High reliability is generally required for laser diodes, such as pump lasers and signal lasers, used in fiber-optic communication. Packaging these lasers typically involves the following steps: fixing the laser and other parts in an enclosure; having optics to couple the light from the laser chip to an optical fiber; and sealing the enclosure hermetically. Pump laser modules, which nowadays have hundreds of mW fiber-coupled optical power, are the key components in erbium doped fiber amplifiers. Because of the high power output, packaging pump laser modules is more challenging in both the package design and process as compared to those for the low power lasers.
One of the major challenges in packaging of high power output fiberoptic components is the tight tolerance in fiber alignment (FIG. 1). The laser beam emitted from the laser chip 10 (
In addition to the tight tolerance, it is also required that the high-power fiber optic package is free from any contamination, including outgassing, of organic materials. Such a contamination could be laser dissociated into carbon particles, which then deposit onto the laser facet. The contamination will, therefore, degrade the laser performance and could eventually cause catastrophic optical damage to the laser chip.
Laser welding has been used in packaging pump laser modules for many years and has been proven as a reliable and clean process. In this process, the lensed fiber is assembled in a metal ferrule and a special designed metal clip is needed for welding the fiber to a metal base. Because the laser welding process inevitably introduces some local stress on the welding spot and hence, shifts the fiber out of alignment, one has to anneal the laser module to relax the excessive stress and then bring the fiber back into alignment by “hammering” which means to physically deform the metal parts. The annealing/hammering process could take several iterations before the fiber is stabilized in alignment.
Low temperature solder glasses (also known as frits) are proven materials and are widely used in opto-electronic packages as hermetic sealing compounds for feed-through pins, optical windows and lenses. Solder glass starts in a form of powder or preforms and is processed at high temperature that ranges from 350° C. to 700° C., depending on the specific composition. It is non-creeping, clean and stable over the temperature range that laser modules are specified.
In one embodiment, locally heated low temperature solder glass is used to permanently fix an optical fiber with sub-micron precision inside a high power pump laser module. The fiber is manipulated into a predetermined alignment while the solder glass is still molten and the solder glass is then cooled to its solidified state. Preferably, the alignment process involves monitoring of the laser power coupled to the fiber and the predetermined alignment includes an offset to compensate for subsequent thermally related dimensional changes as the solder glass solidifies. If necessary, the solder glass can be remelted and the fiber realigned with a different offset if the first alignment attempt is less than optimal. This alignment process has been demonstrated to provide reliable and efficient coupling of an optical fiber to a high power pump laser within very tight tolerances. A similar process can also be applied to other micro-optics assemblies where high precision, high reliability fiber fixing is required.
The salient characteristics, features and advantages of this invention will be apparent from the following detailed description of certain preferred embodiments and the accompanying drawings, in which:
Reference should now be made to the lensed fiber fixing station shown schematically in FIG. 3. Prior to lensed fiber alignment and fixing, all the other parts 22a, 22b in the pump laser module 20 are bonded to the package 24 with various alloy solders, of which the melting points are all below 300° C. To process the solder glass without remelting any alloy solder, we use a focused CO2 laser beam 26 as the heating source and fix the lensed fiber 28 on a glass-ceramic submount 30. The CO2 laser spot is adjusted to the size of the solder glass preform 32 so that the heating is only localized on the point where the fiber is jointed to the fiber submount. The glass-ceramic submount has very low thermal conductivity and can resist up to 900° C. heat, therefore, it blocks most of the heat from conducting to the other part of the package and prevents the alloy solders from remelting.
A fiber gripper 34 holds the lensed fiber and can move it with sub-micron resolution in x, y, z directions as defined in FIG. 2. The fiber gripper is angularly pre-aligned such that the fiber axis is parallel to the waveguide on the laser chip. Since the angular tolerance in fiber to laser alignment is not as tight, no further angular adjustment is necessary. The CO2 laser beam 26 is focused on the solder glass preform 32 and keeps it molten (step 50,
Inevitably, the heat process will cause the solder glass to contract after solidification, which will bring the lensed fiber down (−y direction,
With the above process, one can choose the solder glass and fiber submount with appropriate thermal expansion coefficients relative to that of the other components inside the module package to manage the temperature dependent chip-to-fiber coupling. One presently contemplated application of this technology is an uncooled pump laser module with reduced temperature dependent power variation.
The application of this process can be extended to many other opto-electronic components packaging where reliability, tight tolerance and re-workability are desired. The local heating source can be other laser sources or micro resistive heater printed on the fiber submount and the submount can be ceramics and glasses with high thermal resistivity and high working temperature.
This application is based on, and claims priority from, our like-named U.S. Provisional Application 60/381,636 filed on 17 May 2002.
| Number | Name | Date | Kind |
|---|---|---|---|
| 4186994 | Denkin et al. | Feb 1980 | A |
| 4798439 | Preston | Jan 1989 | A |
| 4807956 | Tournereau et al. | Feb 1989 | A |
| 4844581 | Turner | Jul 1989 | A |
| 5307434 | Blonder et al. | Apr 1994 | A |
| 6536958 | Liu | Mar 2003 | B2 |
| 6690865 | Miyazaki | Feb 2004 | B2 |
| 20020037142 | Rossi | Mar 2002 | A1 |
| 20030095759 | Dautartas et al. | May 2003 | A1 |
| 20040037519 | Kilian | Feb 2004 | A1 |
| Number | Date | Country | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 20030215193 A1 | Nov 2003 | US |
| Number | Date | Country | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 60381636 | May 2002 | US |