1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates generally to fiber assemblies, and in particular relates to fiber assemblies employing one or more photonic band-gap optical fibers.
2. Technical Background of the Invention
In the past, electronic devices communicated with other electronic devices via electrical connections. As the need to provide increasing speed and bandwidth to the electrical communication link, different types of high-speed, high-bandwidth electrical cables, such as coaxial cables, were developed.
Now, with the emerging higher speed standards for data and video transmission, such as 10 Gb/s Ethernet, infiniband, High-Definition Multimedia Interface (HDMI) and USB 3.0, there is an increasing the demand for the use of fiber optical cabling to communicate between electrical devices. The use of such cables requires electrical-to-optical (EO) and optical-electrical (OE) conversion at each end of the cable to retain the purely electrical interface to users at either end of the EO/OE system.
While convention optical fibers have larger bandwidths than electrical cables, they also have a number of shortcomings. A first shortcoming is that they have a solid glass core that creates one or more glass-air interfaces that cause reflections. Such reflections introduce optical loss, and also produce unwanted optical feedback. Glass-air interfaces also typically require coupling optics when interfacing the fiber with an opto-electronic device used to perform the EO or OE conversion.
A second shortcoming is that they are not particularly bend-intolerant—that is to say, they can be damaged and/or can cause significant attenuation of the optical signal traveling therethrough when subjected to severe bending, such as imparting a bend radius of 2″ or less. This is inconvenient when EO and OE devices are formed in or on circuit boards located in devices where interior space is at a premium. Conventional optical fibers and their connectors do not allow for readily accessing and connecting to a circuit board housed in the tight confines of most optical and opto-electronic devices because it requires introducing significant bending loss in the optical fibers. This is particularly true where the connection needs to be formed at a right angle with a sufficiently tight radius while maintaining both low loss and high reliability.
What is needed is a fiber assembly that provides a robust communication link between EO and OE devices that does not have the above-mentioned shortcomings associated with conventional optical fiber.
A first aspect of the invention is a fiber assembly for optically connecting first and second electrical devices. The assembly includes at least one photonic band-gap optical fiber. First and second opto-electronic devices are respectively coupled to the at least one photonic band-gap optical fiber its respective ends, and configured to perform electrical-to-optical (EO) and/or optical-to-electrical (OE) conversion. First and second electrical interfaces are operably disposed relative to the first and second opto-electronic devices and are configured to provide respective industry-standard electrical connections to the first and second electrical devices.
A second aspect of the invention is a bent optical fiber coupler that includes upper and lower alignment members. The upper fiber alignment member has a concave surface and the lower fiber alignment member has a bottom surface defining a coupler output end, and a convex surface. The lower and upper fiber alignment members are arranged to form a first fiber guide channel defining a first coupler input/output (I/O) end, a channel end, and a central curve defined by said convex and concave surfaces. The coupler also includes at least one photonic band-gap optical fiber having an end portion with a proximal end face. At least a portion of the at least one photonic band-gap fiber is held within the first fiber guide channel so as to form a bend in the at least on photonic band-gap fiber corresponding to the central curve, and to position the fiber end face at or near the bottom surface of the lower fiber alignment member so as to define a second coupler I/O end.
A third aspect of the invention is a method of forming an optical coupler. The method includes providing at least one photonic band-gap optical fiber having an end portion with a proximal end face, and holding the at least one photonic band-gap optical fiber between respective concave and convex surfaces of upper and lower fiber alignment guides so as to form a bend in the at least one photonic band-gap optical fiber. In an example embodiment, the bend is a right-angle bend.
A fourth aspect of the invention is a method of optically connecting first and second electrical device. The method includes providing least one photonic band-gap optical fiber having a hollow core and first and second ends. The method also includes connecting first and second opto-electronic devices to the respective first and second ends of the at least one photonic band-gap optical fiber, wherein the first and second opto-electronic devices are configured to perform electrical-to-optical (EO) and/or optical-to-electrical (OE) conversion. The method further includes operably disposing first and second electrical interfaces relative to the first and second opto-electronic devices so as to provide respective electrical connections between the first and second opto-electronic devices and the first and second electrical devices.
Additional features and advantages of the invention will be set forth in the detailed description that follows, and in part will be readily apparent to those skilled in the art from that description or recognized by practicing the invention as described herein, including the detailed description that follows, the claims, as well as the appended drawings. It is to be understood that both the foregoing general description and the following detailed description present exemplary embodiments of the invention, and are intended to provide an overview or framework for understanding the nature and character of the invention as it is claimed. The accompanying drawings are included to provide a further understanding of the invention, and are incorporated into and constitute a part of this specification. The drawings illustrate various embodiments of the invention, and together with the detailed description, serve to explain the principles and operations thereof.
These and other features, aspects and advantages of the present invention are better understood when the following detailed description of the invention is read with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
Reference is now made to preferred embodiments of the invention, examples of which are illustrated in the accompanying drawings. Whenever possible, the same reference numbers and symbols are used throughout the drawings to refer to the same or like parts. In the description below, terms such as “upper,” “lower,” “front,” “back,” “top,”, “bottom,” “vertical,” “horizontal,” and the like, are relative terms used for the sake of description and are not used in a limiting sense.
The present invention uses photonic band-gap fibers to form a fiber assembly and to enable a bent optical fiber coupler. Photonic band-gap fibers guide light by a mechanism that is fundamentally different from the total internal reflection mechanism typically used in conventional optical fibers. Photonic band-gap fibers (PBGFs) have a photonic band-gap structure formed in the cladding of the fiber. The photonic band-gap structure may be, for example, a periodic array of holes having a spacing on the order of the wavelength of light. The photonic band-gap structure has ranges of frequencies and propagation constants, known as “band gaps,” for which light is forbidden from propagating in the photonic band-gap structure. The core region of the fiber is formed by a defect in the photonic band-gap structure cladding. For example, the defect may be a hole of a substantially different size and/or shape than the holes of the photonic band-gap structure. Alternatively, the defect may be a solid structure embedded within the photonic band-gap structure. Light introduced into the core will have a propagation constant determined by the frequency of the light and the structure of the core. Light propagating in the core of the fiber having a frequency and propagation constant within a band gap of the photonic band-gap structure will not propagate in the photonic band-gap cladding, and will therefore be confined to the core. A photonic band-gap fiber may have a core region that is formed from a hole larger than those of the surrounding photonic band-gap structure; such a core region is said to be a “hollow core” region. In such a hollow-core fiber, the light may be guided substantially within the hollow core region.
Example photonic band-gap fibers suitable for use in the present invention are described in U.S. Pat. No. 6,243,522, U.S. Pat. No. 6,847,771, U.S. Pat. No. 6,444,133, U.S. Pat. No. 6,788,862, U.S. Pat. No. 6,917,741, U.S. Patent Application Publication No. 2004/0258381, U.S. Patent Application Publication No. 2004/0228592, and PCT Patent Application Publication No. WO 01/37008, all of which are incorporated herein by reference.
Photonic band-gap fiber 20 also includes core region 30, which is surrounded by photonic band-gap structure 24 of cladding region 22. In the example of
In an example embodiment, the photonic band-gap fibers used in the present invention guide radiation substantially within core region 30. Radiation introduced into core region 30 has a propagation constant determined by the frequency of the radiation and the structure of the core. Radiation propagating in core 30 and having a frequency and propagation constant within a band gap of the photonic band-gap structure will not propagate in the photonic band-gap structure, and will therefore be substantially confined to the core. As such, the photonic band-gap structure acts as a cladding for the core region. In an example embodiment of the present invention, the photonic band-gap fibers 10 used in the present invention guide radiation having a frequency within a band gap of the photonic band-gap structure substantially within the core region.
Unlike conventional optical fibers, the guidance of radiation in photonic band-gap fibers does not rely on the refractive index of the core being higher than the refractive index of the cladding. Consequently, core region 30 may have a lower effective refractive index than that of the cladding region at the wavelength of the optical energy. As used herein, the effective refractive index of a region is defined as:
where neff is the effective refractive index, z is the total number of different refractive indices ni in the photonic band-gap structure, and fi is the volume fraction for refractive index ni The effective refractive index of cladding region 22 will be higher than that of core region 30 due to the presence of matrix material 28. The effective refractive index when the wavelength of light is much larger than the scale of the structure.
As the skilled artisan will appreciate, the exact frequencies spanned by the band gaps of the photonic band-gap structure depend strongly on its structural details. The skilled artisan may adjust the band gap by judicious design of the photonic band-gap structure. Computational methodologies familiar to the skilled artisan may be advantageously used in the design of the photonic band-gap structure. A free software package for the calculation of photonic band-gap structures is available from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (The MIT Photonic-Bands Package, Internet Uniform Resource Locator http://ab-initio mit.edu/mpb. Dielectric structures having a desired shape and refractive index profile may be defined geometrically. The frequencies and electric and magnetic fields of electro-magnetic modes in a given dielectric structure are calculated by computer solution of the Maxwell equations. A trial solution is constructed by expressing the magnetic field as a sum of plane waves, with arbitrary (random number) coefficients. The Maxwell equations are solved by varying the plane wave coefficients until the electro-magnetic energy is minimized. This is facilitated by a preconditioned conjugate gradient minimization algorithm. The mode frequencies, electric fields, and intensity distributions for each mode are thereby computed. This computational technique is described in more detail in “Block-Iterative frequency-domain methods for Maxwell's equations in a planewave basis,” Johnson, S. J. and Joannopoulos, J. D. Optics Express, 8(3), 173-190 (2001).
The skilled artisan will appreciate that the wavelength range of the band gap scales with the scale of the photonic band-gap structure. For example, as shown in
Example photonic band-gap fibers 10 used in the coupler of the present invention as described in detail below may be fabricated using methods analogous to those used in fabricating conventional optical fibers. A preform having the desired arrangement of core and cladding features is formed, then drawn into fiber using heat and tension.
A suitable example method for making a photonic band-gap fiber is shown in cross-sectional detail in
In order to make a hollow-core fiber, a thin tube 66 may optionally be inserted into the hole formed by the removal of the central capillary as shown in
It may be desirable to form the preform so that the material of an inner portion of the preform has a higher softening point than the material of an outer portion of the preform, as is described in the above-cited U.S. Pat. No. 6,847,771. For example, the difference in softening points may be about 50° C. or greater, about 100° C. or greater, or even about 150° C. or greater. One way to achieve such a difference is to use silica glass for the capillaries, and a doped silica tube (e.g. germanium doped, fluorine doped, boron doped) as the sleeve tube. Alternatively, glasses with different concentrations of a common dopant can be used in the inner portion and the outer portion of the preform. In cases where a specially-shaped core structure is used, it may be desirable to form the core structure from a material with an even higher softening point (e.g. tantalum-doped silica). Such a difference in softening point allows the inner portion of the preform to be at a somewhat higher viscosity during the draw, leading to less distortion of the inner portion of the structure.
In order to reduce the occurrence of breaks during the draw and lower the level of attenuation in the drawn fiber, it may be desirable to provide a preform having reduced levels of contaminants (e.g. particulate contaminants, organic contaminants, inorganic contaminants) as well as reduced levels of OH content (i.e. surface-adsorbed water). As such, it may be desirable to clean the preform at various stages of manufacture with a chlorine-containing gas (e.g. a mixture of chlorine and helium). As the skilled artisan will recognize, chlorine gas is effective at removing many types of contaminants. For example, chlorine gas may react with water (e.g. in the form of surface OH) and many inorganic contaminants to form volatile species that are removed in a subsequent purge cycle. Chlorine may also act to oxidize various organic species. It may also be desirable to include exposure to oxygen in a cleaning regimen in order to more fully remove organic contaminants. Cleaning processes are described in detail in the above-cited U.S. Pat. No. 6,917,741.
The preforms used in making the optical fiber of the present invention may be made using other methods familiar to the skilled artisan. For example, redraw techniques may be used to reduce the preform diameter. Etching with SF6, NF3 or aqueous NH4F.HF may be used to enlarge the size of the holes. Redraw and etching procedures are described, for example, in the above-cited U.S. Pat. No. 6,444,133.
The preform may be drawn into microstructured optical fiber using methods familiar to the skilled artisan. Additionally, a pressure may be placed on the holes of the preform during the draw in order to keep them from closing due to surface tension. Alternatively, on the end of the preform opposite the drawn end, the holes may be closed in order to maintain a positive pressure inside the holes of the preform, thereby preventing them from closing due to surface tension. It may be desirable to place different pressures on different sets of holes of the preform, as is described in commonly owned U.S. patent application Ser. No. 10/171,335, filed Jun. 12, 2002 and entitled “METHODS AND PREFORMS FOR DRAWING MICROSTRUCTURED OPTICAL FIBERS”, the specification of which is hereby incorporated herein by reference in its entirety. For example, the large core hole of a photonic band-gap fiber may be coupled to a first pressure system, and the holes of the photonic crystal structure may be coupled to a second pressure system. The first pressure system may be set to a lower pressure than the second pressure system so that the inner core hole does not expand relative to the holes of the photonic crystal structure.
In an example embodiment, the numerical aperture (NA) of photonic band-gap fiber 10 is given by NA10=n sin θ10 and is preferably greater than the numerical aperture NALS=nsinks of an opto-electronic device in the form of an optical light source LS optically coupled to an end 12 of nano-engineered fiber 10, as shown in
One important property of photonic band-gap fiber 10 is that it is relatively bend insensitive when compared to conventional optical fibers or even nano-engineered bend-insensitive fibers. In other words, photonic band-gap fiber 10 can have bends with very small bend radii and the light propagating therethrough will not suffer significant attenuation. For example, for a bend radius of 5 mm and a wavelength of 1550 nm, the attenuation is 30-40 dB less than the other types of fibers. Radiation-induced losses are also significantly less for photonic band-gap fibers than for other types of fiber.
One aspect of the present invention is an optical fiber coupler that employs one or more photonic band-gap optical fibers, wherein the coupler has a severe bend so that connections can be made in tight spaces.
Coupler 100 also includes a lower alignment member 140 having a top surface 142 with an “inner” surface 144 that includes a flat portion 146 and a convex curved portion 148, a bottom surface 150 and front and back ends 156 and 158. In an example embodiment, convex curved surface 148 comprises a quarter-round curve. In an example embodiment, lower alignment member 140 comprises a pre-formed substrate.
Lower alignment member 140 also includes an optical fiber guide 160 located where the flat and curved surface portions 146 and 148 meet and that connects inner surface 144 to bottom surface 150. Optical fiber guide 160 is configured to accommodate one or more photonic band-gap optical fibers 10. In an example embodiment, optical fiber guide 160 includes one or more tapered through-holes that facilitate insertion of fiber(s) 10.
With reference now to
Generally, curved optical fiber guide 200 defines a relatively strong bend in fiber 10, such as from between 45° to 135°.
Coupler 100 also includes one or more photonic band-gap optical fibers 10 (hereinafter, simply “fiber 10” for the sake of description) disposed between upper and lower alignment members 110 and 140 within curved optical fiber guide 200. This causes fiber 10 to have corresponding bend 210 that corresponds to central bend radius RC. Fiber 10 has an end portion 212 associated with fiber end face 12. Fiber end portion 212 is contained within optical fiber guide 160 and is preferably held therein with adhesive 216. In an example embodiment, fiber end face 12 is flush with bottom surface 150 of lower alignment member 140.
In one example embodiment, fiber bend 210 can be performed prior to assembly of coupler 100 by laser annealing fiber 10 over a bent μg fixture (which μg may comprise lower alignment member 140 in an example embodiment). This approach minimizes fiber stresses to ensure high reliability over the life of coupler 100. In another example embodiment, fiber bend 210 is formed during assembly of coupler 100, e.g., by bending fiber 10 over curved surface portion 148 of lower alignment member 140 and then placing and securing upper alignment member 110 atop the lower alignment member so that fiber 10 is held in curved optical fiber guide 200. In an example embodiment, grooves or other control features (not shown) form one or both curved surface portions 118 and 148 to facilitate aligning and controlling the bending of fiber 10 within optical fiber guide 160. In an example embodiment, optical fiber guide 160 provides a tight fit to fiber 10 so that the fiber is firmly held therein.
In an example embodiment, central bend radius RC is in the range defined by 1 mm≦RC≦15 mm, while in another example embodiment is within in the range defined 5 mm≦RC≦15 mm, and in another example embodiment is within the range defined by 2 mm≦RC≦3 mm. In example embodiments, the fiber bend radius RC is that which provides an attenuation of not greater than 1 dB, more preferably not greater than 0.5 dB, and most preferably not greater than 0.1 dB. In another example embodiment, the minimum central bend radius RC is four times (4×) the diameter of fiber 10, while in yet another example embodiment, the minimum central bend radius is 4× the diameter of fiber jacket 260 in which fiber 10 is contained. In another example embodiment, bend radius RC is selected to ensure a high reliability (e.g., less than 100 FIT) over the life of the product.
In an example embodiment, alignment of fiber 10 is accomplished by overmolding an additional element (not shown) within the lower fiber alignment member. Such elements include small Si V-groove substrates or other parts with precision slots, grooves, holes or the like.
With continuing reference to
Opto-electronic assembly 300 includes an opto-electronic device 310, such as an optical transmitter (e.g., an optical transmitter array, broad-area emitter, etc.) or an optical detector (e.g., an optical detector array, broad-area detector, vertical-cavity surface-emitting laser (VCSEL), LED, etc.). In an example embodiment, fiber 10 is directly optically coupled at end face 12 to opto-electronic device 310 without intermediate coupling optics, which is one of the advantages of a hollow-core photonic band-gap fiber. Fiber end face 12 can be positioned within optical fiber guide 160 so that it is flush with bottom 150. Alternatively, fiber end face 12 can be allowed to protrude from fiber guide 160.
In an example embodiment, the bottom surface 150 of lower alignment member 140 includes a projection 151 at second I/O end 170 (see also
In an example embodiment mentioned above, opto-electronic device 310 comprises a broad area optical detector, which like a VCSEL, is commonly implemented using planar fabrication processes. Also like a VCSEL, the detector active area can be optimized to provide low-loss fiber-to-detector coupling as well as high device data rates. The planar process enables 1 D or 2 D layouts and co-location of detector amplification circuitry for high-speed device operation.
Typical opto-electronic devices 310 are packaged using well-established packaging techniques. For example, device substrates are commonly used, with the substrate arranged parallel to the package mounting surface (e.g., a printed circuit board). This configuration is desirable for efficient thermal management of the opto-electronic component, and it also enables standard low-cost electrical interconnection methods (e.g., wire bonding). In the case of optical devices, the configuration also enables relatively simple testing prior to final assembly. Examples of such packing are discussed below.
VCSEL assembly 310 includes a VCSEL substrate 314 that operably supports a VCSEL device 320. VCSEL substrate 314 is supported by a package substrate 324 that includes electrical structure including electrical vias (not shown) that is electrically connected to VCSEL device 320 via bond wires 322. A printed circuit board 330 with electrical wiring 332 is connected to package substrate and electrical vias (not shown) via a ball grid array 340. An alignment structure 400 is used in an example embodiment to align and otherwise operably couple coupler 100 to VCSEL assembly 310.
It is noted here that the cross-sectional views of coupler 100 presented herein depict a 1-dimensional array of one or more fibers 10 by way of illustration. Two-dimensional arrays are also contemplated by the present invention. With reference to
Alignment member 430 may be formed, for example, by bonding a preformed member onto substrate 410. The alignment member 430 can be a molded part or formed from a silicon substrate fabricated by through-wafer KOH etching.
Once alignment structure 400 is properly arranged relative to opto-electronic device 310 (and if necessary, attached thereto), coupler 100 is aligned to the alignment structure and engaged therewith. Coupler 100 may be temporarily held in place via latching elements (not shown) or permanently held in place using thin layers of adhesive 460 in and/or around alignment member 430.
Communication System with Photonic Band-Gap Fiber Assembly
Cable 606 includes respective couplers (connectors) 612 at its opposite ends. PBG fiber assembly 600 includes opto-electronic devices 310 arranged at the respective cable ends and configured to serve as EO/OE converters at their respective ends (i.e., each opto-electronic device 310 can perform EO and OE conversions). In another example embodiment, one of opto-electronic devices 310 serves only as an EO converter while the other serves as an OE converter. The combination of connectors 612 and opto-electronic devices 310 constitute the aforementioned opto-electronic assemblies 300. In an example embodiment illustrated in
In an example embodiment, one or both opto-electronic assemblies 300 present an industry-standard copper connection (interface) 650 (e.g., SFP, MTF, USB, etc.) to electronic devices 660 at one or both ends of PBG fiber assembly 600. In example embodiments, interface 650 is fixed or removable.
In the operation of communication system 590, one of the opto-electronic devices 310 initially serves as an EO converter and receives an input electronic signal from electronic device 660 via interface 650. This opto-electronic device 310 then converts the electronic signal to an output optical signal 622, which is coupled into the one or more hollow cores 30 of one or more fibers 10 via connector 612. Connector 612 and transmitter 310 are shown separated for the sake of illustration; they can also be in contact via compression fitting, epoxy or other fixing means. Optical signal 622 is guided by the one or more hollow cores 30 in the one or more fibers 10 in fiber optic cable 606 to the other connector 612 (e.g., coupler 100 of
PBG fiber assembly 600 provides a number of advantages over assemblies that employ conventional optical fiber. First, light propagation in the hollow core region eliminates the need for optical sub-components used in conventional cable assemblies to focus and convert laser output from its natural “in air” state beam pattern to a beam pattern appropriate for solid glass optical fibers and vice versa. It also eliminates a number of glass-air interfaces that cause loss and optical feedback due to reflection at glass-air interfaces in conventional cable assemblies. This also enables the use of isolator-free implementations.
Further, because of the use of photonic band-gap fiber 10, cables 606 are more robust and in particular can be severely bent without incurring damage or optical loss. This means the cables can be made with less armor and overall bulk. In additional, the use of photonic band-gap fibers 10 provides enhanced optical isolation as compared to conventional fibers, so that the fibers can be densely bundled. The radiation resistance characteristics of photonic band-gap fibers 10 make PBG fiber assembly 600 suitable for use in a number of harsh environments, such as space and nuclear reactors.
Finally, the bend-insensitivity of photonic band-gap fibers 10 allow for a bent coupler 100 to impart a strong bend to the fibers so that PBG cable 606 can be connected to opto-electronic devices in tight spaces.
It will be apparent to those skilled in the art that various modifications and variations can be made to the present invention without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention. Thus, it is intended that the present invention cover the modifications and variations of this invention provided they come within the scope of the appended claims and their equivalents.
This application claims the benefit of priority to U.S. Patent Application Ser. No. 61/130,482, filed on May 30, 2008, the content of which is relied upon and incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/US2009/002989 | 5/14/2009 | WO | 00 | 1/26/2011 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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61130482 | May 2008 | US |