The present invention relates generally to an apparatus and a method for fusion-splicing fibers to waveguides.
There is an increasing need for a method for attaching fibers and fiber bundles to waveguides (die-attach) that does not use polymeric adhesives, that provides built-in active alignment and that is fast. Standard attachment using specific adhesive is not good enough because adhesives, being organic materials, have a relatively low glass transition temperature and are therefore susceptible to degrade the waveguide-fiber alignment with time. Fusion-splicing methods that use an electric arc or CO2 laser as a source of heat produce better performance. However, some materials are damaged by the heating process (e.g., soft glasses). Moreover, the waveguide itself may be modified and even erased by the heat. Therefore, a controlled fusion-splicing process is required, where the heating is local, and the temperature can be controlled to reach only the minimum value required for splicing without inducing any damage.
The present invention aims to solve this problem by splicing the fiber to the waveguide so as to realize an optimal attachment process. In order to do so, a laser beam illuminates one fiber (or several parallel fibers) in a small region of this fiber; the light is absorbed, generating heat within the fiber. Heat propagates toward the distal end of the fiber so that the fiber facet is heated at a sufficiently high temperature. When the required temperature is reached, the fiber is brought towards the waveguide facet and heats it. The temperature of the waveguide substrate can be controlled by choosing the appropriate laser power, its distance from the waveguide, the number of laser pulses and their duration. According to the respective softening point of the fiber and the waveguide substrate, only the waveguide softens or both the waveguide and the fiber soften, so that by pressing one against the other, splicing is obtained. One aspect of the process is to heat the fiber as homogenously as possible. In order to do so, optical reflectors located on the side opposite to the fiber heating spot concentrate the laser light towards the shadowed side of the fiber so that the fiber is heated all over its perimeter, thereby keeping as best as possible the circular symmetry of the fiber. This results in a much better fusion process, where only one laser is used, simplifying alignment and repeatability. The optical reflectors can be part of the die or external to it.
Furthermore, using several reflectors, multiple fibers can be spliced simultaneously.
There is provided in accordance with a non-limiting embodiment of the invention a method for attaching an optical fiber to an optical waveguide including positioning a distal end of at least one optical fiber in spaced-apart alignment with a facet of at least one optical waveguide, illuminating and heating the distal end of at least one optical fiber with a laser beam, heating the facet of the at least one optical waveguide, wherein the facet reaches its softening point temperature, and pressing the distal end of the at least one optical fiber against the facet of the at least one optical waveguide until the at least one optical fiber is welded to the at least one optical waveguide.
In accordance with a non-limiting embodiment of the invention the distal end of the at least one optical fiber is heated to its softening point temperature.
In accordance with a non-limiting embodiment of the invention the softening point temperature of the facet of the at least one optical waveguide is lower than the softening point temperature of the at least one optical fiber.
In accordance with a non-limiting embodiment of the invention heating the facet of the at least one optical waveguide includes bringing the distal end of the at least one optical fiber, after having been heated, close to the facet of at least one optical waveguide so that the distal end heats the facet to the softening point temperature.
In accordance with a non-limiting embodiment of the invention heating the distal end of the at least one optical fiber includes placing a reflector on a side of the at least one optical fiber opposite to the laser beam, so that a perimeter of the at least one optical fiber is heated by the laser beam.
In accordance with a non-limiting embodiment of the invention a distance between the at least one optical fiber and the reflector is of an order of half a Rayleigh range of the laser beam.
In accordance with a non-limiting embodiment of the invention a profile of the laser beam is asymmetric, wherein in a direction parallel to the at least one optical fiber the profile is a Gaussian profile and wherein in direction perpendicular to the at least one optical fiber the profile is a flat top profile.
In accordance with a non-limiting embodiment of the invention the reflector includes two flat reflective surfaces that are symmetrical regarding to a plane that crosses a longitudinal axis of the at least one optical fiber and perpendicular to the facet. In accordance with a non-limiting embodiment of the invention the reflector includes two circular reflective surfaces that are symmetrical regarding to a plane that crosses a longitudinal axis of the at least one optical fiber and perpendicular to the facet.
A critical issue in optical fiber technology is the connection of the fibers to planar optical waveguides. This is a recurrent problem since optical fibers are essentially used for information transmission while information processing is usually performed on a planar geometry. Such a problem is particularly important in the field of silicon photonics, fiber communication, RF over fiber, fiber sensing and many more other applications.
In most cases several of the following issues must be solved simultaneously:
This is due to the fact that adhesive bonding degrades in time, and modifies the coupling efficiency between the fiber and the waveguide.
The fiber is usually made of fused silicate glass, with a glass melting temperature typically in the 1500° C. to 2000° C. range. Waveguide substrates are usually made of softer materials such as silicon, lithium niobate, III-V compounds, lower melting temperature glasses (such as BK7), soft glasses (such as fluoride glasses), etc. Therefore, splicing using standard techniques may lead to waveguide deterioration.
In many cases, a bundle of fibers must be bonded to an array of waveguides. Bonding them one by one is not only a lengthy process but might also reduce the yield since the fibers must be individually manipulated.
The alignment precision is typically below 0.5 microns for telecommunication wavelengths. Prior art active alignment uses an external signal feedback that must be optimized, requiring expensive equipment.
These issues make the connection of fibers to waveguides a challenge that has to be repetitively solved.
The present invention solves simultaneously all these problems by using a laser based approach that is simple to implement as is now explained.
In
For sake of simplicity, we now consider a single fiber-waveguide process.
As mentioned before, in the plane containing the fiber (parallel to the fibers), the laser intensity profile is Gaussian.
In
As mentioned before, in the plane perpendicular to the fiber, the laser intensity profile is flat top. The effect is best viewed in
Laser light that does not impinge on the fiber continues its way until it impinges on mirror 104 that is especially shaped so that it reflects and focuses the laser light towards the shadowed part of the fiber 102 in such a way that the fiber is illuminated as uniformly as possible by the laser beam, which generates uniform heat.
In
Description of the Method
In reference to
The remaining part of the method is illustrated in
Once all the fibers are introduced within the apparatus, the assembly is pressed against an adequately flat surface so that the fibers facets plane is located between the waveguide facets plane and the reflector ends plane (
If one is interested in removing the fibers assembly jig, an adhesive (such as epoxy) is adequately deposited on the fibers in order to maintain them mechanically and the adhesive deposited earlier (
Here are several examples of such an assembly.
Reference is now made to
Using flat reflectors, the optimal distance between the fiber and the reflectors is 680 microns, the flat mirror length is 250 microns (the pitch), and the reflectors are tilted at an angle of 2.4 degrees from the horizontal plane.
The simulated irradiance is shown in
Using cylindrical reflectors (
The simulated irradiance is shown in
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/IB2020/062262 | 12/20/2020 | WO |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2021/124302 | 6/24/2021 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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6411759 | Beguin | Jun 2002 | B1 |
6556740 | Hagelin | Apr 2003 | B1 |
11090684 | Shinoda | Aug 2021 | B2 |
20020164132 | Tian | Nov 2002 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
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2661512 | Oct 1991 | FR |
H03160406 | Jul 1991 | JP |
05134137 | May 1993 | JP |
H05134137 | May 1993 | JP |
07020346 | Jan 1995 | JP |
2008286948 | Nov 2008 | JP |
Entry |
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PCT Search Report and Written Opinion PCT/IB2020/062262, May 3, 2021. |
Shimizu et al., “Fusion splicing between optical circuits and optical fibres”, Electronic Letters, IEEE, vol. 19, Issue 3, Feb. 3, 1983, p. 96-97. |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20230019700 A1 | Jan 2023 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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62950191 | Dec 2019 | US |