The present invention relates to methods and arrangements for calibration of fusion temperature in an optical fiber splicing device.
It is well known that fusion temperature in a splicer will be varied due to significant changes of operating environment, e.g. changes of altitude, temperature and humidity etc. For the well-defined operating environment, the fusion temperature can still be varied because of changes in electrode conditions, e.g. wear of the electrodes, dynamic changes of silica layers deposited on the electrodes. Even for the same settings of fusion parameters (e.g. fusion currents and fusion time etc.), finite tolerance in manufacture processes of splicers may also result in different fusion temperature among identical type of splicers. As a consequence of fusion temperature variation, inconsistent splicing results (e.g. in term of splice losses, splice strength and loss estimation etc.) will occur in a particular splicer and/or among identical splicers.
During past decades, many scientists have devoted their efforts to study and model the impacts of different factors in splicing processes, e.g. the operating environment, the electrode conditions and the machinery tolerances etc. Up to the date, suitable models have not been seen for commercial splicers, which could be attributed to primarily technical reasons and rather complicated nature of the involved splicing processes. Thus, instead of modeling individual factors, different calibrating processes for deriving the integrated effect of these factors have been proposed and developed, which involve directly or indirectly measuring discharge heat energy and/or fusion temperature. That is the so-called arc-test or the arc-check process.
One of frequently referred methods is the fiber-meltback method disclosed by Sumitomo's patent JP5150132 and Fujikura's U.S. Pat. No. 5,009,513. With the method, the fiber ends are positioned with a known gap distance and then heated by the electrical arc. The heating process causes a retraction of fiber ends and results in an increase of gap distance. By measuring the amount of change in the gap distance, the discharge heat energy can be determined. Unfortunately, it is found that, the retraction of fiber ends is strongly affected by the degree of arc-spread (e.g. changes in the effective width of arc intensity profile). The method therefore does not give the high accuracy of calibration.
Another type of methods are the offset-splicing methods (cf. Ericsson's U.S. Pat. No. 5,772,327; Fujikura's U.S. Pat. No. 4,948,412 and U.S. Pat. No. 6,294,760). With these methods, two fibers are spliced with an initial core/cladding axial offset. Due to surface tension effects, a reduction of the axial offset will occur during splicing processes. By measuring the relative reduction of the offset, the discharge heat energy is determined. Though the methods are less sensitive to the degree of arc-spread, the process could be however strongly affected by the “arc-walk”, i.e. the spatial movement of arc intensity profile due to dynamic changes of silica layers deposited on the electrodes. The arc-walk changes the amount of energy deposited on the offset-splicing point, which in turn results in the inconsistent results from one calibration to the other.
The other methods, such as the method of barometric sensor (cf. Fujikura's patents, EP583155 and EP504519) and the method of electrode-impedance-detection (cf. Furukawa's patent, JP9005559), rely mainly on the hardware construction in the splicer. Thus, the method is not applicable to compensate differences in fusion currents among identical splicers due to finite tolerances of hardware components. And, the reliability of these methods may also suffer from those components having high sensitivity to operating environment.
The present invention relates to problems how to develop methods that can provide high reliability and high accuracy of calibrating fusion temperature in an optical fiber splicing device, without drawbacks of existing techniques wherein outer circumstances not are taken into full account.
An object of the invention is to establish a reliable calibration method.
The problem is solved by the invention by a method for fusion temperature calibration where changes in altitude and arc-spread are considered.
More in detail the problem is solved by the invention by a method for calibrating fusion temperature in an optical fiber splicing device wherein fusion currents to an electrical arc that is heating the fiber splicing, are compensated in terms of altitude where the calibration is performed. The fusion temperature is determined based on real-time detecting of a reduction of cladding diameter of the warm-fiber positioned at the center of the electrical arc. The fusion temperature determination is used to calculate new currents needed for replacing values of expected fusion currents in various splicing processes.
An advantage with the invention is that the method according to the invention provides high reliability and high accuracy of calibration.
The invention will now be described more in detail with the aid of preferred embodiments in connection with the enclosed drawings.
a-5c disclose a comparison of CCD-camera saturation for different target fusion currents.
a-7d disclose intensity profiles at both the horizontal and vertical directions, and their analysis.
a-9b disclose a flow chart for fusion current calibration.
When an optical fiber is heated by electrical arc, temperature in the center of fusion area is over 2000° C. In such a high temperature, the fiber in the fusion area is liquidized. Since the viscosity of liquid decreases with increasing temperature, a temperature dependence of viscosity distribution will be created in the fusion area, which results in tangential forces at the vicinity of cladding and/or inside of the fiber. As a consequence, the reduction of cladding diameter at the center of electrical arc will occur during an extended fusion time. The reduction area of cladding will be expanded with increasing fusion time due to the effects of viscosity and surface tension. Finally, the fiber will get broken. The progress of this unique phenomenon is schematically shown in
During experiments, we discovered that the total fusion time at which the significant reduction of cladding diameter occurs can be strongly correlated to the amount of arc discharge energy deposited on the fiber. In other words, for a well-defined target fusion current (i.e. the current used in the calibrating processes), variations of fusion temperature can be derived by measuring the amount of increasing/decreasing fusion time defined by the relative reduction of cladding diameter.
In order to make use of the unique phenomenon shown in
We have to point out that the pre-process of making an ordinary splice is not necessary to be part of the calibrating process. In principle, the calibrating process requests only to heat up a bare fiber (e.g. a window-stripped fiber). In the experiments, it is observed however that the window-stripped fiber could be bent during fusion processes due to the initial offset between the left and right fiber-holder system at transverse (x, y) directions. The bending could induce an error in the measurement of warm-fiber diameters, which in turn degrades the accuracy of calibration.
Therefore, in the present invention, the pre-process of making an ordinary splice is introduced to create an automatic self-alignment of the fiber-holder system to remove the offset. Alternatively, the pre-process for automatically aligning the fiber-holder system could also be done with help of the built-in position sensors at transverse (x, y) directions in the splicer.
By carefully studying the unique phenomenon shown in
The experimental data (solid circles) shown in
t=c1e−c2I (1)
Where, c1 and c2 are fitting constants.
With the help of equation (1), the variations of fusion temperature due to the changes of operating environment, the changes of electrodes conditions and the machinery tolerances can be calibrated. Let's assume that, for a given target fusion current Ic,1, the expected fusion time according to equation (1) is t1. After executing the calibrating processes, one gets the measured fusion time t2. Thus, the effective fusion current Ic,2 can be calculated according to equation (1). One gets the amount of fusion current needed for compensation:
ΔIc=Ic,1−Ic,2 (2)
If one assumes that the compensating current ΔIc derived from a given target current Ic,1 can be applied to all fusion currents Ii (i=1,2 . . . ) in splicing processes, the new currents INew,i need for replacing values of fusion currents Ii in various splicing processes should be:
INEW,i=Ii+ΔIc i=1,2, . . . (3)
The remaining questions are how to select a suitable target current Ic,1 for the calibration and what amount of the error could be induced according to the assumption given in the equation (3).
It is clear that, the optimal main fusion current IOpt, in principle, should be used as the target current for calibrating processes since the IOpt is one of the most important parameters for achieving the lowest splice losses. Due to practical reasons, however, one may prefer to perform the calibration processes with a different target current Ic,1 instead of IOpt (i.e. IOpt≠Ic,1). Let's take Ericsson FSU15 splicer as an example. If one sets Ic,1=IOpt=8 mA as the target fusion current, the expected time t1 for calibration process will be significantly long, t1≈91 seconds. It is well known that long fusion time can cause the problem of arc instability. To avoid the problem of arc instability, one may need to increase Ic,1 to some extend, e.g. using Ic,1=9.5 MA (the corresponding t1≈11 sec) to speed up the calibrating process. Thus, it is interesting to estimate the calibrating error if one uses different target currents for the calibration.
From basic physics, one learns that fusion temperature T is proportional to the arc discharge energy or the power consumption during fusion processes, that is:
T∝VI=(AP/ne)I2 (4)
Where, V is the fusion voltage applied on the electrodes and ne is the electron density in the arc, P is the air pressure, and A is a proportional constant. For a well-defined altitude, both P and ne are constants. Therefore, the equation (4) can be rewritten by introducing another constant K:
T=KI2 (5)
Assuming that the compensating current is ΔIc, and temperature variations for the optimal main fusion temperature and the target fusion temperature are: ΔTOpt and ΔT1(TOpt≠T1), respectively. One gets:
TOpt+ΔTOpt=K(IOpt+ΔIc)2 (6)
T1+ΔT1=K(Ic,1+ΔIc)2 (7)
Since ΔIc2<<IOpt2 and ΔIc2<<Ic,12, the equations (6)-(7) can be approximated by:
TOpt+ΔTOpt≈K(IOpt2+2IOptΔIc) (8)
T1+ΔT1≈K(Ic,12+2Ic,1ΔIc) (9)
Inserting the equation (5) into (8) and (9), one gets:
ΔTOpt=2KIOptΔIc (10)
ΔT1=2KIc,1ΔIc (11)
That is:
ΔTOpt=(IOpt/Ic,1)ΔT1 (12)
Assuming the offset current between IOpt and Ic,1 is ΔIOff (i.e. ΔIOff=Ic,1−IOpt), the error δErr in fusion temperature calibration due to the offset current ΔIOff can be estimated by:
ΔTOpt/ΔT1=(1−δErr) (13)
δErr=ΔIOff/Ic,1 (14)
If (Ic,1−IOpt)≧0, one gets ΔTOpt/ΔT1≦1, which means that one overestimates the fusion temperature with the error of δErr. On the other hand, if (Ic,1−IOpt)<0, one get ΔTOpt/ΔT1>1, meaning the underestimate of the fusion temperature by δErr.
Taking derivative in the equation (5), one gets:
ΔT≈2KIΔI (15)
Insetting (5) into (15), one gets:
ΔT/T≈2ΔI/I (16)
The equation (16) shows that the relative change of fusion current is a factor of two smaller than that of fusion temperature. Therefore, one could estimate the error due to ΔIOff,i=Ic,1−Ii for different fusion currents Ii (i=1,2 . . . ) in various splicing processes by:
δErr,i(Ii)=0.5(Ic,1−Ii)/Ic,1 (17)
In order to make an accurate calibration, we introduce an error correction factor δi for compensating the error in the calibrating process. Thus, the equation (3) can be rewritten by:
INew,i=Ii+δiΔIc; i=1,2 . . . (18)
δi=1−δErr,i=1−0.5(Ic,1−Ii)/Ic,1 (19)
Where, i=1,2 . . . is the number of fusion currents needed for compensation. For Ericsson FSU15FI splice (i=1, 2 . . . 6), these currents are the pre-fuse current, the gap current, the overlap current, the main current, the pull current and the relax current in various splicing processes.
Furthermore, it is also interesting to check what is the best range for setting the target current Ic,1 to perform the calibration and what is the estimated accuracy in term of the fusion current compensation.
By close inspection of
For estimation of accuracy in the process, let's assume that fusion currents are varied by ±0.1 mA in the range Ic,1≈9.5˜9.0 mA. According to
The concept of the arc recentering was first proposed by W. Huang et. al. (cf. Ericsson's patent WO01/86331). With the concept, warm-images obtained in splicing processes are evaluated to predict positions of arc center for setting the best splicing points in a sequence of splices. In contrast to the previous method of prediction, in the present invention, we extend the concept of the arc recentering to directly reposition fiber ends with respect to the arc-center detected in the pre-fusion process before splicing. That is the so-called direct arc recentering process.
The light intensity profile of air-discharge was extracted from the warm-image at the position of the fine-line indicated in
For an automatic fusion splicer, the CCD-camera together with an imaging processor is used for image analysis. In order to increase the dynamic range of imaging system, the CCD-camera usually has a built-in auto-gain control (AGC) function defined by control parameters, e.g. the integration time (IT) and the gain (G) of pre-amplifier.
When the electrical arc heats the fiber, the light emission from solid plasma excitation inside fiber can also be observed by the CCD-camera. The light emission spectrum covers a wide range from UV to infrared. The CCD-camera responds mostly the visible light. And, the light intensity distribution obtained from the CCD-camera depends strongly on the CCD-settings (e.g. IT and G).
In normal splicing applications, the AGC-function has to be active in order to remove the saturation of CCD-camera so that the information from the fiber-core can be extracted for analyzing splicing results, e.g. estimating splice losses. In the preset application of calibration, however, the most important information having to be extracted from warm-images is the changes of cladding diameter occurring at the arc center rather than the information of the fiber-core.
From
In contrast to the measurement of initial arc-center X0, the positions of arc-center Xc during calibration are extracted using the light emission from the fiber instead of from the air-discharge. The position of the arc-center Xc is determined at the position of about ¼ width of the warm-fiber shown by the crossing-cursor at the horizontal direction in
With the technique of arc-center detection, the arc-walk defined by ΔX=Xc−X0 can be monitored in real-time (here, the arc-walk is ΔX=368−359.5=8.5 pixels). If significant changes of arc-center positions are found (e.g. ΔX≧20 μm) during the calibrating process, a warning is given to the operator. Thus, the technique opens the possibility for the operator to control the calibrating process and redo the calibration. Therefore, the calibration error due to the arc-walk can be further limited.
b shows the intensity profile of warm-fiber diameter extracted at the position of initial arc-center (X0=359.5 pixels) shown in
In
Our previous studies show that the significant changes of altitude can give a very strong impact to the fusion temperature. In
From the calibrating model shown in
By carefully fitting the data shown in
I*j=h1Ij+(h2H+h3Ij+h4)2+h5 (20)
Where, H is the altitude. Ij (j=1,2, . . . ) are the fusion currents before compensation. While, I*j (j=1,2, . . . ) are the compensating currents used in the calibrating process. The hk(k=1,2, . . . 5) are fitting parameters.
Thus, the equations (18) and (19) used for compensating fusion currents in various splicing processes should be rewritten to:
INew, i=I*i+δiΔIc; i=1,2 . . . 6 (21)
δi=1−δErr,i=1−0.5(Ic,1−Ii)/Ic,1 (22)
I*i=h1Ii+(h2H+h3Ii+h4)2+h5 (23)
In order to develop an automatic process for altitude compensation, the altitude H has to be detected automatically. There are many methods to get the value of H, e.g. using a built-in commercial altimeter in the splicer, or getting H value just by an educated guess with available knowledge and information.
In the present invention, we propose a method to construct an altimeter by making use of a barometric pressure sensor. According to basic physics (cf. Concise Encyclopedia of Science and Technology, McGraw Hill, 3rd edition 1994, in the article Pressure Altimeter), the relation between the altitude and the pressure can be expressed by:
P=b1(1−b2H)b
Where P and H are the standard barometric pressure and the altitude, respectively. The equation can be held for the altitude up to 4500 meters above the sea level. The b1, b2, and b3 are the fitting parameters and the b4 is the calibrating constant of the pressure sensor.
According to the discussion above, a process of “arc-check” for fusion temperature calibration is developed and implemented in Ericsson FSU15 splicers. The calibrating processes are presented in the program flow chart shown in
To recover the optimal fusion temperature, the calibrating result ΔIc and the altitude H are automatically invoked to compensate fusion currents in various fusion processes. The working principle is shown by the program flow chart in
The invention is of course not limited to the above described and in the drawings shown embodiments but can be modified within the scope of the enclosed claims.
This application claims priority from PCT/SE03/00529 filed on Apr. 2, 2003, which claims benefit of U.S. Application No. 60/431,035 filed on Dec. 5, 2002.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/SE03/00529 | 4/2/2003 | WO | 00 | 5/25/2005 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO03/096088 | 11/20/2003 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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5772327 | Zheng | Jun 1998 | A |
6294760 | Inoue et al. | Sep 2001 | B1 |
Number | Date | Country |
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0583155 | Feb 1994 | EP |
0740172 | Apr 1996 | EP |
1039319 | Sep 2000 | EP |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20060074516 A1 | Apr 2006 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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60431035 | Dec 2002 | US |