1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates generally to optical fiber, and particularly to graded index multimode fibers.
2. Technical Background
The bandwidth of multimode fibers (MMF) is limited mostly by inter-modal chromatic dispersion. To minimize the inter-modal chromatic dispersion, MMF are designed with graded index α-profiles. For optimum bandwidth, the parameter α is about 2. However, a practical MMF has a cladding that truncates the ideal alpha profile. For higher order modes near the cutoff frequency whose effective refractive index is close to that of the cladding, the time delay deviates from that of the infinite alpha profile. In the past, these modes were not of particular concern because they had high loss as a result of perturbations such as bending and cladding absorption.
However, as fiber glass and coating technologies have improved, losses due to micro-bending and cladding absorption have reduced significantly. As a result, some of the higher order modes can survive over the length of practical applications, which limits the multimode fiber bandwidth.
One aspect of the invention is a graded index multimode optical fiber. The optical fiber includes a core region extending radially outwardly from a centerline to a radius R1 and having a positive relative refractive index percent profile Δ1(r). The core region has a maximum relative refractive index percent, Δ1MAX. The optical fiber also includes a first annular cladding region surrounding and directly adjacent to the core region and extending to a radius R2, having a width W2 of R2−R1. The first annular cladding region has a relative refractive index percent profile Δ2(r), with a minimum relative refractive index percent, Δ2MIN. In addition, the optical fiber includes a second annular cladding region surrounding the first annular cladding region and having a relative refractive index percent profile, Δ3(r), with a maximum relative refractive index percent, Δ3MAX, wherein Δ3MAX is ≧0.05%.
In another aspect, the present invention includes a graded index multimode optical fiber. The optical fiber includes a core region extending radially outwardly from a centerline to a radius R1 and having a positive relative refractive index percent profile Δ1(r). The core region has a maximum relative refractive index percent, Δ1MAX. The optical fiber also includes a first annular cladding region surrounding and directly adjacent to the core region and extending to a radius R2, having a width W2 of R2−R1, wherein W2 is greater than 5 μm. The first annular cladding region has a relative refractive index percent profile Δ2(r), with a minimum relative refractive index percent, Δ2MIN. In addition, the optical fiber includes a second annular cladding region surrounding the first annular cladding region and having a relative refractive index percent profile, Δ3(r), with a maximum relative refractive index percent, Δ3MAX, wherein (Δ3MAX−Δ2MIN)≧0.05%.
In the above-described aspects, the core region preferably has an alpha (α) between 1.8 and 2.5. In the above-described aspects, the optical fiber is preferably capable of guiding at least two mode groups at a wavelength of 850 nm, wherein the maximum differential delay between the fastest and slowest guided mode groups at a wavelength of 850 nm is less than 5 ns/km.
Additional features and advantages of the invention will be set forth in the detailed description which follows, and in part will be readily apparent to those skilled in the art from that description or recognized by practicing the invention as described herein, including the detailed description which follows, the claims, as well as the appended drawings.
It is to be understood that both the foregoing general description and the following detailed description present embodiments of the invention, and are intended to provide an overview or framework for understanding the nature and character of the invention as it is claimed. The accompanying drawings are included to provide a further understanding of the invention, and are incorporated into and constitute a part of this specification. The drawings illustrate various embodiments of the invention, and together with the description serve to explain the principles and operations of the invention.
Reference will now be made in detail to the present preferred embodiments of the invention, examples of which are illustrated in the accompanying drawings. Whenever possible, the same reference numerals will be used throughout the drawings to refer to the same or like parts.
The “refractive index profile” is the relationship between refractive index or relative refractive index and waveguide fiber radius.
The “relative refractive index percent” or “delta” is defined as Δ%=100×(ni2−ns2)/2ni2, where ni is the maximum refractive index in region i, unless otherwise specified, and ns is the average refractive index of pure undoped silica glass. As used herein, the relative refractive index is represented by Δ and its values are given in units of “%”, unless otherwise specified. The relative refractive index percent is measured at 800 nm unless otherwise specified. In cases where the refractive index of a region is less than the average refractive index of pure undoped silica glass, the relative index percent is negative and is referred to as having a depressed region or depressed index, and is calculated at the point at which the relative index is most negative unless otherwise specified. In cases where the refractive index of a region is greater than the average refractive index of pure undoped silica glass, the relative index percent is positive and the region can be said to be raised or to have a positive index. An “updopant” is herein considered to be a dopant which has a propensity to raise the refractive index relative to pure undoped SiO2. A “downdopant” is herein considered to be a dopant which has a propensity to lower the refractive index relative to pure undoped SiO2. An updopant may be present in a region of an optical fiber having a negative relative refractive index when accompanied by one or more other dopants which are not updopants. Likewise, one or more other dopants which are not updopants may be present in a region of an optical fiber having a positive relative refractive index. A downdopant may be present in a region of an optical fiber having a positive relative refractive index when accompanied by one or more other dopants which are not downdopants. Likewise, one or more other dopants which are not downdopants may be present in a region of an optical fiber having a negative relative refractive index.
Accordingly, the contribution of a relative refractive index percent or delta attributable to a particular dopant in a given region can be specified. For example, the contribution of GeO2 to a relative refractive index percent can be specified as:
Similarly, the contribution of fluorine to a relative refractive index percent can be specified as:
Relative refractive index percent or delta value is typically specified at a given wavelength. For the modeling conducted in this application, the wavelength is 800 nm. The material data such as the Sellmeier equation that determines the refractive index of the doped glass as well as dispersion follows that in the article, J. W. Fleming, “Material dispersion in Lightguide glasses”, Electronics Letters Vol. 14, No. 11, 326-328 (1978).
The term “α-profile” refers to a relative refractive index profile, expressed in terms of Δ(r) which is in units of “%”, where r is radius, which follows the equation,
Δ(r)=Δ(ro)(1−[|r−ro|/(r1−r0)]α),
where ro is the point at which Δ(r) is maximum, r1 is the point at which Δ(r) % is zero, and r is in the range ri≦r≦rf, where Δ is defined above, ri is the initial point of the α-profile, rf is the final point of the α-profile, and α is an exponent which is a real number.
The bend resistance of a waveguide fiber can be gauged by induced attenuation under prescribed test conditions. For example, macrobend performance can be determined according to FOTP-62 (IEC-60793-1-47) by wrapping 1 turn around either a 10 mm or 20 mm diameter mandrel (the “1×10 mm diameter macrobend loss” or the “1×20 mm diameter macrobend loss”) and measuring the increase in attenuation due to the bending using an overfilled launch condition. For a fiber with low macrobend loss, the measurement is done by wrapping multiple turns on a mandrel to increase the accuracy. The macrobend loss is normalized to 1 turn/m by dividing the total loss by the number of wraps around the mandrel.
Bandwidth can be measured by using the TIA/EIA Standard described in TIA/EIA-455-204 “Measurement of Bandwidth on Multimode Fiber”, or “FOTP-204”, or by using the TIA/EIA Standard described in TIA/EIA-455-220 “Differential Mode Delay Measurement of Multimode Fiber in the Time Domain”, or “FOTP-220”, as appropriate.
In the multimode optical fiber disclosed herein, the core is a graded-index core, and preferably, the refractive index profile of the core has a parabolic (or substantially parabolic) shape. For example, in some embodiments, the refractive index profile of the core has an α-shape with a value of about 2, preferably between 1.8 and 2.3, as measured at 850 nm. In some embodiments, the refractive index of the core may have a centerline dip, wherein the maximum refractive index of the core, and the maximum refractive index of the entire optical fiber, is located a small distance away from the centerline, but in other embodiments the refractive index of the core has no centerline dip, and the maximum refractive index of the core, and the maximum refractive index of the entire optical fiber, is located at the centerline. As used herein, “parabolic” therefore includes substantially parabolically shaped refractive index profiles which may vary slightly from a value of 2.00 at one or more points in the core, as well as profiles with minor variations and/or a centerline dip.
As depicted in
In the embodiments depicted in
For example, the first set of preferred embodiments includes those in which 1.00%≦Δ1MAX≦2.00%, 0%≦Δ2MIN≦0.02%, 0.1%≦Δ3MAX≦0.5%, 20 μm≦R1≦30 μm, 5 μm≦W2≦10 μm, and core region 20 has an alpha (α) between 1.8 and 2.5. First set of preferred embodiments also include those in which 0.50%≦Δ1MAX≦1.00%, 0%≦Δ2MIN≦0.02%, 0.1%≦Δ3MAX≦0.5%, 10 μm≦R1≦20 μm, 5 μm≦W2≦10 μm, and core region 20 has an alpha (α) between 1.8 and 2.5. In addition, first set of preferred embodiments includes those in which 1.00%≦Δ1MAX≦2.00%, 0%≦Δ2MIN≦0.02%, 0.15%≦Δ3MAX≦0.25%, 20 μm≦R1≦30 μm, 7 μm≦W2≦10 μm, and core region 20 has an alpha (α) between 1.9 and 2.2. First set of preferred embodiments also includes those in which 0.50%≦Δ1MAX≦1.00%, 0%≦Δ2MIN≦0.02%, 0.15%≦Δ3MAX≦0.25%, 10 μm≦R1≦20 μm, 7 μm≦W2≦10 μm, and core region 20 has an alpha (α) between 1.9 and 2.2.
For example, the second set of preferred embodiments includes those in which 1.00%≦Δ1MAX≦2.00%, −0.5%≦Δ2MIN≦−0.1%, 0%≦Δ3MAX≦0.02%, 20 μm≦R1≦30 μm, 5 μm≦W2≦10 μm, and core region 20 has an alpha (α) between 1.8 and 2.5. Second set of preferred embodiments also includes those in which 0.50%≦Δ1MAX≦1.00%, −0.5%≦Δ2MIN≦−0.1%, 0%≦Δ3MAX≦0.02%, 10 μm≦R1≦20 μm, 5 μm≦W2≦10 μm, and core region 20 has an alpha (α) between 1.8 and 2.5. In addition, second set of preferred embodiments includes those in which 1.00%≦Δ1MAX≦2.00%, −0.2%≦Δ2MIN≦−0.1%, 0%≦Δ3MAX≦0.02%, 20 μm≦R1≦30 μm, 7 μm≦W2≦10 μm, and core region 20 has an alpha (α) between 1.9 and 2.2. Second set of preferred embodiments also include those in which 0.50%≦Δ1MAX≦1.00%, −0.2%≦Δ2MIN≦−0.1%, 0%≦Δ3MAX≦0.02%, 10 μm≦R1≦20 μm, 7 μm≦W2≦10 μm, and core region 20 has an alpha (α) between 1.9 and 2.2.
In preferred embodiments, multimode optical fiber can be provided that guide at least 2, and preferably at least 5, such as at least 10, and further such as at least 15, and still even further at least 20 mode groups at a wavelength of 850 nm, wherein the maximum differential delay between the fastest and slowest guided mode groups at a wavelength of 850 nm is preferably less than 5 ns/km, more preferably less than 1 ns/km, even more preferably less than 0.5 ns/km, and yet even more preferably less than 0.2 ns/km, and still yet even more preferably less than 0.1 ns/km.
Preferably, the fibers disclosed herein are made by a vapor deposition process. Even more preferably, the fibers disclosed herein are made by an outside vapor deposition (OVD) process. Thus, for example, known OVD laydown, consolidation, and draw techniques may be advantageously used to produce the optical waveguide fiber disclosed herein. Other processes, such as modified chemical vapor deposition (MCVD) or vapor axial deposition (VAD) or plasma chemical vapor deposition (PCVD) may be used. Thus, the refractive indices and the cross sectional profile of the optical waveguide fibers disclosed herein can be accomplished using manufacturing techniques known to those skilled in the art including, but in no way limited to, OVD, VAD and MCVD processes.
Preferably, the optical fiber disclosed herein has a silica-based core and cladding. In preferred embodiments, the cladding has an outer diameter, 2×Rmax, of about 125 μm. Preferably, the outer diameter of the cladding has a constant diameter along the length of the optical fiber. In preferred embodiments, the refractive index of the optical fiber has radial symmetry. Preferably, the outer diameter of the core has a constant diameter along the length of the optical fiber. Preferably, one or more coatings surround and are in contact with the cladding. The coating is preferably a polymer coating such as acrylate. Preferably the coating has a constant diameter, radially and along the length of the fiber.
The invention will be further clarified by the following examples in which the performance of multimode fiber was evaluated through numerical modeling. In these examples, the scheme developed in the following article, T. A. Lenahan, “Calculation of modes in an optical fiber using the finite element method and EISPACK”, The Bell System Technical Journal Vol. 62, (No. 9) 2663-2694 (1983), was followed. In the examples, the fiber performance was dictated by the scalar wave equation:
where r is the radius, f(r) is the eigenfield in the radial direction, k=2πn(r)/λ, n(r) is the refractive index profile, λ is the wavelength, m is the angular parameter indexing the modes, and β is propagation constant. For each m, there can be two eigen-modes, μ, such that the mode number, Q, is defined as:
Q=2μ+m+1
In addition, the refractive index profile illustrated in
Table 1 lists profile characteristics of Examples 1-6.
Improvements of fibers corresponding to embodiments of the invention can also be illustrated by bandwidth, wherein bandwidth is defined herein as the half-power frequency of the transfer function over a distance of 1 km. When intramodal dispersion is neglected, the transfer function is
Where τn denotes the delay time (in the unit of μs/km) for n-th mode, an2 is the power of the n-th mode, ω is the angular frequency of the light, and i is the imaginary number so that i2=−1. There are many ways to specify the power for each mode depending on the power that can be launched into each mode. As a rule of the thumb, we assume a relationship between the power of the n-th mode and mode number, Q, such that:
The average delay is calculated as:
And rms delay (τRMS) is calculated as:
The bandwidth is then calculated as:
In preferred embodiments, multimode optical fiber can be provided that has a bandwidth of greater than 2 GHz-km at all wavelengths between 800 and 900 nm, such as a bandwidth of greater than 3 GHz-km at all wavelengths between 825 and 875 nm, and further such as a bandwidth of greater than 4 GHz-km at all wavelengths between 825 and 875 nm. In preferred embodiments, multimode optical fiber can be provided that has a bandwidth of greater than 2 GHz-km at a wavelength of about 850 nm, such as a bandwidth of greater than 4 GHz-km at a wavelength of about 850 nm, further such as a bandwidth of greater than 5 GHz-km at a wavelength of about 850 nm, and even further such as a bandwidth of greater than 6 GHz-km at a wavelength of about 850 nm, and yet even further such as a bandwidth of greater than 8 GHz-km at a wavelength of about 850 nm, and still yet even further such as a bandwidth of greater than 10 GHz-km at a wavelength of about 850 nm.
It will be apparent to those skilled in the art that various modifications and variations can be made to the present invention without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention. Thus it is intended that the present invention cover the modifications and variations of this invention provided they come within the scope of the appended claims and their equivalents.
This application claims the benefit of, and priority to U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 61/088,490 filed on Aug. 13, 2008 entitled, “Multimode Fiber with At Least Dual Cladding”, the content of which is relied upon and incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.
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