Title of Invention

"PROCESS FOR THE PRODUCING OPTICAL FIBER BASE"

Abstract A process for producing an optical fiber base extremely reduced in the content of impurities which deteriorate the transmission characteristics of an optical fiber. The process for producing an optical fiber base comprises dehydrating a base material obtained from a stack of fine glass particles and converting the base material to a transparent glass to produce a core member for an optical fiber base, stretching the core member so as to result in a desired core/clad proportion, and then adding a clad part thereto. The process includes: a step in which the base material is hung in a furnace tube having a heating zone and the base material is passed through the heating zone while moving it upward from a lower part to dehydrate the base material
Full Text DESCRIPTION
PROCESS FOR PRODUCING OPTICAL FIBER BASE
TECHNICAL FIELD
[0001] The present invention relates to a method of manufacturing an optical
fiber base material. More specifically, the present invention relates to a method of
manufacturing a base material for a low-loss optical fiber, which is being capable of
constantly providing glass base material for an optical fiber containing little impurity
such as heavy metal.
[0002] The present patent application claims priority based on a Japanese Patent
Application No. 2006-114843 filed on April 18, 2006, the contents of which are
incorporated herein by reference.
BACKGROUND ART
[0003] VAD is well-known as a method of manufacturing base materials for
optical fibers. For example, according to this method, glass particles in vapor
phase are generated with a core deposition burner and a cladding deposition burner
disposed in a reaction chamber; and the glass particles are deposited onto a tip of a
starter attached to a shaft which rotatably lifts up , so that a porous base material for
an optical fiber composed of a core layer and a cladding layer is manufactured.
[0004] Usually, GeO2 having a high refractive index is added to the core layer.
Such porous base material for an optical fiber is dehydrated by heating it at approximately 1100 degrees Celsius in a certain atmosphere containing dehydrated gas such as chlorine, and then transparently vitrified by heating the dehydrated material at approximately 1500 degrees Celsius in a certain atmosphere containing inert gas such as helium, so that a core member for an optical fiber base material is obtained.
[0005] The heating furnace for dehydrating and transparently vitrifying has
heaters in and around a furnace tube, and the furnace tube is shut out the air. In one arrangement, a heater is attached to a position around the center of the longitudinal direction of the furnace tube, and the porous base material is suspended in the furnace tube and moves through a heating region of the heater. Thus, the porous base
material is dehydrated or transparently vitrified.
[0006] Here, the reason why the porous base material is suspended from above
is that it is easy to keep the porous base material vertical by gravity. Therefore, it
becomes easy to pass the porous base material through the center of the furnace tube,
i.e. the center of the heating region. In addition, it is convenient that the porous
base material is pulled up from above in order to appropriately define a length of the
porous base material which is processed because a portion of the base material which
is heated shrinks longitudinally when it is transparently vitrified.
[0007] Moreover, the reason why the porous base material is suspended from
above is that the upper portion of the porous base material manufactured by VAD is
easily gripped because the starter is attached to the upper portion. Consequently,
the top of the furnace tube has an opening portion, the base material is taken in and
out from the opening portion. While the base material is processed, the opening
portion of the furnace is covered with a lid, so that the inside of the furnace tube is
shut out the air. A silica tube made of natural quartz is often employed for the
furnace tube because the natural quartz has high heat resistance and little impurity.
[0008] Meanwhile, gas constituting atmosphere within the furnace tube is
introduced from the lower portion of the furnace tube and discharged from the upper portion of the furnace tube. The reason comes from the fact that since the gas heated in the heating region in the center of the furnace tube generates an ascending current, it is convenient that a stream of the introduced gas is also flowed upwardly so as not to unnecessarily convect the gas.
[0009] Thus, the porous base material is placed on upper than the heating region
immediately after being introduced because the porous base material is introduced into the furnace tube from the upper portion thereof. Since a step of dehydrating starts at the position where the porous base material is placed on upper than the heating region, subsequent steps usually have been performed as pulling up the porous base material. For example, in Patent Document 1, a step of dehydrating and transparently vitrifying the porous base material is separated into a dehydrating step and a transparently vitrifying step in order to reduce residual chlorine in the base material. The steps progress the following order: inserting the porous base material into the furnace from above; dehydrating the porous base material progressively from the bottom end as falling at an appropriate speed; pulling the
base material up into the furnace once after completing the dehydration; falling the
base material at an appropriate speed again. Thus, the porous base material is
transparently vitrified progressively from the bottom end thereof.
[0010] As described above, the direction in which the gas flows is generally
opposed to the direction in which the porous base material moves during each step in
the conventional art.
[0011] The core member manufactured by the above described steps is formed
as an optical fiber base material by jacketing the core member with a silica tube, or
further depositing a cladding on the outside thereof by another Vapor Phase
Deposition to obtain a desired core to cladding ratio.
Patent Document 1: Japanese Patent Application Publication No.61-270232
DISCLOSURE OF THE INVENTION
PROBLEMS TO BE SOLVED BY THE INVENTION
[0012] An optical fiber obtained by drawing the optical fiber base material
manufactured by the above described method could infrequently have a larger
transmission loss than usual. When the characteristic of the transmission loss is
examined, a transmission region for the short wavelength 1310nm is larger than a
transmission region for the long wavelength 1550nm. When it is examined more
specifically, the peak of losses is found around 900nm. Consequently, it is
considered that the high transmission loss of the optical fiber is caused by
contaminating the base material with vanadium when the porous base material is
transparently vitrified. It is not preferable that such high transmission loss
deteriorates the transmission characteristics of optical fibers.
[0013] An object of the present invention is to provide a method of
manufacturing an optical fiber base material containing very little impurity which
deteriorates the transmission characteristic of an optical fiber.
MEANS FOR SOLVING THE PROBLEMS
[0014] The method of manufacturing an optical fiber base material according to
the present invention comprising: producing a core member for the optical fiber base material by dehydrating and transparently vitrifying a base material formed by depositing glass particles; and drawing the core member and then adding a cladding
thereto at a desired core to cladding ratio, wherein the dehydrating includes suspending the base material in a furnace tube having a heating region in a first atmosphere at a first temperature, the base material passing through the heating region as upwardly moving, and the transparently vitrifying includes situating the base material below once and then allowing the base material to pass through the heating region in a second atmosphere at a second temperature as upwardly moving again.
[0015] After the step of dehydrating, the base material is moved to the starting position of transparently vitrifying while the temperature of the base material is maintained, and then, the temperature is increased and the step of transparently vitrifying starts. Here, it is preferable that the direction in which the base material moves during dehydrating and transparently vitrifying the base material is the same as the direction in which the gas flows in the furnace tube.
[0016] After the core member for an optical fiber is formed as described above,
the core member is drawn, and then, the cladding is added thereto and the core
member with the cladding is dehydrated and transparently vitrified, so that an optical
fiber base material having a desired core to cladding ratio can be obtained.
[0017] The summary clause does not necessarily describe all necessary features
of the embodiments of the present invention. The present invention may also be a sub-combination of the features described above.
EFFECT OF THE INVENTION
[0018] According to the present invention, a glass base material for an optical
fiber having very little impurity can be manufactured, and an optical fiber having an excellent transmission characteristic can be obtained.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0019] Fig. 1 is a graph showing a distribution of transmission losses in the
longitudinal direction of an optical fiber base material.
Fig.2A-2C are schematic views progressively explaining a moving direction of the base material during transparently vitrifying in Embodiment 1;
Fig.3 is a graph explaining a distribution of transmission losses of the optical fiber obtained in Embodiment 1 and Comparative example 1.
Fig.4A-4C are schematic views progressively explaining a moving direction of the base material during transparently vitrifying in Comparative example 1.
Fig.5 is a graph showing a relationship between positions in the longitudinal direction of the base material which are obtained in Embodiment 1 and Comparative example 2 and relative index differences. And
Fig.6 is a graph showing a relationship between positions in the longitudinal direction of the base material which are obtained in Embodiment 1 and Comparative example 2 and transmission losses of an optical fiber obtained by drawing.
BEST MODE FOR CARRYING OUT THE INVENTION
[0020] Some aspects of the invention will now be described based on the
embodiments, which do not intend to limit the scope of the present invention, but
exemplify the invention. All of the features and the combinations thereof described
in the embodiment are not necessarily essential to the invention.
[0021] Reviewing the conventional step of dehydrating and transparently
vitrifying as described above, the following result is obtained.
[0022] That is, when the distribution of transmission losses of the optical fiber
base material with a high transmission loss is examined longitudinally, the
transmission loss is higher at a starter in the upper portion than in the lower portion
of the optical fiber base material as shown in Fig.l. In fact, the base material is
transparently vitrified from the lower portion to the upper portion.
[0023] The result derives the following mechanism.
[0024] Crystallized by heating, fused silica composing the furnace tube
becomes porous, and then, heavy metal impurities contained in the fused silica is
discharged into the furnace tube. Alternatively, heavy metals heated at a high
temperature is discharged from the refractory lining into the atmosphere in the
furnace tube, dispersed along the grain boundary of the crystallized quartz, and
discharged into the furnace tube. In any case, these heavy metals are taken into the
optical fiber base material, which causes a high transmission loss.
[0025] The fused silica is progressively crystallized in the step of transparently
vitrifying at a high temperature. In addition, the heavy metals are much faster
dispersed under a high temperature. In any case, the step of transparently vitrifying where the temperature of the furnace tube becomes high has a greater risk of discharging the heavy metals into the furnace tube. In the step of transparently vitrifying, the porous base material suspended from above is usually moved downwardly.
[0026] In other words, firstly, the lower portion of the porous base material is transparently vitrified, next, the upper portion is transparently vitrified. Meanwhile, since the ambient gas is supplied from the lower portion of the furnace tube and flows upwardly, the heavy metals discharged from the heating region at a high temperature basically exists only in the upper portion of the furnace tube. Accordingly, the upper the level of the portion of the porous base material is, the longer a time period over which the porous base material is exposed to the atmosphere containing the heavy metals without being transparently vitrified. This theory is consistent with the result of the distribution of transmission losses as shown in Fig. 1.
[0027] In addition to the above consideration, the following invention is
achieved as a result of further consideration.
[0028] That is, in the step of transparently vitrifying, the porous base material is
conventionally moved downwardly, however, the moving direction is inversed, namely, the porous base material is moved upwardly. Therefore, since the base material which passed through the heating region has been transparently vitrified, the base material is not contaminated even if it is exposed to the atmosphere containing heavy metals.
[0029] Meanwhile, a porous portion which has not been transparently vitrified
is disposed lower than the heating region, and there is a flow of clean gas from
bottom toward top. Therefore, the heavy metals discharged from the heating region
do not flow downwardly, so that the porous base material is not contaminated.
[0030] In addition, when the step of dehydrating is performed by moving the
porous base material downwardly and the step of transparently vitrifying is performed by moving the porous base material upwardly, the lower portion of the base material is dehydrated before being transparently vitrified. [0031] Meanwhile, the upper portion of the base material is transparently vitrified before being dehydrated. In this case, a time period until the base material
is transparently vitrified after the step of dehydrating is different between the upper portion and the lower portion of the base material.
[0032] Since the porous base material contains chlorine after the step of
dehydrating and remains partially the high temperature, the base material is continuously treated with chlorine while it is porous. Consequently, the treating time with chlorine is different between the upper portion and the lower portion of the base material.
[0033] Moreover, the treating with chlorine causes not only the base material to
be dehydrated but also GeO2 forming the core to be volatilized. Therefore, not only the residue of moisture is different but also a refractive index distribution is different between the upward direction and the downward direction. Consequently, it is preferable that the step of dehydrating is performed in the same direction as the step of transparently vitrifying.
[0034] The present invention is achieved base on the above described finding.
The feature of the present invention includes dehydrating a base material which is
suspended in a furnace tube by passing the base material through a heating region as
moving the base material upwardly; and transparently vitrifying the base material by
moving downwardly the base material to a starting position of transparently
vitrifying while the temperature is maintained and passing the base material through
the heating region as moving the base material upwardly again. At this time, it is
preferable that the gas is supplied from the lower portion of the furnace tube and the
moving direction of the porous base material is the same as the direction in which
the gas flows in the furnace tube in both the step of dehydrating under the
atmosphere containing chlorine at 900 to 1200 degrees Celsius and the step of
transparently vitrifying under the atmosphere containing inert gas at 1300 to 1600
degrees Celsius.
[Embodiment]
[0035] Embodiment 1
A porous base material is transparently vitrified using an electric furnace with a quartz furnace tube. The porous base material is configured to move downwardly in the furnace tube while it is shut out the air. The porous base material progressively passes through a region heated at a high temperature with a heater which is provided on a part of the furnace tube, so that the porous base
material is dehydrated and transparently vitrified.
[0036] In addition, a first port for introducing ambient gas is provided on the
lower portion of the furnace tube. The top of the furnace tube can be covered with a lid, and a shaft to which the porous base material is attached can go up and down through the lid. The lid has a second port for exhausting the gas in the furnace tube.
[0037] The porous base material which is formed by depositing glass particles
by VAD is suspended in the above described electric furnace. Then, the porous
base material is dehydrated at 1100 degrees Celsius as being moved upwardly under
the atmosphere containing chlorine of 10% and helium of 90%. Next, after the
porous base material moves downwardly to a starting position of transparently
vitrifying once while the temperature is maintained, the porous base material is
transparently vitrified at 1500 degrees Celsius as being moved upwardly again under
the atmosphere containing He of 100% as shown in 2A, 2B and 2C in the order
named. Therefore, a core member for an optical fiber is formed.
[0038] The obtained core member has the ratio of the core diameter to the
cladding diameter being 0.20. Since this is not sufficient for a single-mode optical fiber, a cladding is added to the core member by OVPO (Outside Vapor Phase Oxidation) in order to form a complete glass base material for an optical fiber. When the cladding is added to the core member by OVPO, it is necessary to draw the core member once, and the core member is drawn by oxyhydrogen flame with a glass lathe. Next, the porous base material which is obtained by depositing glass particles by OVPO is dehydrated and transparently vitrified under the atmosphere containing helium and chlorine.
[0039] When the glass base material for an optical fiber manufactured as
described above is drawn, an optical fiber having a good loss characteristic can be
obtained. Specifically, the transmission loss for the full length 1310 nm of the
glass base material is stabilized around 0.32 dB/km. When one hundred glass base
materials are manufactured as well, a variation in the loss characteristic is
significantly small as shown in Fig.3.
[0040] Comparative example 1
A porous base material manufactured by the same process as Embodiment 1 is inserted into the furnace from above. The porous base material
progressively dehydrated from the bottom end thereof as being fallen down at an appropriate speed. After the dehydration is completed, the base material is pulled up to the upper portion of the furnace once. Then, the base material is transparently vitrified progressively from the bottom end thereof as being fallen down at an appropriate speed again as shown in 4A, 4B and 4C in the order named. Therefore, a core member for an optical fiber is formed. Further, a cladding is added to the core member by OVPO, and then, the core member with the cladding is dehydrated and transparently vitrified, so that a glass base material for an optical fiber can be obtained.
[0041] The glass base material manufactured as described above is drawn, and
then, the loss characteristic of the obtained optical fiber is examined. As a result,
the transmission loss for the length of 1310nm is varied between 0.32dB/km and
0.34dB/km. Among one hundred optical fibers manufactured as well, one or more
exhibits a high transmission loss such as 0.36 dB/km as shown in Fig.3. Viewed in
the longitudinal direction, many glass base materials show that the transmission loss
is higher in the upper portion than in the lower portion as shown in Fig.l.
[0042] Comparative example 2
The porous base material manufactured by the same process as Comparative example 1 is used. In a step of dehydrating, the base material is dehydrated as moving downwardly in the same manner as Comparative example 1. Next, in a step of transparently vitrifying, the temperature rises to transparently vitrify the base material while the base material is held in the lower portion of the furnace tube. After the temperature is sufficiently increased, the base material is transparently vitrified as being moved upwardly, so that a core member for an optical fiber is formed. Further, a cladding is added to the core member by OVPO, and then, the core member is dehydrated and transparently vitrified to obtain a glass base material for an optical fiber.
[0043] An optical fiber obtained by drawing the glass base material shows that the refractive index of the core is higher than usual in the upper portion of the base material as shown in Fig.5. In addition, the base material is not sufficiently dehydrated and has a higher loss for the length of 1383 nm due to hydroxy group in the upper portion as shown in Fig.6. [0044] The above-described embodiments do not limit the invention. The
above-described embodiments are only illustrative, and includes a configuration substantially the same as the technical concept recited in the claims of the invention. Any configuration that has the same effects or advantages is intended to be included in the technical concept of the present invention.
INDUSTRIAL APPLICABILITY
[0045] The method of manufacturing the present invention provides an optical
fiber having an excellent transmission characteristic.





CLAIMS
1. A method of manufacturing an optical fiber base material comprising:
producing a core member for the optical fiber base material by dehydrating and transparently vitrifying a base material formed by depositing glass particles; and
drawing the core member and then adding a cladding thereto at a desired core to cladding ratio, wherein
the dehydrating includes suspending the base material in a furnace tube having a heating region in a first atmosphere at a first temperature, the base material passing through the heating region as upwardly moving, and
the transparently vitrifying includes situating the base material below once and then allowing the base material to pass through the heating region in a second atmosphere at a second temperature as upwardly moving again.
2. The method according to Claim 1, wherein the first atmosphere includes at
least chlorine, and the second atmosphere includes at least an inert gas.
3. The method according to Claim 1, wherein the second temperature is equal to or higher than the first temperature.
4. The method according to Claim 1, wherein the base material moves during the dehydrating and the transparently vitrifying in a direction the same as a gas flowing direction in the furnace tube.
5. The method according to Claim 1, further comprising:
moving the base material to a starting position of the transparently vitrifying while the first temperature is maintained after the dehydrating has been completed; and
starting the transparently vitrifying in a further elevated temperature.
6. The method according to Claim 1, wherein the base material formed by
depositing glass particles is porous.
7. A method of manufacturing an optical fiber base material, comprising:
providing a base material that includes glass particles and is elongated in a longitudinal direction;
dehydrating the base material at a first temperature as the base material progressively passes in the longitudinal direction through a heating region in a gas atmosphere within a furnace tube, the base material being dehydrated from a first position to a second position thereof; and
forming a core member as the dehydrated base material progressively passes in the longitudinal direction through the heating region, the dehydrated base material being transparently vitrified at a second temperature from the first position to the second position.
8. The method according to Claim 7, further comprising:
drawing the core member after the transparently vitrifying; and forming a cladding to the drawn core member.
9. The method according to Claim 7, wherein the first position experiences
substantially the same time period between the end of the dehydrating and the start
of the transparently vitrifying as the second position experiences.
10. The method according to Claim 7, wherein
the furnace tube has an inlet through which gas that forms the gas atmosphere is introduced, and an outlet through which the gas is exhausted, and
a direction from the inlet to the outlet is the same as a direction from the second position to the first position.
11. The method according to Claim 7, wherein the direction from the inlet to the
outlet is substantially vertical and upward.
12. The method according to Claim 7, wherein the transparently vitrifying starts
while a temperature of the base material is maintained equal to or higher than a
temperature at the end of the dehydrating.
13. The method according to Claim 7, wherein the second temperature is equal to or higher than the first temperature.
14. The method according to Claim 13, wherein the second temperature is in the range between 1300 and 1600 degrees Celsius while the first temperature is in the range between 900 and 1200 degrees Celsius.
15. The method according to Claim 14, wherein the first temperature is 1100 degrees Celsius.
16. The method according to Claim 7, wherein the gas atmosphere in the dehydrating comprises chlorine.
17. The method according to Claim 16, wherein the gas atmosphere in the dehydrating is composed of chlorine of 10% and an inert gas of 90%, while the gas atmosphere in the transparently vitrifying is composed of the inert gas of 100%.
18. The method according to Claim 17, the inert gas is helium.
19. The method according to Claim 8, wherein the core member before drawn includes a diameter, a ratio of which to the cladding diameter is approximately 0.20.
20. The method according to Claim 7, wherein the optical fiber base material has a transmission loss of approximately 0.32 dB/km at a wavelength of 1310 nm over a full length of the optical fiber base material.

Documents:

9600-delnp-2008-abstract.pdf

9600-delnp-2008-Claims-(17-10-2013).pdf

9600-delnp-2008-claims.pdf

9600-delnp-2008-Correspondence Others-(17-10-2013).pdf

9600-delnp-2008-Correspondence Others-(23-12-2013).pdf

9600-DELNP-2008-Correspondence-Others-(15-10-2010).pdf

9600-delnp-2008-Correspondence-Others-(24-06-2013).pdf

9600-delnp-2008-correspondence-others.pdf

9600-delnp-2008-description (complete).pdf

9600-delnp-2008-Drawings-(17-10-2013).pdf

9600-delnp-2008-drawings.pdf

9600-delnp-2008-form-1.pdf

9600-delnp-2008-Form-13-(17-10-2013).pdf

9600-delnp-2008-form-18.pdf

9600-delnp-2008-form-2.pdf

9600-DELNP-2008-Form-3-(15-10-2010).pdf

9600-delnp-2008-Form-3-(17-10-2013).pdf

9600-delnp-2008-form-3.pdf

9600-delnp-2008-form-5.pdf

9600-delnp-2008-GPA-(17-10-2013).pdf

9600-delnp-2008-gpa.pdf

9600-delnp-2008-pct-210.pdf

9600-delnp-2008-pct-304.pdf

9600-delnp-2008-Petition-137-(17-10-2013).pdf


Patent Number 259856
Indian Patent Application Number 9600/DELNP/2008
PG Journal Number 14/2014
Publication Date 04-Apr-2014
Grant Date 28-Mar-2014
Date of Filing 18-Nov-2008
Name of Patentee SHIN-ETSU CHEMICAL CO.,LTD
Applicant Address 6-1, OHTEMACHI 2-CHOME, CHIYODA-KU, TOKYO 1000004, JAPAN
Inventors:
# Inventor's Name Inventor's Address
1 DAI INOUE C/O SHIN-ETSU CHEMICAL CO.,LTD.,OF 1-10, HITOMI, MATSUIDA-MACHI, USUI-GUN, GUNMA 3790224, JAPAN
PCT International Classification Number C03B 37/014
PCT International Application Number PCT/JP2007/058469
PCT International Filing date 2007-04-18
PCT Conventions:
# PCT Application Number Date of Convention Priority Country
1 2006-114843 2006-04-18 Japan