The present invention relates to splicing optical fibers using the heat from an electric arc generated between two electrodes and in particular to a method of arc recentering or centering the arc, i.e. positioning the arc and end surfaces of the optical fibers to be spliced in relation to each other so that the end surfaces are placed at the center of the arc.
In a common type of apparatus for splicing or welding optical fibers made from basically silica or quartz to each other a high voltage applied to a pair of electrodes is used to generate an electric arc enclosing end regions of the fibers to be spliced to each other. In the electric arc the temperature is high causing material of the optical fibers inside the arc to melt and by slightly pressing the ends of the fibers to each other (this operation called “overlap”) a fusion-splice is obtained. The temperature in the fusion region must be above 1800° C. or generally about 2000° C. in order to melt the silica material of the fibers. When the fibers are heated to such high temperatures, some material from the fibers is evaporated and deposited on surfaces of the electrodes, in particular on the points or tips of the electrodes. The deposited material mainly appears as silica particles attached to the electrode surfaces, see the photograph in
A few methods have been developed which involve temperature control and which thus can to some extent handle arc-walk, see e.g. U.S. Pat. No. 5,772,327 for Wenxin Zheng, “Automatic fusion-temperature control for optical fiber splicers”, and U.S. Pat. No. 5,909,527 for Wenxin Zheng, “Automatic current selection for single fiber splicing”. The methods disclosed in these patents are based on compensation of the electric current flowing between the electrodes in the fusioning operation in order to maintain a desired temperature inside the arc and in the fusioning region. However, only temperature control is not sufficient to handle the situation of large distances of arc-walk, such as distances e.g. larger than about 30 μm. This is because a high current compensation is needed for a large distance of the arc-walk which may give a strong influence on the temperature distribution within the fusioning region.
It is an object of the present invention to provide a method of splicing optical fibers to each other giving low splicing losses for splices made successively one after another.
It is another object of the present invention to provide a method of splicing optical fibers in which the position of an electric arc is determined and used to move ends of the fibers to be spliced to each other to the center of the arc.
A problem which the invention intends to solve is thus how to determine the position of an electric arc used in fusion-splicing optical fibers to each other and using such a determined position to give low losses in splices or generally how to place the splicing position, i.e. the end surfaces or end regions of fibers to be spliced, and the electric arc in a centered relationship to each other.
Thus generally, a method using automatic arc recentering or arc repositioning is used. The method is based on recalibrating the position of the ends of the fiber to be spliced for each individual splice performed by determining spatial movements of the intensity distribution of the arc so that a desired fusion temperature in the end portions of the optical fibers is maintained. Using this method the resulting splices are more equal and the process is thus more stable compared to prior compensation methods only using adjustment of the arc current to maintain the average temperature of the arc region constant. The method can obviously be applied for both small and large distances of arc-walk.
Additional objects and advantages of the invention will be set forth in the description which follows, and in part will be obvious from the description, or may be learned by practice of the invention. The objects and advantages of the invention may be realized and obtained by means of the methods, processes, instrumentalities and combinations particularly pointed out in the appended claims.
While the novel features of the invention are set forth with particularly in the appended claims, a complete understanding of the invention, both as to organization and content, and of the above and other features thereof may be gained from and the invention will be better appreciated from a consideration of the following detailed description of non-limiting embodiments presented hereinbelow with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
a is a schematic picture of a setup for fusion-splicing two optical fibers to each other,
b is a schematic picture similar to that of
a is a picture of the display of an automatic optical fiber splicer showing images of spliced similar fibers and determined curves of total light intensity,
b is a picture similar to that of
In
In the schematic picture of
When the optical fibers 1, 1′ are heated by the electric arc 5, the thermal radiation emitted from the heated fiber portions and from the air discharge can be observed using the video-camera 9 and analyzed using the digital image processing system 15 of the splicing device. Since the observed light intensity distribution is directly correlated to the emission of light and the largest emission is from the regions which have the highest temperature, i.e. primarily the arc and in particular solid objects within the arc, information on the location of the arc and its movements can be obtained by observing and carefully analyzing the light intensity distribution.
In the picture of
The position of the highest value of the light intensity curve indicates approximately the center position of arc. However, the position of the peak of a smooth curve in the best possible way adapted or fitted to the measured light intensity values and thus accurately depicting the observed light intensity will give a better indication of the center position of the arc. Thus, in order to accurately determine the position of the imaginary peak value and thereby the position of the center of the arc, some curve fitting method can be used. Such a method is the so-called Chi-Square (χ2) fitting method. It will be assumed herein that the distribution of light emitted from an optical fiber within in an elongated, rectangular observation field primarily located parallel to the fiber (the z-direction), which is the case considered here, and even being located in some angle thereto, can be modeled by the sum of a Gaussian function G(x, a1, a2, a3) and a constant C, the constant representing a background light intensity which is produced by background illumination, optical and electronic noise, etc. and which can be assumed to be constant over the observation field. The parameters a1, a2 and a3 of the Gaussian function are the position of the center of the function, the length of the interval from the position of the full width to the position of the half maximum (FWHM) of the function and the maximum value of the function, respectively. The last mentioned parameter can often be fairly constant in an automatic fiber splicer having a depicting system with AGC (Automatic Gain Control) and no determination thereof is then needed. The quality of the fitting of the sum [G(z, a1, a2, a3)+C] for some chosen values of the parameters to the measured intensity values I(z) can be evaluated by a reduced Chi-Square (χ2) function such as:
There, I(zi) is the average of the measured values of light intensity at the i-th position zi with a measurement error-bar ΔIi. The quantity ΔIi can be estimated by the standard deviation: ΔIi≈√{square root over (Σ(Ij(zi)−I(xi)2)}{square root over (Σ(Ij(zi)−I(xi)2)} where Ij(zi) is the j-th measured intensity value at position zi. jN is the number of positions for which light intensity is measured. The constant C can in standard imaging system of 256 grey scale levels be typically 1-2 grey scales. The constant μ is the number of fitting parameters varied during the fitting procedure and thus here μ≦4 or even μ≦3.
In this fitting method, the best set of fitting parameters {a1, a2, a3, C} is that which maximizes the probability of representing the measured data. In practice, one searches for a set of fitting parameters giving a value of the test index χ2 of about 1 or generally a smallest possible value. Thus, by varying the fitting parameters and calculating for each set of varied parameters the corresponding value of χ2, one finds the best set of fitting parameters and in that set the value of the parameter a1 indicates the position of the peak of the curve of measured light intensity values and this position indicates the position of the center of the arc.
If the errors in each measurement point cannot be determined or estimated, such as when having only the two images captured at one single occasion in the splicing procedure, in the curve fitting a procedure of the type least sum of squares can be used.
Furthermore, the images used in determining the light intensity values can be captured at at least two different stages of the process of splicing two fibers to each other:
(1) Prior to applying the main, large fusion current for melting to fiber ends to each other, a probing arc with an appropriately set lower current can be applied for a suitably selected short time period to take some images which are used to calculate the position of the center of the arc based on some curve fitting method such as that described above. The set current intensity and the time for energizing the electrodes are then chosen to ensure that high quality images can be captured without damaging well-prepared fiber end surfaces and in particular the edges thereof. After the calculation of the position of the center of the arc, the fiber ends can be positioned to have their end surfaces at the determined position of the arc center to give the best possible splicing conditions. This method can be called “direct arc recentering”.
(2) The images used for determining light intensity values and therefrom the position of the center of the arc can also be taken when applying the main fusion current. Since the fiber ends are spliced to each other using main fusion current, the calculated information on the position on the center of the arc cannot be used to directly recenter the fiber end surfaces in the splice being made. However, the obtained information on the position of the arc can be used to predict a suitable position at which the fiber ends will be placed for next splice using a forecast method such as the so-called exponentially weight moving average (EWMA) method, as will be described hereinafter. This method can be called “indirect arc recentering”.
Images similar to those shown in
In order to determine a value of the position of the center of an electric arc, in particular when making a splice between two optical fibers of different types, the thermal light emission only from the air-discharge in the arc region can be used to find light intensity values suitable for a curve fitting process, such as that described above. This means that in the image fields of
For the total light intensity curves determined in this way excluding the fiber images the same determination as described above using some curve fitting process such a χ2-fitting method to find a best fitting curve can be made from which the position of the maximum of the found curve light intensity directly gives a good measure of the position of the center of the arc. Using the determined position value the end surfaces of fibers to be spliced can be repositioned to place the fiber end surface in the center of the arc. The images used in the determination can also in this method be obtained by direct or indirect arc recentering.
Furthermore, it can be advantageous to exclude, in a way corresponding to that described above, the image of the fiber cores when evaluating images of splices of similar fibers, i.e. images of the kind seen in
The method of direct arc recentering as described above is straightforward. However, this method may result in a large error in the determination of the position of the center of the arc if the arc is unstable during capturing the images used for calculating the light intensity values from the position of the center is determined. Instabilities in the arc can e.g. be caused by sparks. In order to reduce the influence of arc instability, the method of indirect arc recentering supplemented with a moving average method to find a reliable position of the center of the arc, as briefly mentioned above, can be used. Using such a moving average method the position of the arc center in a sequence of splices is predicted by the contributions of historical data of the arc centers. In particular, for the exponentially weight moving average (EWMA) method, a new position znew of the center of the arc is determined from the position zold used for the latest splice being modified by the center position zcalc calculated from light intensity values obtained from images captured when making said splice, according to the following recursive equation
znew=(1−α)zold+αzcalc (2)
where α is weighting factor having a value between 0 and 1. The start value to be used for the first calculation according to Eq. (2) is taken as the electrode position.
The operational steps when making a splice using a procedure as outlined above will now be described with reference to the flow chart of
If it is determined in the block 79 that the absolute difference satisfies the tested condition, the light intensities emitted from each fiber are deemed to be sufficiently equal to each other and the splice is probably made from two fibers having identical physical characteristics. Then in a block 81 the fields for calculating the total intensity values are set to be the whole rectangular fields of the images, no division line being used. Then additional three warm fiber images for each perpendicular direction are captured in a block 83. In the next block 85 the three warm fiber images for each perpendicular direction are evaluated in a function block 41 in the evaluation circuit 15, see
If it is determined in the block 79 that the absolute difference does not satisfy the tested condition, the light intensities emitted from each fiber are not sufficiently equal to each other and the splice is probably made from two fibers having different physical characteristics. Then in a block 87 the fields for calculating the total intensity values are set, by the field selecting block 37, to now be the whole rectangular fields of the images but excluding the center strip along the images of the fibers. Thereafter, in a block 89 the sensitivity of the image capturing system of the fusioning device is set to give a good image of the regions of the image outside the image of the fibers. This means e.g. that possible automatic gain control (AGC) functions of the image capturing system are disabled and that the sensitivity is increased since the intensity of light emitted by the air-discharge is much lower than the intensity of light emitted from the heated solid objects in the images, i.e. from the fibers. This setting of the sensitivity can be made after the step called overlap of the ordinary fusion process in which the end surfaces of the fibers have been moved against other and pressed to each other compressing slightly the end portions. Then in a block 91 additional three warm fiber images for each perpendicular direction are captured. The sensitivity of the image capturing system is reset to the normal value in a following block 93. Then the block 85 is performed as above for finding the calculated position zcalc and a new value of znew.
After the block 85 a block 95 is executed in which the new value of znew is compared to the previously value used which is now called zold. If the absolute difference |znew−zold| of these averages is larger than or equal to some threshold value zmax there has been a large change of the position of the arc center and then a block 97 is performed in which a warning to an operator of the device is given that the arc is unstable. Otherwise, if the absolute difference is smaller than the threshold value there has been a normal change of the arc position and a block 99 is executed in which the new modified z-position value znew is stored. The block 99 is also executed after the block 97 in which the alarm was given. The ordinary fusion process is finished in a block 101. It is thereupon decided in a block 103 whether a refusion, i.e. a special process in which only the main fusion procedures without performing the other procedures, e.g. fiber alignment, overlap etc. are executed, is to be made and in the case that a re-fusion will be made, the block 75 is next executed. Otherwise the procedure is ended in a block 105.
The procedure as described with reference to
The procedure as described has been used in automatic fiber splicers such as the automatic splicer FSU975 manufactured by the company Ericsson. Thus, in Table 1 some results of tests for splices made between four combinations of fibers are given. In the tests, 15 splices for each of the four fiber combinations were performed in sequence, i.e. a total of 60 splices were made, without using any means to clean the electrodes. Very stable results were obtained. Low splicing losses were obtained also for difficult combinations of fibers such as for splices between carbon-coated erbium-doped fibers and small-core fibers, which have a core diameter of e.g. 4 μm.
While specific embodiments of the invention have been illustrated and described herein, it is realized that numerous additional advantages, modifications and changes will readily occur to those skilled in the art. Therefore, the invention in its broader aspects is not limited to the specific details, representative devices and illustrated examples shown and described herein. Accordingly, various modifications may be made without departing from the spirit or scope of the general inventive concept as defined by the appended claims and their equivalents. It is therefore to be understood that the appended claims are intended to cover all such modifications and changes as fall within a true spirit and scope of the invention.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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0001708-7 | May 2000 | SE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/SE01/01018 | 5/9/2001 | WO | 00 | 3/11/2003 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO01/86331 | 11/15/2001 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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4708483 | Lorenz | Nov 1987 | A |
5495428 | Schwartz | Feb 1996 | A |
5559695 | Daily | Sep 1996 | A |
5570446 | Zheng et al. | Oct 1996 | A |
5648007 | Reslinger et al. | Jul 1997 | A |
5772327 | Zheng | Jun 1998 | A |
5909527 | Zheng | Jun 1999 | A |
Number | Date | Country |
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08800390 | Nov 1998 | EP |
0889337 | Jan 1999 | EP |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20030172680 A1 | Sep 2003 | US |