1. Field of the Invention
This invention relates to optical devices and graded refractive index lenses.
2. Discussion of the Related Art
A graded refractive index (GRIN) lens has a refractive index whose value varies with radial distance from the axis of the lens. The non-trivial variation in refractive index causes light refraction and gives the GRIN lens focusing capabilities that are similar to those of an ordinary lens. Therefore, many optical devices employ GRIN or ordinary lenses interchangeably.
Optical devices use lenses to focus, collimate, or expand light beams.
Since the diameter of a light beam varies along the axis of a GRIN lens, the diameter variations provide a measure of the lens' length. The length over which the variations in the beam diameter make two complete cycles is known as the pitch of the lens. Typically, lengths of GRIN lens are referred to in multiples of the pitch length, e.g., ½ pitch or ¼ pitch.
One apparatus embodying principles of the inventions is a mode converter that reduces losses when waveguides with different propagation modes are end-coupled. In optical fibers, the forms of the propagation modes depend on the radial dependence of the refractive index.
The mode converter includes first and second optical waveguides and a GRIN fiber lens. The GRIN fiber lens is attached to both the first and the second waveguides.
In the Figures, like reference numbers refer to functionally similar features.
1. Grin Fiber Lenses
Exemplary optical fibers 17 include single-mode and multi-mode fibers.
Exemplary GRIN fiber lenses 18 have refractive indexes whose radial profiles differ significantly from those of conventional GRIN fiber lenses. The new radial profiles enable decreased numerical apertures and increased Rayleigh ranges for fiber device 16 as compared to values of the same quantities in conventional fiber device 10 of FIG. 1. The decreased numerical aperture implies that an appropriate length GRIN fiber lens 18 would cause less diffraction and a lower power density in emitted light beam 19 than in the light beam 14 emitted by conventional fiber device 10. The increased Rayleigh range implies that emitted beam 19 is better collimated than the beam 14. The improved properties of the emitted beam 19 facilitate transverse alignments required to end-couple the fiber device 16 to another fiber device (not shown).
In some embodiments of fiber device 16, GRIN fiber lens 18 has an end face 21 that is angle cleaved to reduce back reflections of light into optical fiber 17. In particular, a normal vector to the end-face 21 is preferably cleaved at an angle 1°-2° or less with respect to the axis of the GRIN fiber lens 18. This cleave angle is smaller than a typical cleave angle of about 8° used to lower reflections from its end face back into the optical fiber (not shown). The beam expansion provided by the GRIN fiber lens 18 lowers the amount of angle cleave needed to produce an equivalent reduction in back reflections into the fiber 17.
The new GRIN fiber lens 18 has a circular core 22 and an annular cladding 24 that surrounds the core 22. In the core 22, the refractive index varies with the radial distance from the axis of the GRIN fiber lens 18. In the cladding 24, the refractive index is constant and has a lower value than in the core 22. The GRIN fiber lens has an outer diameter of about 125 μm. The outer diameter is the same as that of conventional GRIN fiber lens 11 shown in FIG. 1. But, the new and conventional GRIN fiber lenses 11, 18 have different radial refractive index profiles due to differences in density distributions of dopant atoms in their cores. Exemplary dopants include germanium (Ge), aluminum (Al), phosphorus (P), and fluorine (F).
The boundaries between core and cladding, i.e., at radial distances of Rc and Rc′, are characterized by abrupt changes in the Ge-dopant densities and/or radial gradients of the densities. The core diameter is larger in the new GRIN fiber lens 18 than in conventional GRIN fiber lens 11, i.e., Rc′>Rc. Increasing the core diameter increases the Rayleigh range of fiber device 16 when a GRIN fiber lens 18 of appropriate length is used therein. Exemplary embodiments of the GRIN fiber lens 18 have an outer diameter of about 125 μm. and a core 22 with a diameter of about 85 μm, preferably 100 μm or more, and more preferably 105 μm or more. In some GRIN fiber lenses 18, cladding is absent so that the core has a diameter of about 125 μm.
The radial profiles 28, 29 also show that the new GRIN fiber lens 18 has a refractive index whose radial profile has a significantly more gentle variation than in the conventional GRIN fiber lens 11. A parameter “g” measures the radial curvature of the refractive index profile in the core of a GRIN fiber lens. In particular, the parameter g is defined as:
Here, “r” is radial distance for the axis of the GRIN fiber lens, n0 is the value of the refractive index on the axis of the GRIN fiber lens, and P(r) is the value of the refractive index at the distance “r” from the axis of the fiber lens.
The GRIN fiber lens 18 has a refractive index profile that has a gentler radial variation over the lens' core. Refractive index profiles of the GRIN fiber lens 18 typically, have radial curvatures that are smaller in magnitude than those disclosed in Table 1 of “Analysis and Evaluation of Graded-Index Fiber-Lenses”, Journal of Lightwave Technology, Vol. LT-5, No. 9 (September 1987), pages 1156-1164, by W. L. Emkey et al (EMKEY), which is incorporated by reference herein in its entirety. Typically, magnitudes of the radial curvature of refractive index profile for embodiments of the GRIN fiber lens 18 are, at least, twice as small as values for the same quantity that are disclosed in EMKEY. Exemplary GRIN fiber lens 18 have a “g” that is less than 1.7×10−6 μm−2, preferable less than about 0.9×10−6 μm−2 and more preferably less than about 5.0×10−7 μm−2. For 125 μm-diameter GRIN fiber lenses 18, values of “g” are selected from the range 1.7×10−6 μm−2 to 5.0×10−7 μm−2 and preferably in the range 0.9×10−6 μm−2 to 5.0×10−7 μm−2 to provide good beam collimation.
Exemplary GRIN fiber lens 18 have core index profiles that vary approximately quadratically in the distance from the lens axis. But, other embodiments of the GRIN fiber lens 18 have non-quadratic index profiles.
Referring again to
The Rayleigh range determines the distance range over which an optical device can couple to a fiber device without substantial losses. The larger Rayleigh range in the new fiber device 16′ makes a larger set of distances available for end-coupling to such a device than are available for the conventional fiber device 10′.
GRIN lenses of equal pitch ordinarily have equal products of gi1/2 times the lens-length. Since the new GRIN fiber lenses 18 have smaller g-values, the new GRIN fiber lenses 18 are ordinarily longer than conventional GRIN fiber lenses 11 of equal pitch. The longer lengths make the new GRIN fiber lenses 18 easier to handle, align, and fuse to optical fibers than the conventional GRIN fiber-lenses 11. The increased lengths also reduce collimation errors associated with cleaving errors that occur during production of the new GRIN fiber lenses 18.
To form the GRIN preform, layers of silica-glass are deposited inside a silica-glass cladding tube by MCVD (step 102). During the MCVD, a time-varying partial pressure of dopant gases is bled into the gas mixture used to deposit silica-glass on the inside of the cladding tube. Exemplary dopants include Ge, Al, P, and F. Introduction of one or more of these dopants into the silica-glass changes the refractive index of the glass. The partial pressure of dopant gas is varied during the MCVD process to produce a non-trivial radial profile of dopant atoms in the final silica-glass preform.
The radial profile in dopant atoms produces a selected radially graded refractive index in the final preform. Exemplary profiles for the dopant density and the refractive index have profiles with concave downward or negative radial curvature. Often, the index profile varies as the square of the distance from the preform's axis in the core of the preform, e.g., profiles 27, 29 of
The method 100 includes using the tube produced by the internal deposition to form the rod-like preform. To form the rod-like preform, heat is applied to partially collapse the tube of doped silica-glass (step 104). In one embodiment, the heating includes making repeated passes of the tube through a hot zone of a furnace. The heating is stopped prior to totally blocking the axial channel in the tube with glass.
After partially collapsing the tube, a silica-glass etchant mixture is passed through the axial channel to remove several layers of glass from the axis of the tube (step 106). An exemplary gaseous etchant mixture includes C2F7, O2, and Cl2. Other gaseous etchant mixtures include HF. The removed layers have lower dopant concentrations than adjacent outer layers of silica-glass, because dopants vaporize and are lost through the tube's axial canal during the heating used to collapse the tube. If these layers with lower dopant densities were not removed, the final preform would have an axial dip in dopant density and a corresponding axial dip in refractive index. The axial dip in refractive index interfered the operation of some conventional GRIN fiber lenses.
After the etching removal of several central layers of glass, the tube is externally heated to finish its collapse to a rod-like preform of doped silica glass (step 108).
After cooling the preform, etchants are applied to the outer surface to remove a selected thickness of cladding tube from the outside of the preform (step 110). Removing a portion of the cladding tube enables subsequent drawing of glass fibers with less or no cladding, e.g., see profiles 27 and 29 in
Fabrication of GRIN fiber lenses also includes using a standard fiber drawing furnace to draw GRIN fiber from the graded-index preform (step 112). After cooling, one end of the drawn GRIN fiber is fused to one end of a standard fiber, i.e., a fiber with a non-graded index core (step 114). To fuse the GRIN and standard fibers, the ends of the two fibers are heated with an electrical arc or a tungsten filament in an argon environment while the ends are appropriately aligned and positioned adjacent each other.
Finally, the GRIN fiber is cleaved to produce an optical lens with a desired length (step 116). The final attached GRIN fiber lenses has a pitch of ¼, ½, or any other desired length and is fused to the fiber on which it functions as a beam collimator and expander.
To reduce reflections from the face of the final fiber device back into the fiber, the cleaving is often performed along a direction that is not perpendicular to the axis of the GRIN fiber. In a non-GRIN optical fiber, cleaving the fiber's end face at an 8 degree angle with respect to a direction perpendicular to the fiber's axis significantly reduces back reflections. For a GRIN fiber lens, this cleaving angle can be reduced to less than 8 degrees from a direction perpendicular to the lens axis to achieve the same reduction in back reflections into an attached optical fiber, e.g., a preferred cleave angle is about 0.5-2 degrees.
The method 100 produces GRIN fiber lenses, e.g. lens 18 of
The GRIN fiber lens 18 of
2. Fiber Devices That Use Grin Fiber Lenses
Various embodiments provide optical fiber devices that are described below. The various devices described can use either conventional GRIN fiber lenses, e.g., lens 11 of
Since optical fibers 36, 38 have different core diameters and/or refractive index jumps, the fibers 36, 38 have propagating modes, e.g., fundamental modes, with different sizes. Herein, the size of a propagating mode is defined as the mode's full-diameter between half-maximum amplitude values. Due to the different sizes of the propagating modes, coupling the optical fibers 36, 38 directly would produce a significant coupling loss of optical energy, i.e., a splice loss.
To reduce splice losses, GRIN fiber lens 43 is positioned between optical fibers 36, 38 and is selected to expand the narrower propagating mode of optical fiber 36 to have a larger diameter that equals that of the propagating mode of the optical fiber 38. Designing the GRIN fiber lens 43 to produce the appropriate size conversion entails selecting an appropriate lens length. One of skill in the art would know how to select the length of GRIN fiber lens 43 based the amount of magnification needed to convert the size of the propagating mode of one fiber 36 into that of the propagating mode of the other fiber 38.
In other embodiments, the mode converter 34 couples a waveguide other than an optical fiber to optical fiber 38.
To select a routing, reflector 54 is moved in or out of the path of the light beam emitted by optical fiber 48. The reflector 54 is fixed to a micro-electro-mechanical (MEM) device 56 that moves the reflector 54 in and out of the beam's optical path in response to electrical signals applied to the MEM device 56.
The GRIN fiber lenses 49, 49′, 49″ improve beam collimation and collection so that terminal ends 58, 60, 62 can be separated by distances that are large enough to enable insertion and removal of reflector 54 in routing region 64. In embodiments of router 46 based on the new GRIN fiber lenses 18 of
In some embodiments, the micro-router 46 has an overall size, S, that is much smaller than the overall size of an analogous router in which the GRIN fiber lenses 49, 49′, 49″ are replaced by conventional lenses with curved refractive surfaces. The lenses with curved refractive surfaces have larger diameters than the GRIN fiber lenses 49, 49′, 49″. The larger lens diameters require positioning the ends of the input and output fibers at larger separations in such a router than in the micro-router 46. The lenses with curved refractive surfaces also typically produce larger diameter collimated beams in the routing region than the fused GRIN fiber lenses 49 of micro-router 46. The larger beam diameters necessitate a larger reflective surface on the routering reflector of the router whose lenses have curved refractive surfaces than would be needed on the reflector 56 of the micro-router 46.
In some embodiments of micro-router 46, the distance, S, characteristic of separations between GRIN lenses 49, 49′, 49″ has a value in the range of about 1-3 times the fiber diameter to about 1-3 times the Rayleigh range, e.g., less than about 1 mm. In these embodiments, the small size of the region 64 between the lenses 49, 49′, 49″ is achieved in part, because diameters of the attached GRIN fiber lenses 49, 49′, 49″ are small and in part, because the reflective surface on reflector 54 has a small beam acceptance window. The acceptance window for reflecting the input beam can be less than the fiber diameter, because the GRIN fiber lens 49 produces a beam waist that is smaller than the diameter of fiber 48. Both the small diameter GRIN fiber lenses 49, 49′, 49″ and the smallness of reflector 54 enable the router 46 to be much smaller than routers that use lenses with curved refractive surfaces.
Arranging the fibers 48, 50, 52 in array 68 makes the width of the router 46′ roughly equal to the width, W, of the array 68. The small diameters and fine collimation of GRIN fiber lenses 49, 49′, 49″ enable packing the fibers 48, 50, 52 closely in the array 68. Thus, embodiments of the router 46 can have a width, W, that is much smaller than the width of a similar-form router in which lenses with curved refractive surfaces replace the GRIN fiber lenses 49, 49′, 49″.
Exemplary reflectors 76 include mirrors that move or rotate and diffraction gratings that reflect light in a wavelength dependent manner. For example, the router may be a spectrally sensitive demultiplexer for a wavelength division multiplexed network.
The GRIN fiber lenses 770-77N expand and collimate the light beam 78 of the input optical fiber 72 and focus the light beam 78 into the output optical fibers 741-74N. Due to the GRIN fiber lenses 770-77N, the output array 73 of optical fibers 741-74N and input optical fiber 72 can be separated by an optical path that is long enough to enable insertion of bulk reflector 76 into the path without significant coupling losses. For the router 70 coupling losses are typically less than about 0.5 dB-0.2 dB and preferably less than about 0.1 dB.
In micro-optical router 70, GRIN fiber lens 770 focuses the beam from fiber 72 onto a reflective acceptance window on the reflector 76. Perpendicular to direction D, the diameter of the acceptance window is less than the fiber diameter. Also, the use of the GRIN fiber lenses 770-77N enables an increased fiber packing density in the array 73 without interference between light beams reflected towards different ones of the fibers 741-74N. Finally, the use of GRIN fiber lens 770 enables the acceptance window and overall size of reflector 76 to be smaller than that of the reflector that would otherwise be needed in a router using lenses curved refractive surfaces (not shown). Thus, using the GRIN fiber lenses 770-77N enables greater miniaturization in micro-router 70 than in a fiber router based on lenses with curved refractive surfaces.
Other embodiments use the GRIN fiber lens 18 of
By using attached GRIN fiber lenses 851-85N, 861-86M the fiber packing densities in the arrays 81, 83 can be increased above fiber packing densities of an N×M fiber router in which lenses with curved refractive surfaces (not shown) replace the GRIN fiber lenses 851-85N, 861-86M of FIG. 9. Similarly, sizes of reflective surfaces of reflectors 88F1-88FN, 89R1-89RN in the router 80 are smaller than sizes of reflective surfaces of reflectors in routers based on lenses with curved refractive surfaces, because the beam diameters produced by the GRIN fiber lenses 851-85N are small. Both effects enable the new N×M to be smaller than an N×M router based on lenses with curved refractive surfaces.
Other embodiments of the invention will be apparent to those skilled in the art in light of the specification, drawings, and claims of this application.
This is a divisional of application Ser. No. 09/896,789, filed Jun. 29, 2001, now Abandoned. This application claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 60/269,586, filed Feb. 17, 2001, and of U.S. Provisional Application No. 60/292,013, filed May 19, 2001.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
4217027 | MacChesney et al. | Aug 1980 | A |
4262035 | Jaeger et al. | Apr 1981 | A |
4493212 | Nelson | Jan 1985 | A |
4701011 | Emkey et al. | Oct 1987 | A |
4900120 | Caviglia et al. | Feb 1990 | A |
4909816 | MacChesney et al. | Mar 1990 | A |
5050954 | Gardner et al. | Sep 1991 | A |
5076672 | Tsuda et al. | Dec 1991 | A |
5321501 | Swanson | Jun 1994 | A |
5337380 | Darbon et al. | Aug 1994 | A |
5384874 | Hirai et al. | Jan 1995 | A |
5566260 | Laughlin | Oct 1996 | A |
5608831 | Pan | Mar 1997 | A |
5621832 | Yokoyama et al. | Apr 1997 | A |
5680237 | Cheng | Oct 1997 | A |
5701375 | Duck et al. | Dec 1997 | A |
5757993 | Abe | May 1998 | A |
5844410 | Ikuta et al. | Dec 1998 | A |
5881195 | Walker | Mar 1999 | A |
5905838 | Judy et al. | May 1999 | A |
5910839 | Erskine | Jun 1999 | A |
5956355 | Swanson | Sep 1999 | A |
6014483 | Thual et al. | Jan 2000 | A |
6105396 | Glodis et al. | Aug 2000 | A |
6131413 | Rousseau et al. | Oct 2000 | A |
6134003 | Tearney et al. | Oct 2000 | A |
6172817 | Senapati et al. | Jan 2001 | B1 |
6219477 | Peck, Jr. | Apr 2001 | B1 |
6222954 | Riza | Apr 2001 | B1 |
6280100 | Haake | Aug 2001 | B1 |
6366716 | Graves | Apr 2002 | B1 |
6373048 | Tschanun | Apr 2002 | B1 |
6411753 | Ao | Jun 2002 | B1 |
6445939 | Swanson et al. | Sep 2002 | B1 |
6449406 | Fan et al. | Sep 2002 | B1 |
6485413 | Boppart et al. | Nov 2002 | B1 |
6507438 | Bhagavatula | Jan 2003 | B2 |
6542665 | Reed et al. | Apr 2003 | B2 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
512393 | Jun 1994 | DE |
0972752 | Jan 2000 | EP |
1035083 | Sep 2000 | EP |
WO 0111409 | Feb 2001 | WO |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20040028329 A1 | Feb 2004 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
60292013 | May 2001 | US | |
60269586 | Feb 2001 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
Parent | 09896789 | Jun 2001 | US |
Child | 10635430 | US |