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Fiber Fabrication

Fiber fabrications

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Page 1: Fiber fabrications

Fiber Fabrication

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Optical Fiber Fabrication Technology

Optical fiber is used worldwide for transmission of voice, data, and content because of its ability to transmit at speeds in excess of 10 GB/second over very long distances.

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Optical fibers consist of:

1. A core, having high refractive index. 2. Cladding. 3. Buffer, protective polymer layer. 4. Jacket, protective polymer layer.

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Types of Fiber Based on Materials

1. Glass Fibers 2. Plastic Fibers 3. Photonic Crystal Fibers

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Glass Fibers: • Glass Is Made by Fusing Mixtures of Metal Oxides, Sulfides or Selenite.

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• Glass fiber is a dimensionally stable engineering material. Glass fiber does not stretch or shrink after exposure to extremely high or low temperatures.

• Glass fibers do not absorb moisture or change physically or chemically when exposed to water.

• Glass fiber is an inorganic material and will not burn or support combustion. It retains approximately 25% of its initial strength at 1000°F (540°C).

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Plastic Optical Fibers:

• Plastic optical fiber (POF) (or Polymer optical fibre) is an optical fiber which is made out of Plastic.

• POF standard is based on multilevel PAM modulation a frame structure, Tomlinson-Harashima Precoding and Multilevel coset coding modulation.

• For telecommunications, the more difficult-to-use glass optical fiber is more common.

• Although the actual cost of glass fibers are similar to the plastic fiber, their installed cost is much higher due to the special handling and installation techniques required.

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Photonic Crystal Fibers:

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• Photonic-crystal fiber (PCF) is a new class of optical fiber based on the properties of photonic crystals.

• PCF is now finding applications in fiber-optic communications, fiber lasers, nonlinear devices, high-power transmission, highly sensitive gas sensors, and other areas

• PCFs guiding light by a conventional higher-index core modified by the presence of air holes.

• Photonic crystal fibers may be considered a subgroup of a more general class of microstructured optical fibers, where light is guided by structural modifications, and not only by refractive index differences.

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Fiber Fabrication • Outside Vapor-Phase Oxidation(OVPO) • Vapor-Phase Axial Deposition(VAD) • Modified Chemical Vapor Deposition(MCVD) • Plasma-Activated Chemical Vapor

Deposition(PCDV) • Photonic Crystal Fiber Fabrication.

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Outside Vapor-Phase Oxidation(OVPO):

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• The preform, as mentioned above, is nothing more than an optical fiber but on a much larger scale.

• Drawing enables the manufacturer to obtain the fiber in the actual size desired.

• First a Layer of Sio2 Particles Called a Soot is deposited from a burner onto a Rotating Graphite Or Ceramic Mandrel.

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Vapor-Phase Axial Deposition (VAD):

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• This was the first successful mass-fabrication process. It was developed by Corning in 1972. In fact, the first optical fiber with attenuation less than 20 dB/km was manufactured by Corning using this process.

• The process consists of four phases: laydown, consolidation, drawing, and measurement .

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Modified Chemical Vapor Deposition(MCVD):

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• This process was developed by Bell Laboratories in 1974 and has been widely accepted for the production of graded-index fiber.

• First, reactant gases flow through a rotating glass tube made from fused silica while a burner heats its narrow zone by traveling back and forth along the tube.

• SiO2, GeO2, and other doping combinations form soot that is deposited on the inner surface of the target tube.

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Plasma-Activated Chemical Vapor Deposition(PCDV):

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• This process was developed in 1975 by Phillips, a Dutch consumer-electronics and telecommunications company.

• The process differs from MCVD in its method of heating the reaction zone: Instead of delivering heat from the outside through a burner, PCVD uses microwaves to form ionized gas—plasma—inside the silica tube.

• The capacity of this preform is about 30 km of fiber.

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Photonic Crystal Fiber Fabrication:

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