The present invention relates to the manufacture of fiber optic preforms useful in forming solution-doped optical fibers and, more particularly, to the utilization of an internal heat source to improve the uniformity of the soot layer morphology, resulting in improving of the uniformity of the dopant concentration added to the soot.
While the variety, forms, and complexity of fiber optic configurations continue to evolve, the central underlying structure found in virtually all optical fibers is a light transmitting core surrounded by a cladding layer. The indices of refraction of the core and cladding are adjusted during manufacture to provide the cladding with an index of refraction that is less than that of the core. When light is pumped into the fiber core, it encounters the refractive index differential at the core/cladding interface and in an optical phenomenon, also referred to as “continuous internal reflection”, is “bent” back with little loss into the core, where it continues to propagate down the optical fiber.
In manufacture, an optical fiber is typically drawn from an optical fiber preform that has essentially the same cross-sectional geometrical arrangement of core and cladding components as that of the final optical fiber, but with a diameter several orders of magnitude greater than that of the fiber. One end of the preform is heated in a furnace to a soft pliable plastic consistency, then drawn lengthwise into a fiber having the desired fiber core/cladding dimension.
In the art of fiber preform manufacture for transmission fibers, techniques have been developed for high speed manufacture using a chemical vapor deposition process, which has been found to be relatively inexpensive, while also providing a high quality fiber. In this process, the necessary cladding and core constituents are supplied in their vapor phase to a horizontally rotated refractory tube to form one or more inner glass layers on the inside surfaces of the tube. Exemplary of this technique is U.S. Pat. No. 4,909,816, issued to MacChesney et al, and its companion patents U.S. Pat. Nos. 4,217,027 and 4,334,903, disclosing what is referred to in the art as the “modified chemical vapor deposition” (MCVD) process.
While the MCVD technique is extremely successful in the manufacture of preforms for transmission fibers, it is not considered as the preferred approach in the manufacture of fibers containing rare earth dopants (e.g., erbium) or other materials (e.g., cobalt) that cannot be successfully deposited on the inner wall of a glass tube using a conventional vapor phase deposition process. In its place, a process referred to as “solution doping” has been developed to form the fiber optic preforms required for these doped fibers. In a conventional solution doping process, a “soot” layer is first formed on the inner wall of a glass tube; the term “soot” is used to define a deposited layer having a large amount of porosity, where the layer is not fully sintered to form a glass (or amorphous) layer. Thereafter, the tube is removed from the processing apparatus and turned “on end” and filled with a solution containing the dopant (such as erbium or cobalt). The soot layer behaves as a “sponge”, absorbing the liquid and, therefore, the dopant. After a predetermined period of time, the liquid is slowly drained from the tube, where the liquid-soaked soot will retain the dopant. The tube is then dried and further processed (oxidized and sintered) to form a glass layer comprising the desired dopant material.
One problem with this prior art solution doping process is that the concentration of the dopant species incorporated during soaking is controlled, to a large extent, by the morphology of the unsintered soot layer. Therefore, it is difficult to reproduce the same dopant concentrations from preform to preform. Reproducibility has now become a very important issue as the preforms fabricated by solution doping have evolved from being drawn into experimental fiber into being used for high tolerance production fiber. Thus, a need remains in the art for a method of improving the reproducibility of the preforms formed using the solution doping process.
The need remaining in the prior art is addressed by the present invention, which relates to the manufacture of fiber optic preforms useful in forming solution-doped optical fibers and, more particularly, to the utilization of an internal heat source to improve the uniformity of the soot layer morphology (and, as a result, improve the uniformity of the dopant concentration in the soot).
In accordance with the present invention, an internal gaseous heat source is used in combination with a conventional prior art vapor phase glass precursor used to form the soot, such as SiCl4 (or GeCl4, POCl3, etc.) and oxygen. This may be accomplished using a conventional MCVD process by flowing the gas mixture, including the internal gaseous heat source, into the interior of the tube and heating the tube wall. Preferably, the tube is rotated during this process.
It has been discovered that the addition of the internal gaseous heat source results in forming a dual layer soot; a “bottom” layer and a “top” layer. The bottom soot layer is similar to the soot layer of the prior art, at least in terms of its morphology. As the deposition temperature increases, the thickness and porosity of the bottom layer decreases. Indeed, under certain circumstances the presence of the bottom layer becomes negligible. The addition of an internal gaseous heat source results in forming a “top” layer which exhibits little, if any, change in its morphology as the deposition temperature is varied. Since the dopant added during solution doping will be absorbed by this top layer (which has a much more consistent morphology), the result is a fiber optic preform that exhibits significantly improved reproducibility (from preform to preform) in terms of its dopant concentration.
In accordance with a preferred embodiment of the present invention, N2O can be used as the internal heat source, and added to the gaseous flow during the soot deposition process. Other gaseous heat sources include, but are not limited to, perchloryl fluoride, silane, chlorosilane, di- or tri-chlorosilane, methane, C2N2 (cyanogens), or other gaseous material for providing heat.
Other and further aspects of the present invention will become apparent during the course of the following discussion, and by reference to the accompanying drawings.
Referring now to the drawings,
Prior to discussing the improvement in preform reproducibility found from using the process of the present invention, it is useful to have a full understanding of the prior art “solution doping” process of preform construction. In general, solution doping can be broken down into several steps. First, as shown in
Once solution 14 is drained away, preform 12 is put back on the lathe and doped soot layer 16 is dried by flowing room temperature O2 through the tube. When doped soot layer 16 is completely dry, the dopants are oxidized and purified by passing oxygen, and then oxygen and chlorine, through preform 12 while heating preform 12 to a temperature greater than 1000° C. Finally, the soot layer is sintered. The entire process can then be repeated if a thicker glass layer is desired.
As mentioned above, the concentration of the species incorporated by the prior art solution doping process is controlled, for the most part, by the morphology of the unsintered soot layer (such as soot layer 10). Indeed, variability in the fiber caused by the solution doping process can be easily understood if the preform soot layer is thought of as a sponge. Assuming a constant dopant molarity in the solution, the amount of dopant incorporated in the soot depends on the ability of the soot to retain the solution. It has been discovered, as will be discussed in detail below, that the addition of an internal heat source, such as N2O, during the soot deposition process improves the uniformity of the soot. In particular, the addition of the heat source results in forming an additional soot layer (i.e., the “top” layer) which exhibits a consistent morphology as the deposition temperature (and/or other parameters) vary.
The morphology and thickness of a soot layer can be measured as a function of temperature to aid in determining the benefits of the process of the present invention. The porosity and soot thickness, as shown below, has been found to decrease as temperature increases. However, the porosity and soot thickness decreased significantly less for the process of the present invention when compared to the prior art.
In accordance with the present invention and as mentioned above, it is possible to design a solution doping process such that the conventional “bottom” layer is minimized—or even eliminated—by minimizing the temperature gradient between the hottest point created by the external heat source and the downstream tube wall temperature. The minimization of the temperature gradient can be accomplished without affecting the soot deposition rate associated with the internal heat source, since this deposition process is not affected by the downstream tube temperature.
Table I, shown below, illustrates the relationship between the addition of an internal heat source and the soot layer morphology:
As discussed above, the bottom soot layer deposited using the process of the present invention is similar to the total soot layer deposited when N2O (or another internal heat source) is not used (i.e., the conventional prior art process). As the temperature increases, the soot thickness and porosity decrease. However, when N2O is used, an additional high porosity soot layer is deposited, which becomes thicker with increasing temperature. This top soot layer counteracts the negative effects of temperature on the bottom layer. Thus, the improved top soot layer, in terms of more uniform porosity, allows for the dopant concentration retained by each preform to also be more uniform, resulting in improved consistency in the manufacture of preforms.
As shown clearly in
It is to be understood that the above-described processes of the present invention are considered to be exemplary only, for the sake of discussion and describing a preferred mode for the process of the present invention. For example, nitrous oxide (N2O) is to be considered as exemplary only of one possible internal heat source; perchloryl fluoride, silane, chlorosilane, di- or tri-chlorosilane, methane (in general, hydrocarbons), C2N2 (cyanogens), and other gaseous material for providing heat are considered to be equally applicable as an internal heat source in the soot structure fabrication process of the present invention. Indeed, the teachings of the present invention are considered to be limited only by the claims which are appended hereto.
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 10096020 | Mar 2002 | US |
Child | 11607385 | Dec 2006 | US |