1. Field of the Invention
This application relates to communication cables. More particularly, this application relates to fiber optic cable insulation.
2. Description of Related Art
Fiber optic cables, such as loose tube fiber optic cables, are generally constructed with an outer jacket, one or more buffer tubes therein and one or more fibers contained within each buffer tube. Tight Buffer optical fibers on the other hand have a closely extruded jacket directly on the fiber for a more rugged construction. With both loose tube and tight buffer optical fibers, the tubes or tight buffer jackets are made from extruded polymer.
Among all of the various construction issues that go into forming either the loose buffer tubes or the tight buffer jackets, including polymer selection, tube/tight buffer jacket sizing, extrusion controls etc. . . . , one additional issue that arises during production is the need to completely dry the extruded cable after it's passed through the water cooling bath and prior to optical inspection. During the production of the loose buffer tubes and tight buffer/jackets, a fiber or fibers are pulled through an extrusion head with the molten polymer flowing thereon. As the molten polymer exits the die it quickly cools to a solid, forming the tube or buffer/jacket. To completely cool the polymer, typically a water bath is employed just after the tubes and buffer/jackets exit the die so that the polymer does not stick to itself on the take up reels at the end of the extrusion line. The water is usually blown off with an air stream prior to the cable being taken up on the take up reels.
Separately, laser (or LED) light source and sensor variation are employed to inspect extruded lines for lumps and other surface irregularities and to detect whether or not the extrusion process is proceeding normally. As can be expected, the combination of laser inspection for lumps, combined with the water cooling process can occasionally lead to problems. For example, water droplets remaining on the extruded cables from the extrusion cooling stage may cause false lump positives in the testing phase, which ultimately can lead to slower production times.
Another issue that can occur during jacket production, is that after extruding the loose buffer tubes or tight buffer jackets, and when later extruding or applying the outer protective cable jacket, the tight buffered fibers or loose buffer tubes need to be pulled through a second outer jacket extrusion phase under a given back tension to prevent processing errors caused by the cooling and the shrinking of jacket polymer.
For example, in the case of applying an external jacket over one or more tight buffered optical fibers the coefficient of friction of the tight buffered fiber is a relevant processing factor as it is fed into this second extrusion process. The tight buffered fiber(s) are first surrounded by aramid or fiberglass yarns and then encapsulated by the jacket plastic.
Back tension is applied to the tight buffer being jacketed to shift the (relative) downstream process speed with respect to the yarns and plastic based on the coefficient of friction of the tight buffered fiber, and other physical characteristics of the yarns and jacket polymer. This back tension applied to the tight buffer postpones the “coupling point” or point where the tight buffer is proceeding linearly at the same speed as the yarns and cooling jacket plastic. The goal with such a back tension is to postpone this coupling point (i.e. increasing the distance from jacket extrusion until it draws down and contacts the tight buffer fiber) until after as much plastic shrinkage has already occurred as possible (in the jacket polymer) so that the length of the fiber ultimately remains equal to the length of the cable rather than it ending up coiled within as a result of a mis-match in the polymer application of the jacket on the tight buffer.
In this respect, the tension required for this back tension operation is a function of the normal force or tightness of the yarns on the tight buffer, the coefficient of friction and surface area of the tight buffer and the length downstream in the jacketing process that one wants to impact. In current prior art arrangements, the coefficient of friction of the tight buffer fiber is limited based mostly on the composition of the tight buffer polymer thus limiting how far downstream one could place the coupling point. Moreover, in the area of loose tube cable constructions, a related drawback can occur when the fibers stick to the molten plastic of the tubes just exiting the extruder or tube wall, which has a similar negative effect as when the subunits, the aramid(s) or tight buffered fibers stick to the molten subunit wall. In both cases, by reducing the contact surface area, less sticking or bonding takes place.
Furthermore, generally with all tight buffer and loose tube cables, it is usually ideal to remove as much polymer material as possible while retaining maximum protection in order to improve overall production costs while reducing weight
The present arrangement overcomes the drawbacks associated with the prior art and provides for profiled or shaped insulation, including reduced outer surface area, in order to improve water removal during cooling, reduction in coefficient of friction for subsequent cable jacketing and reduction in material usage. The present arrangement may be used on tight buffer, buffer tubes and/or jackets.
One object of the present arrangement is to provide for production line improvements in the production of tight buffer and loose tube optical fiber cables.
Another object is to reduce the cost and material in the production of tight buffer and loose tube optical fiber cables. In this context, the present arrangement further reduces the fuel component of flame retardant cables by reducing the amount of flammable material.
Another object of the present arrangement is to improve the compression resistance of loose tube and tight buffer designs by creating splines of compression resistance, while not transmitting compression forces toward fiber interior. Grooves or fins which are located around the periphery of the insulation also provide a reduction of surface contact with multiple surrounding components. This decreases attenuation caused by pressure applied to the fiber by the polymer. Further the grooves prevent the direct interior glass deflection usually rendered by harmful exterior compression forces, by allowing the splines to flex under the compression loads.
Another object of the present arrangement is to reduce the coefficient of friction of loose tube and tight buffer fiber cable designs by creating physical breaks in (drag) contact surface area using grooves. This allows one to reduce the coefficient of friction, so that when an external jacket is being applies, the process temperature contraction lock-in point can be pushed further downstream from the extrusion point, reducing processing mismatches between the jacket and the tube/buffer polymers so as to remove forces that can cause bending of the fibers (thus reducing attenuation).
In this context, the grooves or slotted surface of the tight buffer can be used to promote a detached or sliding tight buffer element which postpones the coupling point further downstream in the jacketing process. This reduces the need for as much back tension on the tight buffer, thus reducing its loading compared to the aramid when exposed to in the cable installation tensile loads. Unlike the prior art where the fibers (or tubes/buffers) can stick to the molten plastic just exiting the extruder or tube wall (loose tube), with subunits, aramid(s) or tight buffer(s) stick to the subunit wall, the present arrangement reduces the contact surface area of the tubes and/or buffer insulation resulting in less sticking or bonding between the cable components during production.
Another object of the present arrangement is to reduce water droplet/false lump pickup during processing by changing tight buffer surface to water dynamic thereby allowing water to be consistently blown off.
Another object of the present arrangement is to reduce friction of connector insertion while maintaining the critical diameter needed for terminating in connectors. Additionally, the connector process is made easier if the optical fiber (glass and uv coating) is centered within the tight buffer, and the tooling having a grooved die provides the added beneficial aspect of aiding in the centering of the optical fiber within the tight buffer. Further the tight buffer element, having grooved insulation, is more easily slid into the connector housing which is placed typically at the end of each tight buffer fiber length.
Overall, the active assembly of an optical fiber cable is a balancing of tensions, frictions, wrapping normal forces and plastic applications and shrinkage parameters. Grooves on the inner and outer surfaces of the tubes or tight buffers, as proposed in more detail below, are a solution to further manage the contact or frictional-adhesive relationships between the jacket and tube/buffers in this assembly process.
To this end, the present arrangement includes An optical fiber cable includes at least one optical fiber element and a tight buffer coating on the optical fiber element, where the tight buffer coating on the optical fiber element includes a plurality of alternating splines and grooves facing outwardly towards the outer circumference of the tight buffer coating.
Additionally, an optical fiber cable can have at least one optical fiber element and at least one buffer tube surrounding the optical fiber element, where the buffer tube around the optical fiber element includes a plurality of alternating splines and grooves facing outwardly towards the outer circumference of the buffer tube.
The present invention can be best understood through the following description and accompanying drawings, wherein:
a-3d are front cut away views of a tight buffer fiber and insulation according to one embodiment;
a-7c are perspective cut-away views of a tight buffer fiber and insulation in a jacket in accordance with one embodiment;
a-10b illustrate a die for producing the fiber insulation in a tubing process in accordance with one embodiment; and
a and 11b illustrate a die for producing the fiber insulation in a pressure process in accordance with one embodiment.
In one embodiment as shown in
It is noted that certain applications for tight buffered fibers require staged stripping where tight buffer insulation 10 is stripped off of fiber 12 for a length of several inches leaving the optical fiber 12 with the fiber's typical UV coating intact. Thereafter the UV coating is striped off for an additional separate length for connectorization purposes. The inner grooves 17 allow for easier and more consistent stripping off of the tight buffer layer 10 while leaving the UV coating of fiber 12 intact.
It is noted that in many stripping situations the UV coating tends to pull off the glass fiber 12 at that the same time the buffer 10 is stripped. In such cases an alternative design with only outer grooves 14 may be used, where buffer 10 has a tighter adhesion or firmer grip against fiber 12.
The following table 1 gives exemplary weight reductions based on a standard 900 micron thickness tight buffer fiber insulation 12.
With these grooves, both outer grooves 14 and inner grooves 17, using different sizes and depths, a reduction of approximately 10-25% in tight buffer 12 material relative to a standard 900 micron tight buffer fiber can be achieved.
In one arrangement exemplary dimensions for outer grooves 14 on a tight buffer fiber may be as follows:
The following table 3 includes another set of exemplary data for six lobe/groove 14 tight buffer designs, with different groove 14 dimensions and the corresponding reduction in insulation/material. The attached
Applicants note that deeper grooves may be used to provide more material savings and more flexibility, and possibly lower crush resistance. Shallower grooves may be used to provide a stiffer product and less material reduction, but possibly more crush resistance. It is likewise noted that more material reduction can be achieved with more grooves but the product may have lesser crush resistance and consistent extrusion results when such considerations are less important. More grooves allow high reductions, greater flexibility. A higher number of grooves also decrease the nesting ability of adjacent fibers/cables, because grooves can be made narrower while retaining the same reduction in material.
Generally speaking the exemplary embodiment uses six (6) grooves 14 where buffer 12 has an OD of 0.0365″ with grooves 14 approximately 0.0065″ deep and 0.003″ wide. However, using different amounts and sizes for outer grooves 14, it is possible to remove 10-25% of material, with outer groove 14 depths substantially in the range of 25-65% of wall thickness and groove 14 width substantially in the range of 5-15% of overall buffer 12 diameters.
Such arrangements, in addition to the apparent reduction in material use, also improve compression resistance (reduced attenuation under compression). It is noted that, in fact, lobes 15 on either side of outer grooves 14 actually compress more easily than a solid buffer insulation. However, deflection of lobes 15 improves attenuation results by absorbing energy in a different manner such as by not transmitting to the interior surface of buffer 10 (against fiber 12). In other words, lobes 15 under compression deflect side to side as well as downward towards fiber 12 thus deflecting compression stress away from fiber 12.
Another advantage of the present arrangement as shown in
In another embodiment shown in
In
In another embodiment shown in
In the examples shown,
In the arrangements shown in
Turning to the construction of grooved buffers 10 and/or jackets 16, grooves 14, 17, 18 and 19 may be formed using either one of draw down/tubing processing or pressure extrusion. For example,
Applicants note that pressure extrusion using the die for example shown in
While only certain features of the invention have been illustrated and described herein, many modifications, substitutions, changes or equivalents will now occur to those skilled in the art. It is therefore, to be understood that this application is intended to cover all such modifications and changes that fall within the true spirit of the invention.