diffraction grating in x-y-z coordinates. It will be appreciated, however, that for efficiency purposes an RDOE represents a preferred embodiment.
In this application all citations are expressly incorporated herein by reference.
This application is cross-referenced to commonly assigned application Ser. No. 09/663,850, filed on Sep. 18, 2000 (Attorney Docket No. LUC 2-027-3), the disclosure of which is herein incorporated by reference.
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 09836685 | Apr 2001 | US |
Child | 12474340 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 09372316 | Aug 1999 | US |
Child | 09836685 | US |