1. Technical Field
The present invention relates to the general field of switchable latching Faraday rotators and, more particularly, relates to enhancing the switching and latching reliability, and reducing driving current and voltage.
2. Description of Related Art
Faraday rotation is a magneto-optic effect in which the plane of polarization of polarized light is caused to rotate by passage through a magneto-optic material to which is applied an external magnetic field. The combination of magneto-optic material and a means for application of an external magnetic field is denoted as a “Faraday rotator”.
The rotation angle, θ, denotes the angle through which the plane of polarization is rotated by the magneto-optic material. Typically, θ is approximately proportional to the intensity of the magnetic field applied to the magneto-optic material in the direction of propagation of the light through the material as in Eq. 1.
θ=K−H∥ Eq. 1
in which:
According to their applications, Faraday rotators can be classified as three major categories: fixed rotators, switchable rotators and variable rotators. Fixed rotators use fixed magnetic field or permanently magnetized magneto-optic materials, so that the rotation angle is fixed and cannot be controlled or switched. Switchable rotators, however, use switchable magnetic field so that the rotation angle is switchable between two possible values. Variable rotators, instead of switch between two possible states, use variable magnetic field to generate variable rotation angle.
Faraday rotators have been employed as components or subsystems in various optical devices. For example, fixed rotators are widely used in isolators and circulators, variable rotators can be used in variable optical attenuators, and switchable rotators can be used in optical switches. Compared with opto-mechanic technologies, the switchable or variable magneto-optical devices have no moving-parts and hence have incomparable reliability. The importance of such devices will increase with the steady growth of the optical fiber networks.
The fixed rotators use permanent magnet to generate fixed magnetic field, or use permanently magnetized magneto-optical material to generate fixed rotation angle, so that electrical parts are not necessary for the fixed Farady rotator. The switchable rotators and variable rotators, on the contrary, need electrical circuit to convert electrical control signal into switchable or variable magnetic field. The switchable rotators and variable rotators can be further divided into two categories: latching type and non-latching type. “Latching” denotes the ability to retain the rotation angle after the applied electrical control signal is removed. In most situations, latching is preferred for Faraday rotators due to the electrical power consumption consideration.
Usually a switchable latching type Faraday rotator at least includes the following parts: magneto-optic material, wire coil, and semi-hard magnetic material. The wire coil is used to convert the electrical energy into magnetic energy. The semi-hard magnetic material is used to provide a sustainable magnetic field for the magneto-optic crystal after the electrical current is removed. The semi-hard magnetic material is a category of magnetic material which is very similar to hard (or permanent) magnetic material, only that semi-hard materials has relatively lower coercive force (Hc). “Coercive force” is the demagnetizing force, measured in Oesteds, necessary to reduce observed magnetic induction (B) to zero after the magnet has previously been brought to saturation. “Saturation” is the condition under which all elementary magnetic moments have been oriented in one direction. According to the Magnetic Materials Products Association Standard No. 0100-00: a permanent magnetic material, also designated as a magnetically hard material, has a coercive force generally greater than 120 Oersted. A semi-hard magnetic material generally has a coercive force less than 120 Oersted and greater than 10 Oersted. The semi-hard magnetic material is very critical to the performance of switchable latching type Faraday rotators. The driving current of the latching type Faraday rotator is directly related to the coercive force of the semi-hard material. Lower coercive force means lower magnetic field is needed for the semi-hard material to reverse its status and hence lower current is needed to produce the corresponding magnetic field. Obviously the driving current is also related to the structure of the wire coil and the magnetic circuit that directly affects the efficiency of energy conversion. The latching reliability is connected to the properties of the magneto-optic material and the magnetic field strength at the location of magneto-optic material. Stronger magnetic field at the location of the magnetic-optical material results in more reliable latching.
Besides the latching capability, the switchable or variable rotators should also meet the following requirements to be widely used as a practical commercial optical device: 1. Low control voltage and control current. For example, the switchable Faraday rotators used in telecommunication applications usually require the control voltage be lower than 5 Volts, and the control current be lower than 200 mA and the lower the better. 2. Temperature-proof latching reliability. It is a common requirement that the status should be firmly latched when temperature varies from −40° C. to 85° C. 3. Small physical profile. In the application of telecommunication, the optical devices used together with the Faraday rotators are usually in the scale of a few millimeters, which implies that Faraday rotators used in this field should be in the scale of a few millimeters too.
However, prior art switchable Faraday rotators cannot meet these requirements listed above. Most of the conventional Faraday rotators are not switchable, or switchable but not latchable[U.S. Pat. No. 5,535,046]. Some Faraday rotators do switch and latch, but require too much driving current (usually large than 1 A) to prevent them from being used in practical optical systems. The dual difficulties of lack of stable latching capability and the need for high switching current has precluded magneto-optic (Faraday rotator) switches from capturing a major share of the applications for optical switches.
However, the Faraday rotator depicted in
Since the hollow yoke is located outside of the coil, the magnetic field at the position of the hollow yoke (i.e., position D) generated by the coil is much smaller than the magnetic field at position C within the coil. Thus, this device has the disadvantage of not effectively magnetizing the hollow yoke, hence needs very large current to achieve latching functionality. According to the data given by the patent disclosure, the minimum current need to achieve latching is about 3 Amps.
The objective of the present invention relates to providing a switchable latching-type Faraday rotator having low electrical power consumption, small physical profile, as well as reliable latching capability.
The switchable latching Faraday rotator according to the present invention comprises: (1) a magneto-optic crystal, (2) semi-hard magnets which are adjacent to the magneto-optic crystal (3) wire coil encompassing the magneto-optic crystal and semi-hard magnets (4) soft magnetic tubes and adaptors which form a magnetic conductive loop.
The present invention optimizes the semi-hard magnets design so that the semi-hard magnets can generate maximum magnetic field at the location of magneto-optic crystal. This optimized design lows driving current and voltage, improves latching reliability and reduces physical profile of the Faraday rotator.
The present invention also optimizes the wire coil design so that both low driving voltage and low driving current requirements can be meet at the same time.
After all these efforts, the present invention can bring the driving voltage down to 4V and driving current down to 55 mA. The present invention also improves latching reliability of the Faraday rotators. The Faraday rotators made with present invention can latch in their original status for a few weeks in the 85° C. oven.
The drawings herein are not to scale.
Magneto-optic material is the core material for the Faraday rotators.
To use the magneto-optic crystal in a switchable Faraday rotator, it is necessary to drive the magneto-optic crystal beyond two saturation points, Hs and −Hs. To be a latching type Faraday rotator, it is also necessary to provide sustainable magnetic field which is strong enough to drive the magneto-optic crystal into saturation region and reliably hold the saturation status. The semi-hard magnetic material is an ideal candidate for this application. The semi-hard magnetic material has very low coercive force (Hc<120 Oersted) so that it can be easily magnetized or reverse magnetized by a wire coil. On the other hand, the semi-hard magnetic material has large residual induction (Br>5000 Gauss) so that it can produce strong magnetic field in its surrounding region after the external magnetic field is removed.
The magnetic field at the location of magneto-optical crystal generated by semi-hard magnet is dependent on the geometrical shape of the semi-hard magnet and the position of magneto-optic crystal.
One major objective of present invention is to provide a switchable Faraday rotator with highly reliable latching performance. This is realized by introducing very high magnetic field at the magneto-optic material position. In detail, this objective is implemented by: 1. choosing optimized semi-hard and magneto-optic material, 2. choosing optimized geometrical structure for the semi-hard magnet and magnetic circuit. 3. mounting the magneto-optic crystal into an optimized position.
Another major objective of the present invention is to achieve switching and latching function with low electrical power consumption, including low driving voltage and low driving current. To achieve this objective, the wire coil design is also need to be optimized so that maximal energy conversion efficiency can be achieved. A few parameters of the wire coil can to be optimized or balanced between each other, including: coil length, inner diameter, outer diameter, wire gauge, wire resistance, and number of turns.
In the telecommunication optical device application, some considerations should be taken into account:
When applying a 4V (52 mA) pulse to the wire coil, it can produce over 140 Oersted magnetic field at the location of semi-hard magnet core. Since the coercive force (Hc) of the semi-hard magnet core in this embodiment is about 70 Oersted, it can be easily magnetized or reverse-magnetized into saturation state by the magnetic field of the wire coil. After the driving voltage or current is removed, a magnetic flux density (Br) remains on the semi-hard magnet core.
The semi-hard material used in present invention has very high residual induction (Br>10000 Gauss), and it can generate very high magnetic field in its surrounding region. However, the magnetic field generated by semi-hard magnet is not uniform in space. One major advantage of present invention over prior art inventions is that present invention optimized the semi-hard magnet design so that it can generate maximum magnetic field at the location of magneto-optic crystal.
In present invention, the optimization is realized in two different aspects at the same time: 1. The position of the magneto-optic crystal is optimized, so that the magnetic energy is concentrated in the region of the magneto-optic crystal.
Another advantage of present invention is that the semi-hard magnet is much smaller compared with prior art switchable Faraday rotators (
Having described the invention in detail, those skilled in the art will appreciate that, given the present disclosure, modifications may be made to the invention without departing from the spirit of the inventive concept described herein. Therefore, it is not intended that the scope of the invention be limited to the specific and preferred embodiments illustrated and described.