This invention relates to an optical guide switching assembly and to steering devices used in the assembly for deflecting radiation from a transmitting guide in order to direct the radiation to a selected receiving guide.
One of the major problems facing the invention is to provide rapid switching with low insertion loss (high coupling efficiency and low cross talk) for high port counts, whilst evolving a compact design which can be readily manufactured. A related problem is to increase the switching capacity of an optical fibre switching assembly, without the expense of an increase in physical size. At least preferred embodiments of the invention have been especially designed to deal with these problems.
According to the main aspect of the invention, an optical beam switching assembly comprises:
Advantages of the latter arrangement include greater deflection for a comparatively smaller movement (of either the collimating means, or the transmitting guide) and higher switching speeds due to comparatively lower inertia. For example, in the case where an end portion of optical fibre is subject to traverse movement to deflect an emergent beam, the end portion has less inertia and a wider deflection is possible at higher speed. This is also beneficial in designing a switching assembly having a high packing density of (eg.) optical fibres.
The optical guide can be, for example, an optical fibre which conducts laser light, or a waveguide made of silicon or other dielectric material which conducts infrared light. These guides, (for example, optical fibres) can be arranged in the switching assembly so that emergent beams of radiation are projected directly across a space, i.e. between separated sets of transmitting and receiving optical fibres. Alternatively, they can be arranged in the same array where beams of radiation are projected from sets of transmitting optical fibres to a reflector, which then reflects the beams back to receiving optical fibres. (Reference made herein to optical fibres is by way of example only and can be taken to cover other forms of optical guide).
The steering device can include, for example, a piezo electric transducer for deflecting an end portion of a transmitting fibre so that the radiation (which exits from the fibre) is caused to move in the focal plane of a collimating lens. Alternatively, the end of the transmitting fibre can be fixed and a collimating lens can be moved with respect thereto, so that the focal plane of the lens is moved around the end of the fibre to produce the same effect. Alternatively, the end of the transmitting fibre can have a collimating lens either integral therewith, or attached thereto, so that the fibre and the lens can move together to produce the same effect.
Instead of using a piezo electric transducer, electrostatic deflection means can be used either to move a fibre with respect to a fixed lens, or to move a lens with respect to a fixed fibre. For example, the surface of the end portion of the fibre can be metallised or given some other conductive coating, so that it forms one electrostatic moveable ‘plate’ which co-operates with fixed electrostatic ‘plates’ adjacent the moveable ‘plate’.
Where a piezo electric transducer is used to cause movement, it can be of a ‘foil type’, where fingers of a comb-like array of piezo transducers are attached to actuating members, such as foil strips, for producing orthogonal displacement of either the optical fibre or the lens system. Such foils and combs can be assembled in a laminar matrix.
Alternatively, the piezo electric transducer can be of a ‘monolithic type’, where each transducer is made of piezo electric material, it has a body with a longitudinal axis, and the body has conductive strips aligned with said longitudinal axis so as to define respective portions of the piezo electric transducer which are energised to impart respective transverse movements in different radial directions. This provides a resultant motion in orthogonal axes. A multiplicity of such bodies can be assembled in a columnar matrix. The body can have a bore aligned with its longitudinal axis in which the fibre is received, whereby bending of the fibre occurs with respect to said longitudinal axis. Alternatively, the body is attached to the collimating lens which moves relative to a fixed fibre.
This ‘foil type’ and ‘monolithic type’ which are described in more detail below, can be designed to provide greater beam deflection than prior art arrangements, with less inertia, to achieve more rapid switching between a greater number of fibres and also to provide a higher packing density of fibres.
Preferably, position sensing feedback means are employed for sensing the amount of movement and for providing a feedback signal. This is used in a control system which energises the transducers to ensure that the transmitted radiation is aimed at the correct receiver fibre for making the required switching connection.
Preferably, a capacitive feedback system is used. For example, the fibre end has a conductive coating (as one ‘capacitor plate’) and it moves with respect to fixed conductive tracks (acting as the other ‘capacitor plate’). The term ‘capacitor plate’ applies generally to any member, surface, or structure which, together with the intervening ‘dielectric’ (which could be air, liquid or gaseous fluid, or some other dielectric material), forms a good capacitive coupling between fixed and moving elements. Such ‘plates’ can therefore take various forms, eg. they can be flat, curved or parts of some structure having some inherent capacitive properties. In another example, a lens system or optical collimator, having an associated ‘capacitor plate’ moves with respect to a fixed fibre end, having an associated ‘capacitor plate’.
In a preferred embodiment of the invention, conductive tracks on insulating boards are arranged in layers to form one set of fixed capacitive plates of a position sensing feedback system; the moving end portions of respective fibres having conductive coatings to form the other plates. Alternatively, a conductive plates moves with a lens and another conductive plate is fixed with the fibre. These tracks can cross orthogonally so that pairs of conductive tracks, associated with individual fibres, can be polled or addressed so as to sense the change in capacity proportional to the relative displacement between the fibre ends and the lens systems. In a preferred embodiment, a diagonal addressing system is used which can be selectively energized and switched in order to detect an instantaneous capacitive value relating to the amount of beam deflection.
When using the monolithic type of (piezo electric material) transducer, its rod-like form may be comparatively short and thick whereby bending is limited with respect to the longitudinal axis. In this case, mechanical leverage means can be used so as to magnify the transducer movement before imparting motion to cause relative movement between the collimating lens and the end portion of the fibre, or to move the end portion of the fibre to which a collimator lens is attached or forms an integral part. Preferably, such leverage means includes a gimbal mounting and an extension rod located between the end of the body of the piezo electric material transducer and a point on the gimbal spaced from its pivotal axis. In the latter case, where the collimator is part of or attached to the fibre end, the gimbal mounting is preferably on the body of the collimator to provide optimum deflection of the emergent beam.
Embodiments of the invention will now be described with reference to the accompanying drawings in which:
a-7d are perspective views showing the stages of manufacture of a monolithic type of actuator and
a-13b show another embodiment of capacitive sensing;
a and 23b are side views of an embodiment using a moving lens and a fixed fibre;
a-26e show an example of each of five different foil designs in plan view for a five-layer 64 port foil type switch assembly;
a-28e show different plan sectional views of each of 5 layers of piezo comb arrays and foil arrangements;
a-31c are isometric views of a sub-assembly of monolithic type actuators;
A similar structure can be made by (a) moulding the pillar 14 of piezoelectric material prior to firing and (b) attaching the pads 18 by coating. Such a pillar could be hollow or solid and of different cross-sectional shapes.
Referring to
A combination of (iii) and (vi) permits fibre to fibre coupling. Light from one fibre can be transformed into a directional collimated beam by (iii). By moving a lit fibre-tip (the ‘source’) it can be arrange that the collimated beam from its associated lens is directed as the lens associated with a totally different fibre (the ‘target’). By moving the target fibre it can be arranged that light from the incoming collimated beam may be collected and thus a fibre-to-fibre coupling condition has been set up. Since the optical system is symmetrical, the terms ‘source’ and ‘target’ fibre-tips can be used interchangeably and in a coupled scenario light can be transmitted in either direction.
Calibration would be carried out using the following steps:
1. Each fibre is ground in 2D and for each fibre the capacitance values for retro reflection are located.
2. Sequentially each fibre is moved to the positions on the CCD, using the retro reflection to calibrate the reference points.
3. For each fibre to each fibre the 2x and 2y average voltages are optimised for maximum coupling.
4. With 128 fibres (64 at each end) we have 64 x/y capacitance values stored, i.e. 16,384 numbers. These are stored in the non-volatile memory of the switch and used as the target capacitance values for the desired switch settings.
These steps refer to either the reflective or other straight-through design.
Referring to
With no effective deflection (i.e. no applied voltage on the piezo actuators), the collimated beam from each fibre tip should ideally aim towards the centre of the target lens array (or, by reflection, to the centre of the source array in a folded system). The aim of this is to minimise the bipolar fibre-tip translation required from the rest position to approximately one half of the array size.
Fibre tip Z positions must be within the depth of focus of the lens array to ensure high quality collimated beams. All fibre tips must be within a range behind the back surface of the lens array glass substrate, defined by the focal length of the lens array.
The angle of fibres relative to the lens array should be ideally 90°. Any significant deviation from a perpendicular geometry may have a detrimental effect on coupling efficiency and limit scalability.
In order to sense the position of each individual optical fibre, foil type or monolithic type (for correlating deflection with transducer drive signals), capacitive coupling is employed between (eg) each moving end portion of the fibre optic (which is coated with conducting material to form a moving plate), and other relatively fixed plates. An array of such coated fibre optics can be aligned inside a similar array of capacitive sensor pickup units. The array may be either square or hexagonal to ensure optimum packing density. Array sizes are scalable to larger number of fibres (>1000) suitable for future high port count optical cross connects for fibre optic communication applications.
The position of the optical fibre is determined by a measure of the capacitive coupling between the fibre and capacitive sensor plates. As capacitive feedback determines the fibre optic position with respect to the lens array 12, the capacitive feedback mounting unit is rigidly connected to the lens array to ensure precise reference to the fibres of the lens centres. (An alternative embodiment uses fixed fibres and a moving lens). The capacitive sensor plate pickup units can be formed either as shown in
a and 13b show, in sectional view, an alternative arrangement in which the N, S, E and W capacitive sensor plates are formed by perpendicular arrays of parallel conductive tracks 31N, 31S, 31E, 31W intersecting an array of holes through which the optical fibres 5 pass. The capacitive sensor tracks for NS and EW detection are arranged in parallel arrays, the two parallel arrays being perpendicular to each other. For isolation, the NS & EW sensor arrays are isolated from each other by sandwich layers of insulating matrix material 33. Ground plane layers 32 above and below each sensor layers act as a screen against environmental electromagnetic pickup. Note that
The arrangement of
An ac voltage is applied to the conductive coating on each optical fibre, typically at audio frequency. The resultant ac voltage coupled to the sensor plates is then detected using an appropriate low noise amplifier circuit, such as that shown in
Increased positional accuracy is achieved by coupling the detected voltages on the N and S sensor plates to the two inputs of a differential low noise amplifier 35. Thus as the optical fibre moves closer to the N plate, the N plate detected signal increases, similarly the detected signal on the S plate decreases. The differential is applied to the amplifier. A similar arrangement is used for the E-W plates.
To enable the unique positions of individual fibres within large arrays of optical fibres to be detected, an AC signal needs to be applied to each fibre. Such an arrangement is not practicable with large numbers of fibres. We therefore prefer to use a method by which the unique positions of arrays of fibres may be detected by selectively switching between diagonal rows of such fibres. Details are shown in
An AC excitation signal is applied to diagonal arrays of fibres (as shown in
Diagonal array A utilises all 8 fibres along the diagonal. However, diagonal array B utilises 7 such fibres (B0 and B6), this diagonal is therefore connected to fibre B7 (bottom left corner). Similarly diagonal C comprises six such fibre elements (C0 to C5) and this is connected to fibre elements C6 and C7. The process is repeated so that all diagonals comprise 8 elements. (However, this connection system can be scaled to any size of array). For example, a 256 fibre array comprising 16 rows and 16 columns would be connected using 16 diagonals. A generalised N fibre array therefore contains square root (N) diagonals.
Referring to the 64 fibre array shown in
Note also that for very large arrays, the time to sense all elements with the capacitive feedback system is limited by the time take to excite and scan each diagonal. Improved switching time can be achieved by sub-dividing larger fibre arrays into sub-sections, where, for example, a 256 element array can be split into 4 smaller separate readout arrays. This approach is scalable to any array size.
In order to provide a further improvement, a collimating lens can be attached to or integral with the end of the optical fibre to provide a wider angular spread of the emergent beam. In this case, both the lens and fibre move together which simplifies the design enabling rapid switching speed for a high port count. These collimating lenses can be used independently, i.e. with other switching assemblies, but they are especially useful when used together with the miniaturised ‘foil type’ or ‘monolithic type’ of piezo electric material transducers described above.
As the fibre end and lens array can both result in back reflection (even when all faces are coated with multi-layer dielectric anti-reflection coatings), some signal loss is incurred. Furthermore, coupling efficiency between fibre ends and collimating optics is critically dependent on maintaining the position of the fibre end within the focal plane of the lens. Collimated fibre optics can be used to deal with this problem. Insertion losses and back reflection within optical switch systems can be considerably reduced and construction can be simplified by the use of collimated or integrally lensed fibre optic ends (
Collimated fibre optics 40 are commercially available, they incorporate a collimating lens 40a attached to the single mode fibre optic end portion 5.
Integrally lensed 41 fibre optics may also be used in place of a collimator 40 for all of the present applications discussed here. Integrally lensed fibre optics are formed by treating the fibre optic end in such a way that it forms a micro lens (integral lens fibre optic systems are currently available from some manufacturers of fibre optic systems). The advantage that both of these technologies provide in the present switching application is that the light emanating from the fibre optic end is collimated and parallel without the incorporation of additional discrete optical components such as lens arrays.
Integrally lensed fibre optics may also be made by cementing an appropriate lens to the fibre end. In all cases coated or uncoated components may be used. Collimator based N×N fibre switches (i.e. N input port counts and N output port counts) have the advantage of low insertion loss, excellent cross talk performance and excellent polarisation independence.
Alternatively, fibre optic switching can be achieved in which collimated or integrally based fibre optic ends are incorporated into the N×N switching matrix, thereby precluding the lens array 12 used in the alternative switch structures described above.
Where capacitive feedback is used (as described above) to determine the position of the collimator, the external surface of the collimator is metallised or given a conductive thin film coating.
Connection to the collimator can be made using metallised fibres and capacitive feedback can be used to measure the capacitance between the outer surface of the collimator rather than the metallised fibre optic. However, if integrally lensed optics are used, capacitive coupling is used to measure the capacitance between the sensor pcb and the metallised fibre.
To achieve greater angular swing of the collimated optics at the end of the fibre optic it may be mounted in a gimbals type mount 42 that allows the collimator 40 to pivot about its centre point as shown in
A key feature of this design is that the extension rod 44 provides extra lateral movement of the XY plane (perpendicular to the fibre axis) of the base of the collimator than that provided by an unextended piezo actuator alone. The advantage of this is that the collimated beam may be swung over a large, angular range for a given piezo movement. This is important as it provides a much wider addressable range for the resulting beam emanating from the collimator, thus enabling much larger switch arrays to be built (i.e. larger N×N switch sizes—higher port counts).
With the monolithic type, the optical fibre passes through the centre of the piezo tube scanner. The complete unit is replicated N time for an N×N switch unit (FIG. 22)—not
Individual piezo actuators are formed by moulding, firing and/or subsequent sawing of the monolithic piezo material, followed by patterning with electrical contacts.
The collimator gimbals and flexure mount could be manufactured in a number of ways, one route being patterned foils.
a-26e are plan views of an example of foil designs for a 64 port foil type switching assembly. These are arranged in layers, insulated from one another, in the sub-assembly of optic fibre bundles.
Referring to
a-28e show plan views of each layer of piezo comb arrays and foil arrangements such as those shown in
a and 31b are cut-away perspective views of a monolithic type of switching array in which monolithic tube type piezo actuators 70 deflect metallised fibre optics 71 that terminate in (or adjacent) collimators 72 mounted in a capacitive sensing feedback board 73; mechanical leverage (like that shown in
An example of a method of making a monolithic type of piezoelectric transducer is described in more detail below, all electrical connections for steering the fibres are brought out to bonds pads on the edge of the ceramic and three connections each are supplied with voltages to drive them.
First step: Interconnects are laid out on ceramic base. Two layer metallization, out to the array of bonds pads around edge.
Second step: A coarse pattern low temperature ceramic screen is printed and fired.
Third step: Holes in the pattern are plated up, connecting to interconnects beneath.
Fourth step: A piezo slab, of grade used for inkjet print heads or equivalent, suitable for diamond sawing bonded to ceramic base using low melting point alloy.
Fifth step: Holes drilled through (no clear fibre core).
Sixth step: First hexagonal saw, cut step (
Seventh step: The side of the columns are plated or deep evaporated. Fibre holes also plated or evaporated, as well as back side of ceramic for use as earth connection of fibre holes. Tops of columns demetallised if needed.
Eighth step: Piezo poled under oil, producing radial poling in columns.
Ninth step: Second set of hexagonal sawing, produces final columns (
Tenth step: Fibre cores are dropped through (ends already prepared) with device jigged up above flat and locating grid. Drop in UV cure epoxy to each fibre and expose.
Eleventh step: Attach and focus microlens array.
Twelfth step: Assemble back to back with matching array or mirror. Attach fibre tails to connectors.
Number of fibres accessible in hexagonal array given fibre can bend n times the spot separation from the centre point is n(n=1)*3+1, i.e. a deflection capability of +/−10 spot sizes gives access to 334 spots—1 334×334 nonblocking switch. To realise this performance, the correct path length needs to be used.
The quality of the lens array is important in achieving diffraction limited gaussian beams needed to maximise performance. Given a high numerical aperture and small field of view used, a single surface parabolic form produces excellent results, built up of multi layer deposited silica and then re-flowed.
Response time is set by the resonant frequency of the columns plus fibre. The shorter and fatter the better (this is an opposite requirement to maximising displacement). Having column getting lighter toward top is good.
Deflection is achieved using this radial poled system radial poled and volts applied between three sides and the centre. Using shear mode deflection avoids need for re-poling (can use prepoled through thickness), but gives much lower deflection. Maximum deflection obtained with multilayer stack poled through thickness, but this needs several layers.
Aid to alignment can be had in the single pack against mirror configuration by using a partially transmissive mirror, and a CCD in the place where the other fibre pack would go. This can be used on line if desired in this configuration, or simply as a set up aid for the electronics to learn the right drive voltages for all locations of all fibres.
A linking means such as that referenced 9c incorporates between 9a and 9c as well as between 9b and 9c a number of narrow portions which act as flexure means which carry the optical element and are compliant with the displacement of the optical element.
The invention also envisages the use in these beam steering arrangements of other forms of optical elements such as fibres, lenses, reflectors, prisms, filters and gratings.
The embodiment of
In the embodiment of
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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000026.3 | Jan 2000 | GB | national |
0027745.9 | Nov 2000 | GB | national |
0029439.7 | Dec 2000 | GB | national |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20060002654 A1 | Jan 2006 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 10169782 | US | |
Child | 11133157 | US |