The present disclosure relates to an optical fiber cable holding device for holding an optical fiber cable.
In an optical fiber cable used for communication, a tension member such as steel wire is disposed to prevent an optical fiber core from being stretched more than necessary, for the purpose of securing quality of the communication. In an optical cable connection closure that is used for connection and the like of the optical cable, the optical fiber cable is fixed to prevent bending and damage of optical fibers caused by movement of the optical fiber cable.
For example, Patent Literature 1 discloses that steel wire is suitable for the tension member. Further, Patent Literature 2 discloses a mechanism for bending and press-contact of the tension member and a member for holding an end of a cable.
To lay the optical fiber cable in a section where suppression of electromagnetic induction is required, it is necessary to use a cable including a nonmetallic tension member. An example of the nonmetallic tension member is made of, for example, glass fiber or chemical fiber as a main material. The optical fiber cable is typically required to be housed and fixed in the closure for connection and the like.
Typically, the optical fiber cable is fixed at two positions in the closure. At one of the two positions, the optical fiber cable is held by bending and pressure-contact of the tension member as disclosed in Patent Literature 2. At the other position, the optical fiber cable is held in such a manner that a cable jacket is sandwiched. When the former method is applied to the nonmetallic tension member, the tension member may be damaged because the material of the tension member is fragile unlike a metal, and a holding method to fix the tension member itself is cannot be used. Therefore, the cable is required to be fixed only by the latter method; however, it is not possible to hold the cable with strength sufficient to fix the cable at the single position because large sandwiching force causes buckling deformation of the cable jacket and damages the optical fiber core.
The present disclosure is to solve the above-described issues, and an object of the present disclosure is to fix an optical fiber cable having a nonmetallic tension member in a closure without damaging the tension member and a core.
The invention to solve the above-described issues is a method to fix an optical fiber cable having a nonmetallic tension member in a closure by using a holding band, and the holding band causes appropriate gripping force and appropriate frictional force to act on the cable, which enables fixing of the cable by holding at a single point and eliminates damage by press-contact of the nonmetallic tension member.
More specifically, an optical fiber cable holding device according to the present disclosure includes: a thin plate portion configured, by bending a rectangular thin plate in a length direction thereof into a shape of a rough circle, to hold an outer periphery of an optical fiber cable; a binding mechanism portion fixed on one end of the thin plate portion and configured to bind and fix the thin plate portion wound around the optical fiber cable; protrusion fitting holes provided on the other end of the thin plate portion wound around the optical fiber cable; and a band-diameter adjuster fixed to the binding mechanism portion, including a protrusion fittable into each of the protrusion fitting holes, and configured to adjust a diameter of the rough circle by changing from one hole to another hole of the protrusion fitting holes to be fitted onto the protrusion.
According to the present disclosure, it is possible to fix the optical fiber cable having the nonmetallic tension member in the closure without damaging the tension member and the core.
Some embodiments of the present disclosure are described in detail below with reference to drawings. Note that the present disclosure is not limited to the embodiments described below. These embodiments are merely examples, and the present disclosure can be implemented in forms obtained by variously alternating or modifying the embodiments based on the knowledge of those skilled in the art. Note that, in the present specification and the drawings, components denoted by the same reference numerals mutually denote the same components.
The holding band 1 is manufactured by processing a metal such as stainless steel or a nonmetallic synthetic resin. The band-diameter adjuster 11 and the binding mechanism portion 12 housing the band-diameter adjuster 11 are connected and fixed to one end of the thin plate portion 10. The protrusion fitting holes 13 to be screwed onto protrusions of the band-diameter adjuster 11 are provided on the other end of the thin plate portion 10. The thin plate portion 10 can pass through the binding mechanism portion 12 by being wound, and the band-diameter adjuster 11 fitted to the protrusion fitting holes 13 is tightened to adjust a diameter of a rough circle formed by the thin plate portion 10 and to have a firm grip on an optical fiber cable 2.
Deformation of the jacket 23 occurred by applying the pressure to the optical fiber cable 2 causes contraction of an area of the inner cavity of the optical fiber cable 2. The plurality of optical fibers 21 stored in the optical fiber cable 2 closely contact with one another to generate excessive bending, which influences communication. In a condition where pressure p in a radial direction is applied to the circular optical fiber cable 2 along the circumference, a reduction amount ΔR of a radius R of the inner cavity of the optical fiber cable 2 can be determined by an expression (1) with use of a Young's module E of the jacket 23.
(Math. 1)
ΔR=pR2/tE (1)
In a condition where the optical fiber cable 2 is gripped by the holding band 1, a cross-sectional area S that is a limit for influence on the communication is determined by an expression (2).
(Math. 2)
S=p(R−ΔR)2 (2)
Therefore, the pressure p to fix the optical fiber cable 2 can be increased to a value determined by an expression (3).
As an example, a test in which crushing pressure is applied so as to sandwich two points of a commercially-available optical fiber cable having specifications of
When the optical fiber cable 2 is stretched in such a manner that one end of the optical fiber cable 2 is held in the closure and the other end is anchored to a utility pole or the like, tension in the longitudinal direction occurs on the optical fiber cable 2 due to action of a weight of the cable itself, a wind pressure load applied to the cable, and the like. Hereat, to fix the optical fiber cable 2 in the closure, it is necessary to satisfy an expression (4),
(Math. 4)
F≤2πμw(R+t)p, (4)
where w is a width of the thin plate portion 10 of the holding band 1, μ is a static friction coefficient between the thin plate portion 10 and the optical fiber cable 2, and F is the tension applied to the optical fiber cable in the longitudinal direction of the optical fiber cable. Therefore, the holding band 1 satisfies the gripping force expressed by an expression (5).
(Math. 5)
F/2πμw(R+t)≤p (5)
The gripping force expressed by the above-described expression (5) is realized by the thin plate elastic body 14 illustrated in
The elastic curved portion 15 includes the protrusion 16 on a rear surface of the external contact point with the optical fiber cable 2. When the pressure is applied to the optical fiber cable 2 and the above-described curvature is reduced, the protrusion 16 is caused to fit into one of the protrusion fitting holes 13 as illustrated in
In a configuration according to an embodiment illustrated in
The above-described frictional force application portion and the above-described holding protrusions are added to increase the static frictional coefficient μ acting between the jacket of the optical fiber cable and the holding portion, thereby sufficiently satisfying the following expression. This makes it possible to surely fix the optical fiber cable without applying pressure causing loss of the optical fibers.
The above-described embodiments do not limit the present invention, may be alternated and modified without departing from the gist of the present invention, and includes equivalents thereof.
The present disclosure is applicable to information and communication industry.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/JP2020/008477 | 2/28/2020 | WO |