Electric heating – Heating devices – Combined with diverse-type art device
Reexamination Certificate
2001-11-13
2003-06-24
Walberg, Teresa (Department: 3742)
Electric heating
Heating devices
Combined with diverse-type art device
C385S049000, C219S530000
Reexamination Certificate
active
06583388
ABSTRACT:
FIELD OF THE INVENTION
The present invention relates to component packaging. More particularly, the present invention relates to a thermally insulative, hermetic or non-hermetic package for isolating optical components (e.g., arrayed waveguide gratings) from external stresses.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
Fiber optic communication links have been conventionally employed in long-haul, point-to-point networks with controlled environments at all interface points. Such highly controlled, “central office” surroundings usually offer relatively benign operating environments (temperature, humidity, mechanical) for components. Consequently, highly functional components could be developed and installed without considering the impact of other, more extreme environments.
Recent technological advances, coupled with increasing bandwidth demand, are rapidly expanding the use of fiber optic components beyond the “central office” and into potentially harsher environments. For example, dense wavelength division multiplexing (DWDM) enables the transmission of multiple, independent wavelength streams across a single fiber. Predictably, this capability has resulted in the requirement to add or drop these optical channels along the previously untapped long lengths of fiber (and outside of the central office environment) to provide access to the individual wavelength streams. Optical add/drop multiplexers (OADMs) are employed for this function, enabled by arrayed waveguide grating (AWG) components for filtering and forwarding individual wavelengths.
In addition to these technological advances, simple market forces are pushing fiber networks beyond central offices and into the diverse terrain of “metro” markets. This ever-increasing need for bandwidth which only fiber can deliver is resulting in the widespread deployment of fiber networks, and their associated components, into the harsher, less environmentally controlled conditions present in the metro market.
The demands placed on component designers now reach far beyond optical performance, and into the realms of thermal and mechanical insulation. Certain qualification standards (e.g., Telcordia) exist for reliability of optical components, and many customers require qualification under these standards. AWGs however are thin, fragile chips with narrow waveguides produced using planar lightwave circuit (PLC) processing techniques. The various processing tolerances required to meet the requisite optical specifications are already very tight, and in fact get tighter as the need to process more and closer channels increases.
There is also a need to maintain the tightly controlled, internal operating environment (e.g., temperature) for proper optical component operation in a package. The optical performance of PLC waveguides is especially sensitive to temperature. These components usually include active heating elements in closed loop feedback configurations to ensure temperature stability. It is therefore important to thermally insulate the package to ensure the PLC is kept at stable temperature by the heating element.
Environmentally secure packages therefore now play a vital role in the widespread commercialization of these devices. Without adequate packaging, components such as AWGs, with their highly unique and useful functions, would be relegated to laboratory environments only. It is difficult and costly to impose yet additional requirements on the chip process in the form of advanced materials, processing techniques, etc. to satisfy the harsher environmental standards discussed above.
What is required, therefore, are advanced packaging techniques to enable the widespread use of otherwise fragile optical components in diverse and often stressful environments, and which also maintain the internal operating temperature of these optical components to ensure their proper optical performance.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
These requirements are met, and further advantages are provided, by the present invention which in one aspect is an optical component packaging technique, including the package itself, and its method of fabrication. According to the present invention, an insulative buffer is placed against the optical component, enclosing a first insulative cavity against a temperature-sensitive portion of the component. An outer package encloses the buffer and optical component, forming additional insulation for the component.
In one embodiment, the first buffer may be formed of a soft insulative material, and pressed against the component by an inner surface of the outer package. The buffer may be pre-adhered to the inner surface of the outer package, such that upon assembly thereof, the buffer is pressed into place against the component. For the PLC embodiments disclosed, the buffer is generally planar and may include a frame projecting from its perimeter toward the component to form the cavity against the component.
A heater may be positioned proximate the optical component to control the temperature of its temperature-sensitive area, in which case a second buffer may be placed against the heater, enclosing a second insulative cavity against the heater, aligned with the temperature-sensitive portion of the component. If the optical component is generally planar, the heater is also generally planar, and adhered to the optical component along a planar surface thereof, to maintain the temperature of the temperature-sensitive portion of the optical component. The cavities enclosed by the first and second buffers are both respectively aligned to the temperature-sensitive portion of the optical component.
A portion of the outer package may be transfer-molded, and the buffer advantageously separates transfer-molded material from the temperature-sensitive area of the component.
The buffer may also form a second, opposing insulative cavity against an inner surface of the outer package, in which case the buffer includes a frame projecting from its perimeter toward both the component and the inner surface of the outer package, to thereby form the first cavity against the component and the second cavity against the inner surface of the outer package.
The optical component may comprise a planar lightwave circuit (PLC), wherein the temperature-sensitive portion of the component includes at least one optical waveguide formed in the PLC, e.g., an arrayed waveguide grating.
This package is especially useful if the optical component comprises a planar lightwave circuit (PLC), e.g., an arrayed waveguide grating (AWG), which requires tight temperature control and structural integrity to maintain the integrity of the optical paths.
The insulative cavities of the present invention thermally insulate the temperature-sensitive portions of the PLC from the outside ambient environment. The thermal isolation also reduces the power consumption required to maintain tight temperature control of the device and reduces thermally induced mechanical stresses which could negatively affect the device performance or reliability.
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Chapman David J.
Crafts Douglas E.
Swain Steven M.
Allen Dyer Doppelt Milbrath & Gilchrist, P.A.
Fastovsky Leonid
JDS Uniphase Corporation
Walberg Teresa
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