Fibre-to-fibre connector including a component for joining it to

Patent

Rate now

  [ 0.00 ] – not rated yet Voters 0   Comments 0

Details

G02B 514

Patent

active

043858015

DESCRIPTION:

BRIEF SUMMARY
FIELD OF THE INVENTION

The invention relates to a fibre-to-fibre connector including a component for joining it to an optical fibre cable.


BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION

In the field of data transmission by optical waveguides, a distinction is usually made between two main applications:
long-distance optical transmission for telecommunications; and
short-distance optical transmission for data transmission on board aircraft and ships or in industrial installations.
The first application relates to optical fibre cables in which each optical conductor or fibre conveys data different from that of the other fibres. Connections must be made in the fibre-to-fibre configuration and a multi-contact connector must provide individual one to one connection of the fibres.
The second application relates to optical fibre cables in which each conductor is constituted by a plurality of fibres. Within any one conductor, each fibre conveys the same data as neighbouring fibres. Connection is made on an overall conductor-to-conductor basis via an optical mixer which is usually constituted by a glass cylinder with two optical indices, the cross-section of the core of said cylinder covering the hexagonal bundle constituted by the fibres of the cable. The lower the packing fraction, the higher the connection loss which results therefrom. Said fraction is the ratio between the sum of the areas of the cores of the fibres and the area of the cross-section of the core of the mixer. Said loss is generally about 50%, i.e. 3 dB and is added to that which results from the mechanical production and connection tolerances of the connector parts. Therefore, in this case too, fibre-to-fibre connection is preferable.
The present invention therefore relates to both the main applications mentioned hereinabove.
When forming fibre-to-fibre connections, the difficulty arises from the need to align the optical fibres sufficiently accurately if coupling losses are to be reduced as far as possible, e.g. losses of less than 1 dB. If the fibres have, for example, a core diameter of 100 microns surrounded by lower index cladding, with a difference in index lying between 5. 10.sup.-3 and 10.sup.-1, these devices must then allow the fibres to be positioned in the following conditions:
The distance between the adjacent ends of the fibres must be less than 20 microns; relative eccentricity must be less than 4 microns; relative inclination must be less than 1 degree. In the event that the index of the medium which separates the fibres matches, these tolerances become larger: 100 microns for distance and 10 microns for excentricity, inclination being unchanged. Due to the small diameter of the fibres, it is difficult to satisfy such tolerances.
That is why it may be advantageous to hold each fibre in one of the holding grooves formed by the adjacent lateral surfaces of cylindrical holding pins which are pressed against one another and form a plane layer which is pressed down onto a plane base surface. Such holding pins may be made of hard steel and be machined to great accuracy at a low cost. They are held parallel to one another and in contact in pairs by their lateral surfaces by suitable clamping means. The fibres are placed in suitable positions by guide means which guide the holding assembly constituted by the layer of holding pins.
The fibres may then be guided accurately since a very much stronger and more rigid assembly is guided and the transversal dimensions thereof are much greater than those of the fibres. These guide means may themselves be constituted by cylindrical pins made of a hard and rigid substance and which press laterally on either side of the holding assembly, and down onto the base surface. Another disposition which also uses holding and guide pins is described elsewhere, in the application for the first French certificate of addition No. 2 316 611, for "A fibre positioning device" equivalent to U.S. Pat. No. 4 050 783 (inventor: Andre Tardy). In accordance with said other disposition, the holding pins are spaced out all around an axi

REFERENCES:
patent: 4123137 (1978-10-01), Marcatili
patent: 4203650 (1980-05-01), Millet et al.
patent: 4279468 (1981-07-01), Turley et al.

LandOfFree

Say what you really think

Search LandOfFree.com for the USA inventors and patents. Rate them and share your experience with other people.

Rating

Fibre-to-fibre connector including a component for joining it to does not yet have a rating. At this time, there are no reviews or comments for this patent.

If you have personal experience with Fibre-to-fibre connector including a component for joining it to, we encourage you to share that experience with our LandOfFree.com community. Your opinion is very important and Fibre-to-fibre connector including a component for joining it to will most certainly appreciate the feedback.

Rate now

     

Profile ID: LFUS-PAI-O-2243917

  Search
All data on this website is collected from public sources. Our data reflects the most accurate information available at the time of publication.