I am going to add the following commentary to daltonium.comAny comments or 
suggestions?



DO YOU WANT SINGLE-MODE OPTICAL FIBER WITH A LOSS OF 0.001 DB/KILOMETER?     
DON'T BE AFRAID TO SPEAK UP!!!
For nearly 40 years, optical fiber companies have been making single-mode 
silica fiber waveguide,  with the best loss about 0.16 db/kilometer.   This 
allowed a maximum distance between amplifiers of 125 kilometers, which is 
fairly good.   But it did not get appreciably better.   You wanted more, 
although you didn't know how it could be done.  Which is strange, because from 
about 1970 to the early 1980's fiber went from about 100 db/kilometer to 0.16 
db/kilometer in a tour-de-force of purification, a factor of about 600 in loss. 
So, why didn't the industry continue to improve, going from 0.16 db/km to 0.016 
db/km, to 0.0016db/km, and even to 0.00016db/km, another factor of 1000 
reduction in loss?   
If fiber had a loss of 0.016 db/km,  signals could travel 1250 kilometers 
without an amplifier, nearly 1/4 of the way across America.   If fiber had a 
loss of 0.0016 db/kilometer, signals could travel 12,500 kilometers, and that's 
about 1/3 of the way around the world.  If fiber had a loss of 0.00016 
db/kilometer, signals could travel 125,000 kilometers, about three times around 
the Earth, needing no amplification.
But that's impossible, right?  40 years ago, before many people in your 
industry were even born, scientists got the materials put into fibers so pure 
and refined, and for some odd reason they never got losses substantially 
smaller than 0.16 db/kilometer. They brought iron and other transition metal 
contamination down to parts-per-billion levels, and might have tried parts per 
trillion, and for some odd reason the loss simply hovered at 0.16 db/km.  They 
developed a process to chlorinate the silica soot, dramatically reducing the 
hydroxyl content.   And it worked, mostly.  Eventually, they even soaked the 
fiber in deuterium, to substitute the hydroxyls with deuteroxyls, and developed 
low-water-peak fiber.  As if by magic.  But what should have frustrated the 
fiber optic scientists and engineers was fiber's persistant hold on that loss 
of 0.16 db/kilometer.
I believe I've solved that problem.  I asked the question, "What remains in the 
fiber when you take out all the contaminants you know of?"   The answer?   You 
still have the contaminants you DON'T know of.  And that sounds like a strange 
statement, because what remains in the fiber, and especially the core?  If you 
think like a chemist, you realize there is silica and germania, and very little 
else.  But that's not a complete answer.  You also have to think like a 
physicist.  Elements like silicon, germanium and oxygen are an incomplete 
description.  Silicon in nature consists of silicon-28, silicon-29, and 
silicon-30 isotopes.   Germanium in nature consists of germanium-70, 
germanium-72, germanium-73, germanium-74, and germanium-76.  Oxygen in nature 
consists of oxygen-16, oxygen-17, and oxygen-18.   Learn more at WebElements 
Periodic Table » Germanium » isotope data

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WebElements Periodic Table » Germanium » isotope data

Mark Winter, University of Sheffield and WebElements Ltd

This WebElements periodic table page contains isotope data for the element 
germanium
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If you took chemistry in high school, or even college, you might have learned 
that the difference between isotopes of the same element are the number of 
neutrons present in the nucleus.  Silicon-28 has 14 protons and 14 neutrons.  
Silicon-29 has 14 protons and 15 neutrons,  And silicon-30 has 14 protons and 
16 neutrons.  But their weight isn't the only difference.  If a nucleus has an 
odd (not evenly divisible by 2) number of neutrons, that nucleus has an 
unpaired neutron, which causes that nucleus to wobble a bit.  And the rest of 
the nucleus (which is positively charged, from all the protons) wobbles around 
the center of mass, which amounts to a tiny loop of electric current that never 
ceases.  So, that nucleus behaves as if it was a tiny magnetic dipole, which of 
course it is.   Silicon-29 and Germanium-73 have an odd number of neutrons, so 
they both have a small magnetic field associated with the nucleus.  And 
silicon-29 is about 4.44% atom/atom of natural-isotope silicon.  And 
germanium-73 is about 7.8% of natural-isotope germanium.  
Light consists of an electric field and a magnetic field, at right angles to 
each other, both at right angles to the direction of the motion of the light.  
Light   

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Light

Light is electromagnetic radiation within a certain portion of the 
electromagnetic spectrum. The word usually re...
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When optical fiber companies make their fibers, they almost always use the 
elements the way they get them from nature, including the isotopic distribution 
which is normally seen in nature.  "Why shouldn't we?", you might hear they'll 
say if you asked the question.  They didn't know there was a difference.  But I 
believe that when they use that Si-29 isotope, and that Ge-73 isotope, the 
passing light torques, or kicks, the atoms that have magnetic fields associated 
with their nuclei.  And this converts a very tiny amount of energy from light 
(infrared) to a mechanical vibration, called a 'phonon':  A phonon is like a 
sound wave, but in this case it's at a far-higher frequency, the same frequency 
of the photon which caused it, about 200 terahertz for a photon of wavelength 
1500 nanometers.   And those phonons eventually show up as a tiny amount of 
heat in the fiber itself, but not enough so that anybody would notice.  But 
what you DO notice is a small loss in signal, about 0.16 db/kilometer.  
 I think that the vast majority of that residual 0.16 db/km loss in 
natural-isotope silica optical waveguide is due to Si-29 and Ge-73 isotope 
atoms in the silica and germania making up the fiber.  There may very well be 
almost no other sources of loss from any other component.  So, I believe that 
reducing the proportion of Si-29 and Ge-73 in the chemicals making up the fiber 
will dramatically reduce the fiber's optical loss.  
Fortunately, nearly-isotopically-pure silicon-28 already exists.  It was made 
for the Silicon Kilogram Project.   Kilogram: Silicon Spheres and the 
International Avogadro Project   They made silicon-28 with an isotopic purity 
as much as 99.9995%, but that's extreme overkill for optical fiber.     They 
could do the same thing for germanium, separating out the Ge-73 isotope.  And 
if a fiber is made from nearly-Si-29-free isotope silicon, and the core is 
doped with nearly Ge-73-free isotope germanium, I predict that the overall loss 
will drop in proportion to the reduction in these isotopes.  A reduction in 
Si-29 content by a factor of 100, and a reduction in Ge-73 content by a factor 
of 100, ought to reduce the loss by a factor of 100:  So, that 0.16 db/km loss 
will go to 0.0016 db/km.  And that's over twice as much an improvement needed 
to be able to create a fiber that will allow signals to go from New York City 
to Ireland with no EDFA amplifiers needed.  None at all..   And since those 
amplifiers cost maybe $1 million each, that's a serious savings.  

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Kilogram: Silicon Spheres and the International Avogadro Project

Though measurement scientists chose the Planck constant as the basis for 
redefinition, other constants of nature...
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Is your company interested?  Because, the other ones will be!!!
                 Jim Bell




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