Hi Everyone
How is optical fiber made?

Background

An optical fiber is a single, hair-fine
filament
drawn from
molten
silica glass. These fibers are replacing metal wire as the transmission 
medium in high-speed, high-capacity communications systems that convert 
information
into light, which is then transmitted via fiber optic cable. Currently, 
American telephone companies represent the largest users of fiber optic 
cables,
but the technology is also used for power lines, local access computer 
networks, and video transmission.

Alexander Graham Bell, the American inventor best known for developing the 
telephone, first attempted to communicate using light around 1880. However, 
light
wave communication did not become
feasible
until the mid-twentieth century, when advanced technology provided a 
transmission source, the laser, and an efficient medium, the optical fiber. 
The laser
was invented in 1960 and, six years later, researchers in England discovered 
that
silica glass
fibers would carry light waves without significant
attenuation,
or loss of signal. In 1970, a new type of laser was developed, and the first 
optical fibers were produced commercially.

In a fiber optic communications system, cables made of optical fibers 
connect datalinks that contain lasers and light detectors. To transmit 
information,
a datalink converts an analog electronic signal-a telephone conversation or 
the output of a video camera-into digital pulses of laser light. These 
travel
through the optical fiber to another datalink, where a light
detector
reconverts them into an electronic signal.

Raw Materials

Optical fibers are composed primarily of
silicon dioxide
(SiO2), though minute amounts of other chemicals are often added. Highly 
purified
silica
powder was used in the now-outmoded
crucible
manufacturing method, while liquid
silicon tetrachloride
(SiCl4) in a
gaseous
stream of pure oxygen (02) is the principal source of silicon for the vapor 
deposition method currently in widespread use. Other chemical compounds such
as
germanium
tetrachloride (GeCl4) and
phosphorus oxychloride
(POC13) can be used to produce core fibers and outer shells, or claddings, 
with function-specific optical properties.

Because the purity and chemical composition of the glass used in optical 
fibers determine the most important characteristic of a fiber-degree of 
attenuation-research
now focuses on developing glasses with the highest possible purity. Glasses 
with a high
fluoride
content hold the most promise for improving optical fiber performance 
because they are transparent to almost the entire range of visible light 
frequencies.
This makes them especially valuable for multimode optical fibers, which can 
transmit hundreds of discrete light wave signals concurrently.

Design

In a fiber optic cable, many individual optical fibers are bound together 
around a central steel cable or high-strength plastic carrier for support. 
This
core is then covered with protective layers of materials such as aluminum,
Kevlar,
and polyethylene (the
cladding).
Because the core and the cladding are constructed of slightly differing 
materials, light travels through them at different speeds. As a light wave 
traveling
in the fiber core reaches the boundary between the core and cladding, these 
compositional differences between the two cause the light wave to bend back
into the core. Thus, as a pulse of light travels through an optical fiber, 
it is constantly
bouncing
away from the cladding. A pulse moves through the optical fiber at the speed 
of light-186,290 miles per second (299,340
kilometers
per second) in a vacuum, somewhat slower in practice-losing energy only 
because of impurities in the glass and because of energy absorption by 
irregularities
in the glass structure.

Energy losses (attenuation) in an optical fiber are measured in terms of 
loss (in decibels, a unit of energy) per distance of fiber. Typically, an 
optical
fiber has losses as low as 0.2 decibels per kilometer, meaning that after a 
certain distance the signal becomes weak and must be strengthened, or 
repeated.
With current datalink technology, laser signal repeaters are necessary about 
every 30 kilometers (18.5 miles) in a long-distance cable. However, on-going
research in optical material purity is aimed at extending the distance 
between repeaters of an optical fiber up to 100 kilometers (62 miles).

There are two types of optical fibers. In a single-mode fiber, the core is 
smaller, typically 10 micrometers (a
micrometer
is one-millionth of a meter) in diameter, and the cladding is 100 
micrometers in diameter. A single-mode fiber is used to carry just one light 
wave over
very long distances. Bundles of single-mode optical fibers are used in 
long-distance telephone lines and
undersea
cables. Multimode optical fibers, which have a core diameter of 50 
micrometers and a cladding diameter of 125 micrometers, can carry hundreds 
of separate
light wave signals over shorter distances. This type of fiber is used in 
urban systems where many signals must be carried to central switching 
stations
for distribution.

The Manufacturing
Process

Both the core and the cladding of an optical fiber are made of highly 
purified silica glass. An optical fiber is manufactured from silicon
dioxide
by either of two methods. The first, the crucible method, in which powdered 
silica is melted, produces fatter, multimode fibers suitable for 
short-distance
transmission of many light wave signals. The second, the vapor deposition 
process, creates a solid cylinder of core and cladding material that is then
heated and drawn into a thinner, single-mode fiber for long-distance 
communication.

There are three types of vapor deposition techniques: Outer Vapor Phase 
Deposition, Vapor Phase Axial Deposition, and Modified Chemical Vapor 
Deposition
(MCVD). This section will focus on the
MCVD
process, the most common manufacturing technique now in use. MCVD yields a 
low-loss fiber well-suited for long-distance cables.

Modified Chemical Vapor
Deposition
. First, a cylindrical
preform
is made by depositing layers of specially formulated silicon dioxide on the 
inside surface of a hollow
substrate
rod. The layers are deposited by applying a gaseous stream of pure oxygen to 
the substrate rod. Various chemical vapors, such as silicon
tetrachloride
(SiCl4), germanium tetrachloride (GeCl4), and
phosphorous
oxychloride (POC13), are added to the stream of oxygen. As the oxygen 
contacts the hot surface of the rod-a flame underneath the rod keeps the 
walls of
the rod very hot-silicon dioxide of high purity is formed. The result is a
glassy
soot, several layers thick, deposited inside the rod. This soot will become 
the core. The properties of these layers of soot can be altered depending on
the types of chemical vapors used.
. After the soot is built up to the desired thickness, the substrate rod is 
moved through other heating steps to drive out any
moisture
and bubbles trapped in the soot layers. During heating, the substrate rod 
and internal soot layers
solidify
to form the
boule
or preform of highly pure silicon dioxide. A preform usually measures 10 to 
25
millimeters
(.39 to .98 inch) in diameter and 600 to 1000 millimeters (23.6 to 39.37 
inches) in length.

Drawing the fibers
. The solid preform is then automatically transferred to a vertical fiber 
drawing system. The machines that make up a typical vertical drawing system 
can
be two stories high and are able to produce continuous fibers up to 300 
kilometers (186 miles) long. This system consists of a
furnace
to melt the end of the preform, sensors to monitor the diameter of the fiber 
being pulled from the preform, and coating devices to apply protective 
layers
over the outer cladding.
. The preform first passes through a furnace, where it is heated to about 
3600 degrees Fahrenheit (about 2000 degrees Celsius). Next, a drop of molten 
glass
called a "gob" forms at the end of the preform, much like a
droplet
of water that collects at the bottom of a
leaky
faucet. The gob then falls away, and the single optical fiber inside is 
drawn out of the preform. As the optical fiber is pulled from the preform, 
the material
in the original substrate rod forms the cladding, and the silicon dioxide 
deposited as soot forms the core of the optical fiber.
. As the fiber is drawn out, measuring devices monitor its diameter and its 
concentricity, while another device applies a protective coating. The fiber
then passes through a curing furnace and another measuring device that 
monitors diameter, before being wound on a
spool.

Quality Control

Quality control begins with the suppliers of the chemical compounds used as 
the raw materials for the substrate rods, chemical reactants, and fiber 
coatings.
Specialty chemical suppliers provide detailed chemical analyses of the 
constituent compounds, and these analyses are constantly checked by 
computerized
on-stream analyzers connected to the process vessels.

Process engineers and highly trained technicians closely watch the sealed 
vessels as preforms are being created and fibers drawn. Computers operate 
the
complex control schemes necessary to manage the high temperatures and high 
pressures of the manufacturing process. Precise measurement devices 
continuously
monitor fiber diameter and provide feedback for control of the drawing 
process.

The Future

Future optical fibers will come from ongoing research into materials with 
improved optical properties. Currently, silica glasses with a high fluoride 
content
hold the most promise for optical fibers, with attenuation losses even lower 
than today's highly efficient fibers. Experimental fibers, drawn from glass
containing 50 to 60 percent
zirconium
fluoride (ZrF4), now show losses in the range of 0.005 to 0.008 decibels per 
kilometer, whereas earlier fibers often had losses of 0.2 decibels per 
kilometer.

In addition to utilizing more refined materials, the producers of fiber 
optic cables are experimenting with process improvement. Presently, the most 
sophisticated
manufacturing processes use high-energy lasers to melt the preforms for the 
fiber draw. Fibers can be drawn from a preform at the rate of 10 to 20 
meters
(32.8 to 65.6 feet) per second, and single-mode fibers from 2 to 25 
kilometers (1.2 to 15.5 miles) in length can be drawn from one preform. At 
least one
company has reported creating fibers of 160 kilometers (99 miles), and the 
frequency with which fiber optics companies are currently retooling-as often
as every eighteen months-suggests that still greater innovations lie ahead. 
These advances will be driven in part by the growing use of optical fibers
in computer networks, and also by the increasing demand for the technology 
in burgeoning international markets such as Eastern Europe, South America, 
and
the Far East.



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