This invention relates to methods for making depressed index optical fibers.
Depressed clad optical fibers were developed in the early 1980's as an alternative to fibers with doped cores and less heavily doped, or undoped annular cladding. See, e.g., U.S. Pat. No. 4,439,007. Using depressed cladding allows the manufacture of optical fibers with relatively low core doping. These cores produce low optical loss. More commonly, depressed cladding is used in combination with conventional core doping levels to produce high delta core designs with a now well-recognized “W” profile. A depressed inner cladding allows the use of an undoped outer cladding. Without the depressed inner cladding it would be necessary to use a doped outer cladding to realize the same “W” profile.
Applications have been developed for both single mode and multimode depressed clad fibers, and a variety of processes for the manufacture of depressed clad fibers were also developed. See e.g. U.S. Pat. No. 4,691,990, the disclosure of which is incorporated herein by reference.
Recently, there has been a renewed interest in depressed clad fibers for lightwave systems in which control of non-linear effects is important. For example, in four-wave mixing of optical frequencies in the 1.5-1.6 mm wavelength region where DWDM networks operate, a low slope, low dispersion fiber is required. A fiber structure that meets this requirement is one with multiple claddings including one or more of down-doped silica.
The most common technique for making depressed clad fibers is to dope the cladding of a fiber with fluorine or boron, thus producing a cladding with a refractive index less than the germanium-doped or pure-silica core. For example, fibers with negative normalized refractive index difference, Δn, in the range 0.05-0.7% have been obtained using fluorine doping. This approach is typically used to produce the “W” index profile and is found to be desirable for dispersion control. Manufacture of these fibers can be accomplished using any of the standard fabrication processes, including the Vapor Axial Deposition (VAD) process, but the process is complicated by the step of selectively doping the shell region with fluorine. Fluorine diffuses readily into the porous structure and it is difficult to prevent fluorine migration into the germania doped core region, thus resulting in a core that is counter-doped with fluorine. That erases the benefit of down-doping the cladding. An approach to overcome the effect of core counter-doping is to increase the germania doping level in the core. However, high doping levels in the core lead to increased scattering loss.
Fibers with depressed index cores or cladding have been produced using any of the conventional optical fiber production techniques. These include rod in tube (RIT) processes, the inside tube deposition processes: Modified Chemical Vapor Deposition (MCVD), Chemical Vapor Deposition, and Plasma Chemical Vapor Deposition PCVD, and the outside tube deposition processes: Vapor Axial Deposition (VAD) and Outside Vapor Deposition (OVD). For single mode depressed clad fibers, the rod-in-tube approach may be preferred due to the large amount of cladding material required. Preforms for these fibers require a high quality, low loss cladding tube.
The effect of counter-doping of a porous soot body described above would also appear to favor a rod-in-tube (RIT) process. In a RIT process, the core is a consolidated rod and the cladding is a consolidated tube. In this case the movement of fluorine ions is minimized since all movement is via solid/solid diffusion rather than the much faster vapor/solid permeation that occurs in a soot body. However, preform fabrication techniques that use glass over-cladding tubes suffer from contamination. Even trace amounts of contaminants adversely affect the transmission properties of the glass. Over-cladding tubes for outer cladding are effective, and frequently used, but the use of over-cladding tubes for inner cladding has not been entirely successful.
The prior art choice for inner cladding is therefore between soot methods, where the entire inner cladding is produced with time-consuming soot deposition, and RIT methods, where the use of an overclad tube for the inner cladding produces loss.
We have developed a method that at least partly overcomes the problems just described. It involves making the fluorine doped inner cladding in two steps. The innermost portion of the inner cladding is produced using a soot method, thereby deriving the advantages of the soot method for the region of the cladding that carries the most optical power, then forming the remaining portion of the inner cladding layer using a rod-in-tube step. This method effectively marries the advantages and disadvantages of both methods.
The invention is directed to the manufacture of optical fibers with refractive index profiles having at least one depressed index region. In the preferred embodiment the depressed index region comprises the inner cladding of the optical fiber. The depressed region is formed using a combination of two steps. A first step, using soot formation, produces the innermost portion of the inner cladding layer, followed by a second step, using RIT, to complete the inner cladding layer. This is illustrated schematically in
With reference to
Δ=(n(r)−nSiO2)/nSiO2
where n(r) is the index of refraction as a function of radial position and nSiO2 is the index of refraction of pure silica. The core has a positive Δ, the inner cladding has a negative Δ, and the outer cladding 13 has a zero Δ. Typically, the outer cladding region 13 is formed using a silica tube.
The core 11, and the innermost cladding region 15 are preferably prepared using VAD. With reference to
The core is typically silica doped with germania. In the embodiment used to demonstrate the invention, the inner cladding layer is a depressed index cladding prepared using fluorine-doped silica. After the dehydration and sintering steps, these combine to produce a finished core rod with a refractive index difference between the core and the inner cladding.
As is well known, the core and cladding may be made with a wide variety of compositions to produce many types of index profiles. More than one cladding layer may be made. More details on the basic VAD process can be found in U.S. Pat. No. 6,928,841 issued Aug. 16, 2005, which is incorporated herein by reference. It will be understood that whereas in the embodiment shown, the depressed index cladding layer is the inner cladding layer, the invention is directed to making depressed index layers in general. However, it will also be appreciated by those skilled in the art that the invention is particularly adapted to manufacturing optical fibers having profiles where the depressed index layer is in close proximity to the center core of the optical fiber, preferably adjacent the center core.
Deposition of core soot is produced by torch 33 and deposition of cladding soot by torch 34. The torches are oxy-hydrogen torches with a flame fed by oxygen and hydrogen to control the temperature of the reaction zones in a known fashion. The two torches operate in tandem as shown, one following the other, so that the core soot is deposited first, followed by the cladding soot deposited on the core soot. The flow controller and the two torch assemblies also provide the supply of glass precursor gases to the reaction zones. The glass precursor gases used to produce the core soot typically comprise SiCl4 and GeCl4 in an inert carrier gas. The precursor gases for the inner portion 15 of the depressed cladding may be SiCl4 and CF4. Other fluorine sources may also be used, e.g. XeF, SiF4.
The pull rate is adjusted, according to variations detected at the tip location, by a core growth rate monitor similar to that shown at 37, but with the signal from the core growth rate monitor used, as indicated by feed-back loop 23 in
Improved control of the VAD process may be obtained by independently monitoring the growth rates of the core soot and the cladding soot. This may be implemented using independent monitors 36 and 37 for the cladding and core growth rates respectively. Any change in either is fed back to computer 38, which computes the control action sent to flow controlling unit 31. As just described, the flow controlling unit controls the flow of glass precursor gases to the reaction zones of both the core soot and the cladding soot, and controls the temperature of both reactions by controlling the flow of fuel gases to the torches 33 and 34. In the arrangement shown, control of the core soot and cladding soot reactions is independent, and may be implemented by controlling the flow rate of the precursor gases, the fuel gases, or both. This is described in more detail in U.S. Pat. No. 6,923,024, issued Aug. 2, 2005, which is incorporated by reference herein.
Following soot deposition the porous soot body is consolidated by heating to a temperature sufficient to sinter the silica particles into a solid, dense, glass rod. Consolidation is typically performed by heating the soot body to a temperature of 1400° C. to 1600° C. After cooling, the solid rod is ready for a RIT process.
The second portion 16 of the depressed cladding layer 12 is formed using a RIT method. The tube is a fluorine-doped silica tube as described earlier. The level of doping in the fluorine tube is chosen to provide a refractive index for the glass tube that is at least as negative as that of the innermost cladding region 15. The doping level in the tube may be graded but is typically uniform.
A typical rod-in-tube approach is shown in
In the embodiment represented by
The completed preform is then used for drawing optical fiber in the conventional way.
Coating materials for optical fibers are typically urethanes, acrylates, or urethane-acrylates, with a UV photoinitiator added. The apparatus in
The invention in principle was demonstrated as described above, and a specific design of an optical fiber refractive index profile according to the invention is shown in
Use of the two-step cladding formation process of the invention makes possible the fabrication of very wide and very deep depressed index regions. The depressed index region in
W
D=(DF−DC)/2
where DF is the diameter of the F-doped region (appr. 46 microns in
Since an important advantage in using soot derived glass for the innermost cladding is to provide high quality, low loss glass in the outer region of the optical power envelope of the propagating wave, the width of the soot derived portion of the depressed cladding is preferably substantial, i.e. at least 0.25 WD, and preferably at least approximately 0.5 WD. Also in a preferred case, at least 50% of the width of the soot derived glass depressed index inner-cladding glass has a Δ more negative than −0.0005. It is also preferred that essentially all of the tube derived glass has a Δ more negative than −0.0005. Combining these characteristics, at least 75% of the width WD of the depressed layer will have a Δ more negative than −0.0005.
In the preferred embodiment of the invention, wherein a portion of the depressed index region is derived from VAD-soot and a portion of the depressed index region is derived from RIT overclad tube, the profile has the following characteristics:
The outer cladding 13 is preferably un-doped silica, and may extend to the outer surface of the fiber. Alternatively, other profile features may be incorporated, such as an up-doped ring to control microbending losses.
In the finished preform, it is expected that the depressed region will exhibit a physical interface or discontinuity between the soot-derived glass and the tube-derived glass. Thus the preform can be characterized structurally by a depressed region comprising a portion of VAD or OVD soot-derived glass and a portion of overclad tube-derived glass. These characterizations have acquired specific meaning in the context of this specification, and are therefore terms that would be clear and definite to those skilled in the art. Since the optical fiber drawn from the preform is known to replicate all of the material characteristics of the preform, the optical fiber may be defined by the same characteristics.
The terms up-doped and down-doped as used herein are also terms well known to those skilled in the art. An up-doped glass or glass region is one that is doped to have a refractive index greater than that of pure silica. A down-doped glass or glass region is one that is doped to have a refractive index less than that of pure silica.
In concluding the detailed description, it should be noted that it will be obvious to those skilled in the art that many variations and modifications may be made to the preferred embodiment without substantial departure from the principles of the present invention. All such variations, modifications and equivalents are intended to be included herein as being within the scope of the present invention, as set forth in the claims.
The application is a Continuation of application Ser. No. 11/366,361, filed Mar. 2, 2006.
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 11366361 | Mar 2006 | US |
Child | 12148891 | US |