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1
Fabrication of Optical Fibers
MEC
2
Contents
• Materials and Practical Considerations.
• Fabrication Techniques
- Liquid Phase (Melting) Techniques.
- Vapor-Phase Deposition Techniques.
- Outside Vapor-Phase Oxidation.
- Vapor Axial Deposition.
- Modified Chemical Vapor Deposition.
- Plasma Activated Chemical Vapor Deposition.
• Fiber Drawing.
3
Practical Considerations
• Good stable transmission characteristics -
long lengths, minimum cost, maximum
reproducibility.
• Availability with regard to size, refractive
indices and index profiles, operating
wavelengths, materials etc.
• Conversion into practical cables without
degradation and damage.
• Easy splicing, termination - transmission
characteristics within acceptable operating
levels.
4
Waveguiding Considerations
• Variation in refractive index from core to
cladding.
• Materials with low optical attenuation, low
intrinsic absorption and scattering losses.
• Eradication of scattering centers such as
bubbles, strains and grain boundaries to
avoid scattering losses.
• Choice of fiber materials limited to glasses
(or glass-like materials), monocrystalline
structures (certain plastics).
5
Considerations for Graded Index
Fibers
• Refractive index varied by suitable doping.
• Materials to have mutual solubility over a
wide range of concentrations.
• Glasses or glass like materials for low loss
fibers, monocrystalline materials not
suitable.
• Plastic-clad / plastic fibers for short-haul,
low bandwidth applications.
6
Preparation of Glass Fibers
• Two stage process - glass produced and
converted into rod or preform, drawing or
pulling.
• Conventional glass refining - glass
processed in molten state (melting)
produces multi-component glass structure.
• Vapor-phase deposition produces silica-
rich glasses with melting temperatures too
high to allow conventional melt process.
7
Liquid Phase (Melting) Techniques
• Preparation of ultra-pure material powders
- oxides / carbonates.
• Oxides - SiO2, GeO2, B2O2 and A2O3,
Carbonates - Na2CO3, K2CO3, CaCO3 and
BaCO3 decompose into oxides during the
glass melting.
• High initial purity essential – purification
increases cost.
• Purification - fine filtration, co-precipitation,
solvent extraction before recrystallization
and final drying in vacuum to remove
residual OH- ions.
8
Liquid Phase (Melting) Techniques
• Melting high-purity, powdered, low-
melting-point glass materials to form
homogeneous, no bubble multi-component
glass.
• Refractive index variation by either change
in the composition of constituents or by ion
exchange when materials in molten phase.
• Temperatures between 900 and 1300 °C
in a silica crucible.
9
Glass Making Furnace
10
Glass Making Furnace
• Fused silica and platinum
crucibles used.
• Silica crucibles give
dissolution into the melt,
introduce inhomogeneities
into the glass at high
melting temperatures.
• Recommended - melting
the glass directly into a
radio-frequency (~ 5 MHz)
induction furnace.
11
Radio Frequency Induction
Furnace
Melt the glass directly, Cool the
silica by gas or water flow.
Inhomogeneities reduced.
12
Radio Frequency Induction
Furnace
• Melt the glass, Cool silica by
gas/water flow.
• Materials preheated to around
1000°C, exhibit sufficient ionic
conductivity to enable coupling
between the melt and the RF field.
• A thin layer of solidified pure glass
forms due to the temperature
difference b/w melt and cooled silica
crucible, protects melt from any
impurities in the crucible.
13
Glass Melting Techniques
• Glass homogenized and dried by bubbling
pure gases through the melt, protection
against airborne dust particles originating
in the melt furnace/atmospheric
contamination.
• After melt processing, cooling, forming into
long rods (cane) of multi-component glass.
14
Fiber Drawing
• Make a preform using
the rod in tube process.
• A rod of core glass
inserted into a tube of
cladding glass and the
preform drawn in a
vertical muffle furnace.
• Useful for production of
step index fibers with
large core & cladding
diameters.
• Minute perturbations
and impurities cause
very high losses.
15
Double Crucible Method for Fiber
Drawing
16
Double Crucible Method
• Core and Cladding glass as
separate rods fed into two
concentric platinum crucibles.
• Assembly located in a muffle
furnace capable of heating the
crucible contents to between
800 and 1200°C.
• Crucibles have nozzles in their
bases, clad fiber is drawn
directly from the melt.
17
Double Crucible Method
• Index grading achieved
through diffusion of mobile ions
across the core–cladding
interface within the molten
glass.
• Reasonable refractive index
profile.
• Useful for graded index fibers,
but no precise control, not
possible to obtain optimum
near parabolic profile.
18
Double Crucible Method
• Graded index fibers less dispersive than step
index fibers, do not have the bandwidth–
length products of optimum profile fibers.
• Pulse dispersion of 1 to 6 ns/km.
• Using very high-purity melting techniques
and double-crucible drawing method, step
index and graded index fibers with
attenuations as low as 3.4 dB/km & 1.1 dB/
km respectively produced.
• Such low losses not consistently obtained
using liquid-phase techniques.
19
Double Crucible Method
• Typical losses for multi-component glass
fibers prepared continuously in the range 5
to 20 dB/ km at wavelength of 0.85 μm.
• Used for the production of fibers with a
large core diameter of 200 μm and above.
• Potential for continuous production.
20
Vapor-Phase Deposition
Techniques
• To produce silica-rich glasses of highest
transparency & optimal optical properties.
• Starting materials - volatile compounds eg;
SiCl4, GeCl4, SiF4, BCl3, O2, BBr3 and POCl3 –
distilled to reduce concentration of most
transition metal impurities to below one part in
109 - negligible absorption losses.
• Refractive index modified through formation of
vapor-phase dopants - TiO2, GeO2, P2O5, Al2O3,
B2O3 and F.
21
Variation of Refractive Index with
Dopant Concentration
22
Vapor-Phase Deposition
• Gas mixtures of silica-containing compound,
doping material & oxygen combined in a vapor-
phase oxidation reaction - deposition of oxides
onto a substrate/within a hollow tube, built up as
a stack of successive layers.
• Dopant concentration varied gradually - graded
index profile.
• Hollow tube collapsed to give a solid preform -
fiber drawn.
• Flame Hydrolysis and Chemical Vapor
Deposition.
23
Vapor-Phase Deposition
24
Outside Vapor-Phase Oxidation
• Uses flame hydrolysis - fiber losses < 20 dB/km.
• ‘Soot’ processes developed by Hyde - silica
generated as a fine soot.
• Required glass composition deposited laterally
from a ‘soot’ generated by hydrolyzing halide
vapors in oxygen – hydrogen flame.
• Oxygen passed through silicon compound (i.e.
SiCl4) which is vaporized, removing any
impurities.
• Dopants (GeCl4 or TiCl4) added, mixture blown
through oxygen–hydrogen flame.
25
Outside Vapor-Phase Oxidation
26
Outside Vapor-Phase Oxidation
• Silica generated as a fine
soot, deposited on a cool
rotating mandrel.
• Burner flame reversed back
and forth over the length of
the mandrel, sufficient no. of
layers of silica deposited.
• Mandrel removed, porous
mass of silica soot sintered to
form a glass body.
• Preform may contain both
core and cladding glasses.
• Fiber drawing, collapse and
close the central hole.
soot deposition
27
Outside Vapor-Phase Oxidation
• Can produce several kilometers of fiber.
• Fine control of index gradient - gas flows can be
adjusted at the completion of each traverse of
the burner.
• Fiber bandwidth–length products as high as 3
GHz-km.
• Purity of glass fiber depends on the purity of
feeding materials, OH- content due to exposure
of silica to water vapor in the flame - 50 to 200
parts per million contributes to attenuation.
• OH- impurity content reduced - use gaseous
chlorine as a drying agent during sintering.
28
Outside Vapor-Phase Oxidation
• Batch process, limit on the use for volume
production.
• Removal of mandrel - cracks due to stress
concentration on the surface of the inside
wall.
• Refractive index profile has a central
depression due to collapsed hole when
fiber drawn.
29
Vapor Axial Deposition
• Process developed by Izawa et al.
• Continuous technique for the production of
low-loss optical fibers.
• Flame hydrolysis - end-on deposition onto
a rotating fused silica target.
• Deposited on the end of the starting target
in the axial direction.
• Spatial refractive index profile may be
achieved.
30
Vapor Axial Deposition
• Vaporized constituents
injected from burners, react
to form silica soot by flame
hydrolysis.
• Deposited on the end of the
starting target in axial
direction, forms a solid
porous glass preform.
• Preform growth in axial
direction, pulled upwards at
the growth rate.
31
Vapor Axial Deposition
• Initially dehydrated by heating
with SOCl2, then sintered into
solid preform in a graphite
resistance furnace at 1500 °C.
• Can be adapted for continuous
process- resultant preforms can
yield more than 100 km of fiber.
32
Modified Chemical Vapor
Deposition
• Inside vapor-phase
oxidation (IVPO)
technique.
• Vapor-phase reactants
(halide and oxygen) pass
through a hot zone,
homogeneous.
• Glass particles formed
during this reaction travel
with the gas flow and are
deposited on the walls of
the silica tube.
• Tube may form the
cladding material.
33
Modified Chemical Vapor
Deposition
• Tube may form cladding, is merely a supporting
structure which is heated on the outside by an
oxygen–hydrogen flame to between 1400 and
1600 °C.
• A hot zone is created which encourages high-
temperature oxidation reactions, reduce the OH-
impurity concentration.
• Hot zone moved back and forth along the tube
allows particles to be deposited layer-by-layer,
gives a sintered transparent silica film on the
walls.
34
Modified Chemical Vapor
Deposition
• Film up to 10 μm thick, uniformity maintained by
rotating the tube.
• Graded refractive index profile created by
changing the composition of layers as glass is
deposited.
• When sufficient thickness formed by successive
traverses of the burner for cladding, vaporized
chlorides of germanium (GeCl4) or phosphorus
(POCl3) added to the gas flow.
• Core glass formed by deposition of successive
layers of germanosilicate or phosphosilicate
glass.
35
Modified Chemical Vapor
Deposition
• Cladding acts as a barrier, suppresses OH- diffusion
into the core glass.
• After deposition temperature is increased to
between 1700 and 1900 °C, tube then collapsed to
give a solid preform, then drawn into fiber at 2000 to
2200 °C.
• Reduced OH- impurity contamination, deposition
occurs within an enclosed reactor - very clean
environment.
• Gaseous and particulate impurities may be avoided
during both layer deposition and preform collapse
phases.
• Suitable for mass production.
36
Plasma-activated Chemical Vapor
Deposition
• Developed by Kuppers and Koenings, involves
plasma-induced chemical vapor deposition
inside a silica tube.
• Oxide formation by a nonisothermal plasma at
low pressure in a microwave cavity (2.45 GHz)
which surrounds the tube.
• Volatile reactants introduced into the tube react
heterogeneously within microwave cavity, no
particulate matter formed in the vapor phase.
37
Plasma-activated Chemical Vapor
Deposition
38
Plasma-activated Chemical Vapor
Deposition
• Reaction zone moved back
& forth along the tube by
control of microwave cavity,
circularly symmetric layer
growth formed.
• Tube rotation not
necessary, deposition
virtually 100% efficient.
• Film deposition can occur at
s 500 °C, high chlorine
content cause expansivity,
film cracking, hence tube
heated to around 1000 °C
using a stationary furnace.
39
Plasma-activated Chemical Vapor
Deposition
• Thin layer deposition, formation of up to 2000
individual layers.
• Graded index profiles, optimum near-parabolic
profile.
• Low-pulse dispersion less than 0.8 ns/km,
attenuations between 3 and 4 dB/km, at a
wavelength of 0.85 μm.
• Large-scale production, preparation of over 200
km of fiber, high deposition efficiency.
40
Summary of Vapor-Phase
Deposition Techniques
41
Thank You

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EC 405, Fabrication of optical fibers

  • 2. 2 Contents • Materials and Practical Considerations. • Fabrication Techniques - Liquid Phase (Melting) Techniques. - Vapor-Phase Deposition Techniques. - Outside Vapor-Phase Oxidation. - Vapor Axial Deposition. - Modified Chemical Vapor Deposition. - Plasma Activated Chemical Vapor Deposition. • Fiber Drawing.
  • 3. 3 Practical Considerations • Good stable transmission characteristics - long lengths, minimum cost, maximum reproducibility. • Availability with regard to size, refractive indices and index profiles, operating wavelengths, materials etc. • Conversion into practical cables without degradation and damage. • Easy splicing, termination - transmission characteristics within acceptable operating levels.
  • 4. 4 Waveguiding Considerations • Variation in refractive index from core to cladding. • Materials with low optical attenuation, low intrinsic absorption and scattering losses. • Eradication of scattering centers such as bubbles, strains and grain boundaries to avoid scattering losses. • Choice of fiber materials limited to glasses (or glass-like materials), monocrystalline structures (certain plastics).
  • 5. 5 Considerations for Graded Index Fibers • Refractive index varied by suitable doping. • Materials to have mutual solubility over a wide range of concentrations. • Glasses or glass like materials for low loss fibers, monocrystalline materials not suitable. • Plastic-clad / plastic fibers for short-haul, low bandwidth applications.
  • 6. 6 Preparation of Glass Fibers • Two stage process - glass produced and converted into rod or preform, drawing or pulling. • Conventional glass refining - glass processed in molten state (melting) produces multi-component glass structure. • Vapor-phase deposition produces silica- rich glasses with melting temperatures too high to allow conventional melt process.
  • 7. 7 Liquid Phase (Melting) Techniques • Preparation of ultra-pure material powders - oxides / carbonates. • Oxides - SiO2, GeO2, B2O2 and A2O3, Carbonates - Na2CO3, K2CO3, CaCO3 and BaCO3 decompose into oxides during the glass melting. • High initial purity essential – purification increases cost. • Purification - fine filtration, co-precipitation, solvent extraction before recrystallization and final drying in vacuum to remove residual OH- ions.
  • 8. 8 Liquid Phase (Melting) Techniques • Melting high-purity, powdered, low- melting-point glass materials to form homogeneous, no bubble multi-component glass. • Refractive index variation by either change in the composition of constituents or by ion exchange when materials in molten phase. • Temperatures between 900 and 1300 °C in a silica crucible.
  • 10. 10 Glass Making Furnace • Fused silica and platinum crucibles used. • Silica crucibles give dissolution into the melt, introduce inhomogeneities into the glass at high melting temperatures. • Recommended - melting the glass directly into a radio-frequency (~ 5 MHz) induction furnace.
  • 11. 11 Radio Frequency Induction Furnace Melt the glass directly, Cool the silica by gas or water flow. Inhomogeneities reduced.
  • 12. 12 Radio Frequency Induction Furnace • Melt the glass, Cool silica by gas/water flow. • Materials preheated to around 1000°C, exhibit sufficient ionic conductivity to enable coupling between the melt and the RF field. • A thin layer of solidified pure glass forms due to the temperature difference b/w melt and cooled silica crucible, protects melt from any impurities in the crucible.
  • 13. 13 Glass Melting Techniques • Glass homogenized and dried by bubbling pure gases through the melt, protection against airborne dust particles originating in the melt furnace/atmospheric contamination. • After melt processing, cooling, forming into long rods (cane) of multi-component glass.
  • 14. 14 Fiber Drawing • Make a preform using the rod in tube process. • A rod of core glass inserted into a tube of cladding glass and the preform drawn in a vertical muffle furnace. • Useful for production of step index fibers with large core & cladding diameters. • Minute perturbations and impurities cause very high losses.
  • 15. 15 Double Crucible Method for Fiber Drawing
  • 16. 16 Double Crucible Method • Core and Cladding glass as separate rods fed into two concentric platinum crucibles. • Assembly located in a muffle furnace capable of heating the crucible contents to between 800 and 1200°C. • Crucibles have nozzles in their bases, clad fiber is drawn directly from the melt.
  • 17. 17 Double Crucible Method • Index grading achieved through diffusion of mobile ions across the core–cladding interface within the molten glass. • Reasonable refractive index profile. • Useful for graded index fibers, but no precise control, not possible to obtain optimum near parabolic profile.
  • 18. 18 Double Crucible Method • Graded index fibers less dispersive than step index fibers, do not have the bandwidth– length products of optimum profile fibers. • Pulse dispersion of 1 to 6 ns/km. • Using very high-purity melting techniques and double-crucible drawing method, step index and graded index fibers with attenuations as low as 3.4 dB/km & 1.1 dB/ km respectively produced. • Such low losses not consistently obtained using liquid-phase techniques.
  • 19. 19 Double Crucible Method • Typical losses for multi-component glass fibers prepared continuously in the range 5 to 20 dB/ km at wavelength of 0.85 μm. • Used for the production of fibers with a large core diameter of 200 μm and above. • Potential for continuous production.
  • 20. 20 Vapor-Phase Deposition Techniques • To produce silica-rich glasses of highest transparency & optimal optical properties. • Starting materials - volatile compounds eg; SiCl4, GeCl4, SiF4, BCl3, O2, BBr3 and POCl3 – distilled to reduce concentration of most transition metal impurities to below one part in 109 - negligible absorption losses. • Refractive index modified through formation of vapor-phase dopants - TiO2, GeO2, P2O5, Al2O3, B2O3 and F.
  • 21. 21 Variation of Refractive Index with Dopant Concentration
  • 22. 22 Vapor-Phase Deposition • Gas mixtures of silica-containing compound, doping material & oxygen combined in a vapor- phase oxidation reaction - deposition of oxides onto a substrate/within a hollow tube, built up as a stack of successive layers. • Dopant concentration varied gradually - graded index profile. • Hollow tube collapsed to give a solid preform - fiber drawn. • Flame Hydrolysis and Chemical Vapor Deposition.
  • 24. 24 Outside Vapor-Phase Oxidation • Uses flame hydrolysis - fiber losses < 20 dB/km. • ‘Soot’ processes developed by Hyde - silica generated as a fine soot. • Required glass composition deposited laterally from a ‘soot’ generated by hydrolyzing halide vapors in oxygen – hydrogen flame. • Oxygen passed through silicon compound (i.e. SiCl4) which is vaporized, removing any impurities. • Dopants (GeCl4 or TiCl4) added, mixture blown through oxygen–hydrogen flame.
  • 26. 26 Outside Vapor-Phase Oxidation • Silica generated as a fine soot, deposited on a cool rotating mandrel. • Burner flame reversed back and forth over the length of the mandrel, sufficient no. of layers of silica deposited. • Mandrel removed, porous mass of silica soot sintered to form a glass body. • Preform may contain both core and cladding glasses. • Fiber drawing, collapse and close the central hole. soot deposition
  • 27. 27 Outside Vapor-Phase Oxidation • Can produce several kilometers of fiber. • Fine control of index gradient - gas flows can be adjusted at the completion of each traverse of the burner. • Fiber bandwidth–length products as high as 3 GHz-km. • Purity of glass fiber depends on the purity of feeding materials, OH- content due to exposure of silica to water vapor in the flame - 50 to 200 parts per million contributes to attenuation. • OH- impurity content reduced - use gaseous chlorine as a drying agent during sintering.
  • 28. 28 Outside Vapor-Phase Oxidation • Batch process, limit on the use for volume production. • Removal of mandrel - cracks due to stress concentration on the surface of the inside wall. • Refractive index profile has a central depression due to collapsed hole when fiber drawn.
  • 29. 29 Vapor Axial Deposition • Process developed by Izawa et al. • Continuous technique for the production of low-loss optical fibers. • Flame hydrolysis - end-on deposition onto a rotating fused silica target. • Deposited on the end of the starting target in the axial direction. • Spatial refractive index profile may be achieved.
  • 30. 30 Vapor Axial Deposition • Vaporized constituents injected from burners, react to form silica soot by flame hydrolysis. • Deposited on the end of the starting target in axial direction, forms a solid porous glass preform. • Preform growth in axial direction, pulled upwards at the growth rate.
  • 31. 31 Vapor Axial Deposition • Initially dehydrated by heating with SOCl2, then sintered into solid preform in a graphite resistance furnace at 1500 °C. • Can be adapted for continuous process- resultant preforms can yield more than 100 km of fiber.
  • 32. 32 Modified Chemical Vapor Deposition • Inside vapor-phase oxidation (IVPO) technique. • Vapor-phase reactants (halide and oxygen) pass through a hot zone, homogeneous. • Glass particles formed during this reaction travel with the gas flow and are deposited on the walls of the silica tube. • Tube may form the cladding material.
  • 33. 33 Modified Chemical Vapor Deposition • Tube may form cladding, is merely a supporting structure which is heated on the outside by an oxygen–hydrogen flame to between 1400 and 1600 °C. • A hot zone is created which encourages high- temperature oxidation reactions, reduce the OH- impurity concentration. • Hot zone moved back and forth along the tube allows particles to be deposited layer-by-layer, gives a sintered transparent silica film on the walls.
  • 34. 34 Modified Chemical Vapor Deposition • Film up to 10 μm thick, uniformity maintained by rotating the tube. • Graded refractive index profile created by changing the composition of layers as glass is deposited. • When sufficient thickness formed by successive traverses of the burner for cladding, vaporized chlorides of germanium (GeCl4) or phosphorus (POCl3) added to the gas flow. • Core glass formed by deposition of successive layers of germanosilicate or phosphosilicate glass.
  • 35. 35 Modified Chemical Vapor Deposition • Cladding acts as a barrier, suppresses OH- diffusion into the core glass. • After deposition temperature is increased to between 1700 and 1900 °C, tube then collapsed to give a solid preform, then drawn into fiber at 2000 to 2200 °C. • Reduced OH- impurity contamination, deposition occurs within an enclosed reactor - very clean environment. • Gaseous and particulate impurities may be avoided during both layer deposition and preform collapse phases. • Suitable for mass production.
  • 36. 36 Plasma-activated Chemical Vapor Deposition • Developed by Kuppers and Koenings, involves plasma-induced chemical vapor deposition inside a silica tube. • Oxide formation by a nonisothermal plasma at low pressure in a microwave cavity (2.45 GHz) which surrounds the tube. • Volatile reactants introduced into the tube react heterogeneously within microwave cavity, no particulate matter formed in the vapor phase.
  • 38. 38 Plasma-activated Chemical Vapor Deposition • Reaction zone moved back & forth along the tube by control of microwave cavity, circularly symmetric layer growth formed. • Tube rotation not necessary, deposition virtually 100% efficient. • Film deposition can occur at s 500 °C, high chlorine content cause expansivity, film cracking, hence tube heated to around 1000 °C using a stationary furnace.
  • 39. 39 Plasma-activated Chemical Vapor Deposition • Thin layer deposition, formation of up to 2000 individual layers. • Graded index profiles, optimum near-parabolic profile. • Low-pulse dispersion less than 0.8 ns/km, attenuations between 3 and 4 dB/km, at a wavelength of 0.85 μm. • Large-scale production, preparation of over 200 km of fiber, high deposition efficiency.