The present invention relates to a novel method of making optical glass fibers based on low-temperature glasses such as fluoride and heavy-metal oxide glasses, including known low-temperature glasses, free or substantially free of defects such as micro-bubbles. Low-temperature glasses are those which have a low viscosity at the melt temperature.
Prior art related to heavy-metal oxide glasses such as GeO2-based glasses and fibers shows that they possess high transmission in the mid-IR wavelength region, high mechanical strength, and moisture resistance1. These characteristics allow heavy-metal oxide glass fibers to play a major role in remote sensing in the mid-IR as well as in mid-IR laser surgical applications.
Laser surgery involving mid-infrared lasers such as Er:YAG laser (2.94 micron emission) and Er:YSGG (2.79 micron emission) is evolving at a fast pace. Examples of laser surgery involving Er:YAG and ER:YSGG lasers are laser dentistry (cavity preparation, carries removal, and root canal procedure), and ophthalmology (cataract and vitreous tissue removal). Since human tissues contain water which has the highest absorption coefficient at around 3.0 microns, mid-IR lasers are very efficient in precise cutting and ablating. Presently, the most common fiber delivery system for mid-IR lasers uses a heavy-metal oxide glass fiber, preferably a Germanium Oxide (GeO2)-based glass optical fiber as disclosed in Tran U.S. Pat. No. 5,274,728. GeO2-based fibers have good transmission at 2.79 and 2.94 microns, are capable of handling high power and are resistant to attack from humidity.
The prior art describes two methods of making optical fibers from low temperature-glasses, described for fluoride glass fibers. The first method, termed rotational casting2, consists of rotating a molten fluoride cladding glass inside a metallic mold to form a solid tube, then pouring a molten fluoride core glass melt inside the tube to form a preform. The preform is then drawn into fibers consisting of a core surrounding by the cladding glass.
The second prior method, called build-in casting3, consists of casting the clad melt inside a metallic mold and then upsetting the mold. A layer of melt solidifies around the cavity of the mold to form a cladding tube, and the inner part spills out. The core melt is then cast inside the cladding tube to form a preform.
The main problem associated with these two methods is that it takes at least 10 seconds before the core melt can be cast inside the cladding tube. In the case of rotational casting, it takes at least 10 seconds for the rotation to stop; furthermore, as the cladding melt is rotating inside the mold at around 2,000 rpm, the molten glass melt is pushed against the mold opening by centrifugal force, throwing glass debris and even loose fibers which are deposited at the opening of the mold. In this case it takes time to clear away the deposits from the mold opening before the core melt can be poured inside the cavity.
The same drawback can be seen in the build-in casting approach. Here, as the inert part of the cladding melt spills out, strands of glass fibers solidify around the opening. These glass strands must be broken off and cleared away before the core can be cast in.
The time lapses in casting the core melt in both prior art methods result in an important drop in the temperature of the cladding glass. As a result, a degree of non-wetting occurs at the core-clad interface when the hot core melt is poured in. Non-wetting refers to the incomplete fusion of the core glass and the cladding class originating from the difference in temperature, and gives rise to micro-bubbles at the core-clad interface of the preform.
Micro-bubbles at the core-clad interface of the preform remain in the resultant fiber when the preforms are drawn into fibers. Interface bubbles in the fiber can cause high scattering loss and limits the power transmission of the fiber delivery system.
It is an object of the present invention to over-come defects in the prior art such as those mentioned above.
It is another object to provide an improved method of making preforms of low-temperature glasses from which improved optical glass fibers can be and are formed.
It is yet another object to provide an improved laser device for laser surgery which employs such an optical glass fiber.
It is further object of the present invention to provide an improved mold for forming such a preform.
The system of the present invention involves providing a casting mold for the preform, which casting mold permits the draining of molten cladding glass from the bottom of the mold cavity, casting the cladding glass in the mold cavity to form the cladding, draining the cladding glass from the bottom of the mold, and quickly casting the core glass within the resultant annular cladding to form the preform from which the optical glass fiber can then be drawn, the quick casting being optionally simultaneous with the draining of the cladding glass.
The following detailed description of embodiments will now further describe the invention in conjunction with the drawing, wherein:
The present invention provides a new method of making bubble-free low-temperature glass preforms and optical fibers from fluoride glass, GeO2-based glass, and other low temperature glasses.
Referring to
Because of bottom draining, there is no debris or loose fibers deposited at the mold opening, allowing the core melt 6 to be cast immediately into the cladding tube which is still at an elevated temperature. The casting of the core melt, when the cladding glass is still hot, enables complete fusion or wetting between the two glasses and prevents or substantially reduces interface bubble formation.
According to a variation and using the bottom drain approach, referring to
Other means or mechanisms for initially closing the bottom of the mold, and then later opening the mold bottom to permit draining, can be used.
The core and cladding glass molar compositions were 43GeO2-57PbO and 47GeO2-53PbO, respectively. An 11 mm ID×100 mm long brass mold pre-heated at 360° C. was placed on base plate, also pre-heated at 360° C., as shown in
The core and cladding compositions were similar to those of Example 1. An 11 mm ID×100 mm long brass mold pre-heated at 360° C. was placed on base plate as shown in
The forgoing description of specific embodiments reveals the general nature of the invention so that others can, by applying current knowledge, readily modify and/or adapt for various applications such embodiments without departing from the generic concept, and, therefore, such adaptations and modifications should and are intended to be comprehended within the meaning and range of equivalents of the disclosed embodiments. It is to be understood that the phraseology or terminology employed herein is for the purpose of description and not limitation.
Number | Date | Country | |
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60976689 | Oct 2007 | US |