The present application is based on and claims priority to Japanese Patent Application No. 2017-192337, filed on Oct. 2, 2017, the entire contents of which are incorporated herein by reference.
An aspect of this disclosure relates to an optical module.
Electric cables made of, for example, copper have been used for communications performed by supercomputers and high-end servers via high -speed interfaces. However, optical communication is becoming popular to achieve high-speed signal transmission and to increase the transmission distance.
Next generation interfaces with a long transmission distance of dozens of meters employ optical communication technologies, and use optical modules to connect optical cables to servers and convert electric signals into optical signals. An optical module converts an optical signal from an optical cable into an electric signal, outputs the electric signal to a server, converts an electric signal from the server into an optical signal, and outputs the optical signal to the optical cable.
An optical module includes a light emitter for converting an electric signal into an optical signal, a light receiver for converting an optical signal into an electric signal, a driving integrated circuit (IC) for driving the light emitter, and a trans-impedance amplifier (TIA) for converting an electric current into a voltage. The light emitter, the light receiver, the driving IC, and the TIA are mounted on a board. The light emitter and the light receiver are connected to a ferrule such as a lens ferrule via an optical waveguide (see, for example, Japanese Laid-Open Patent Publication No. 2013-069883 and Japanese Laid-Open Patent Publication No. 2014-085513).
In an aspect of this disclosure, there is provided an optical module that includes a board, a light emitter disposed on the board, a light receiver disposed on the board, and at least one radio-wave absorber disposed between the light emitter and the light receiver.
With an optical module using a high -frequency electric signal, an electromagnetic wave that becomes noise may be generated when the optical module is actuated, and the reception sensitivity of the optical module may decrease.
Accordingly, there is a demand for an optical module whose reception sensitivity does not decrease when the optical module is actuated. Also, if the entire surface of an optical module is covered by a radio-wave absorbing sheet, heat generated in, for example, a driving IC cannot be readily released.
An aspect of this disclosure makes it possible to suppress a decrease in the reception sensitivity of an actuated optical module.
Embodiments of the present invention are described below with reference to the accompanying drawings. Throughout the drawings, the same reference number is assigned to the same component, and repeated descriptions of the same component are omitted.
First, an optical module is described with reference to
The optical module of
The board 10 includes a flexible printed -circuit (FPC) connector 11 to which an FPC 12 is connected. The FPC 12 includes a light emitter 13 such as a vertical cavity surface emitting laser (VCSEL) that converts an electric signal into an optical signal and outputs the optical signal, a light receiver 14 such as a photodiode that converts an optical signal into an electric signal, a driving IC 15 for driving the light emitter 13, and a TIA 16 that is connected to the light receiver 14 and converts an electric current output from the light receiver 14 into a voltage. The board 10 includes a terminal 17 for connection with an external device. In the present application, the driving IC 15 may be referred to as a “driving circuit”, and the TIA 16 may be referred to as a “conversion circuit”.
The optical waveguide 20 is formed like a flexible sheet, and includes multiple cores surrounded by clads. Light entering the optical waveguide 20 propagates through the cores. One end of the optical waveguide 20 is connected to the board 10. The optical waveguide 20 transmits light entering the light receiver 14 and light emitted from the light emitter 13.
The optical connector 30 includes a lens ferrule 31 and an MT ferrule 32 that are connected to each other and held together by the clip 40.
The optical waveguide 20 is connected to the lens ferrule 31. Screw holes 40a formed in the clip 40 are aligned with screw holes 51a of the lower housing 51, and the clip 40 is screwed to the lower housing 51 with screws 53. With the clip 40 screwed to the lower housing 51, the optical connector 30 is fixed to the lower housing 51.
Sleeves 61a and 61b are fixed by a crimp ring 62 to the optical cable 60. A portion of the optical cable 60 to which the sleeves 61a and 61b are fixed is covered by upper and lower cable boots 71 and 72, and a pull-tab/latch 73 is attached to the housing.
The optical connector 30 is fixed via the clip 40 to the lower housing 51, the upper housing 52 is placed on the lower housing 51 on which the board 10 is placed, and screws 54 are screwed into screw holes 52a of the upper housing 52 and screw holes 51b of the lower housing 51 to fix the upper housing 52 to the lower housing 51.
As illustrated in
When the optical module is actuated, an electromagnetic wave is generated.
Thus, an electromagnetic wave may be generated as noise when the optical module is actuated, and the electromagnetic wave may reduce the reception sensitivity of the optical module. As illustrated in
Next, an optical module according to a first embodiment is described. As illustrated in
Each of the light emitter 13 and the light receiver 14 has a size of 1.0 mm×0.4 mm, and each of the driving IC 15 and the TIA 16 has a shape of a square each side of which has a length of 2.2 mm. Each of the capacitors 18a, 18b, 18c, and 18d has a size of 1.0 mm×0.5 mm or 0.6 mm×0.3 mm. The absorber 110 has a width W of 0.65 mm and a length L of 7 to 8 mm.
The absorber 110 disposed between the transmitter and the receiver absorbs and decreases the intensity of electromagnetic waves generated at the light emitter 13 and the driving IC 15, and may reduce the influence of the electromagnetic waves on the light receiver 14 and the TIA 16.
As illustrated in
As illustrated in
Next, a second embodiment is described. An optical module of the second embodiment includes multiple radio-wave absorbers. Before describing the second embodiment, simulations conducted using two planar antennas called patch antennas are described. Patch antennas with a resonance frequency of 25 GHz, which corresponds to the noise frequency, are used for the simulations. In the simulations, as illustrated in
In the simulations, the transmission characteristic S21 is calculated for each of models 9A through 9C.
As indicated by Table 1, providing the absorbing sheet 221 between the antenna 211 and the antenna 212 as in the model 9B decreases the transmission characteristic S21 at 25 GHz by 7 dB compared with the model 9A. This indicates that the electromagnetic wave is absorbed by the absorbing sheet 221. Also, using the absorbing sheet 222 including slits as in the model 9C decreases the transmission characteristic S21 at 25 GHz by 8.6 dB compared with the model 9A. Thus, slits formed in a radio-wave absorbing sheet at a predetermined pitch may decrease the transmission characteristic S21 by 1.6 dB compared with the model 9B where the absorbing sheet 221 with no slit is used.
The optical module of the second embodiment is obtained based on the results of the above research, and includes multiple radio-wave absorbers. In the example of
In the second embodiment, the wave absorber 110b is disposed between the transmitter and the receiver, the absorber 110a is disposed between the transmitter and the capacitors 18a and 18b, and the absorber 110c is disposed between the receiver and the capacitors 18c and 18d. Thus, the transmitter is disposed between the absorber 110a and the absorber 110b, and the receiver is disposed between the absorber 110b and the absorber 110c.
A measured reception sensitivity of the optical module of
In the second embodiment, as illustrated in
Also in the second embodiment, as illustrated in
Configurations of the optical module of the second embodiment other than those described above are substantially the same as those described in the first embodiment.
Optical modules according to embodiments of the present invention are described above. However, the present invention is not limited to the specifically disclosed embodiments, and variations and modifications may be made without departing from the scope of the present invention.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2017-192337 | Oct 2017 | JP | national |