GB2199320A - Optical fibres - Google Patents
Optical fibres Download PDFInfo
- Publication number
- GB2199320A GB2199320A GB08800641A GB8800641A GB2199320A GB 2199320 A GB2199320 A GB 2199320A GB 08800641 A GB08800641 A GB 08800641A GB 8800641 A GB8800641 A GB 8800641A GB 2199320 A GB2199320 A GB 2199320A
- Authority
- GB
- United Kingdom
- Prior art keywords
- soot
- silica
- fibre
- surface layer
- optical fibre
- Prior art date
- Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
- Granted
Links
Classifications
-
- C—CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
- C03—GLASS; MINERAL OR SLAG WOOL
- C03B—MANUFACTURE, SHAPING, OR SUPPLEMENTARY PROCESSES
- C03B37/00—Manufacture or treatment of flakes, fibres, or filaments from softened glass, minerals, or slags
- C03B37/01—Manufacture of glass fibres or filaments
- C03B37/02—Manufacture of glass fibres or filaments by drawing or extruding, e.g. direct drawing of molten glass from nozzles; Cooling fins therefor
- C03B37/025—Manufacture of glass fibres or filaments by drawing or extruding, e.g. direct drawing of molten glass from nozzles; Cooling fins therefor from reheated softened tubes, rods, fibres or filaments, e.g. drawing fibres from preforms
- C03B37/029—Furnaces therefor
-
- C—CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
- C03—GLASS; MINERAL OR SLAG WOOL
- C03C—CHEMICAL COMPOSITION OF GLASSES, GLAZES OR VITREOUS ENAMELS; SURFACE TREATMENT OF GLASS; SURFACE TREATMENT OF FIBRES OR FILAMENTS MADE FROM GLASS, MINERALS OR SLAGS; JOINING GLASS TO GLASS OR OTHER MATERIALS
- C03C25/00—Surface treatment of fibres or filaments made from glass, minerals or slags
- C03C25/10—Coating
- C03C25/12—General methods of coating; Devices therefor
- C03C25/22—Deposition from the vapour phase
-
- C—CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
- C03—GLASS; MINERAL OR SLAG WOOL
- C03B—MANUFACTURE, SHAPING, OR SUPPLEMENTARY PROCESSES
- C03B2201/00—Type of glass produced
- C03B2201/06—Doped silica-based glasses
- C03B2201/20—Doped silica-based glasses doped with non-metals other than boron or fluorine
- C03B2201/24—Doped silica-based glasses doped with non-metals other than boron or fluorine doped with nitrogen, e.g. silicon oxy-nitride glasses
-
- C—CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
- C03—GLASS; MINERAL OR SLAG WOOL
- C03B—MANUFACTURE, SHAPING, OR SUPPLEMENTARY PROCESSES
- C03B2201/00—Type of glass produced
- C03B2201/06—Doped silica-based glasses
- C03B2201/30—Doped silica-based glasses doped with metals, e.g. Ga, Sn, Sb, Pb or Bi
- C03B2201/58—Doped silica-based glasses doped with metals, e.g. Ga, Sn, Sb, Pb or Bi doped with metals in non-oxide form, e.g. CdSe
Landscapes
- Chemical & Material Sciences (AREA)
- Life Sciences & Earth Sciences (AREA)
- Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
- General Life Sciences & Earth Sciences (AREA)
- Geochemistry & Mineralogy (AREA)
- Materials Engineering (AREA)
- Organic Chemistry (AREA)
- Manufacturing & Machinery (AREA)
- Chemical Kinetics & Catalysis (AREA)
- General Chemical & Material Sciences (AREA)
- Manufacture, Treatment Of Glass Fibers (AREA)
Abstract
In order to eliminate the effect of water attack on silica optical fibres, the fibres are provided with a surface layer of silicon nitride or silicon oxynitride. The method proposed comprises direct nitridation. This may be achieved by adding a nitriding atmosphere to the drawing furnace gases, or to the reactive gases (TiCl4 and SiCl4) incorporated in the flame of an oxyhydrogen torch for the formation of a compressive silica-titania layer on an optical fibre by a glass soot deposition and sintering process.
Description
OPTICAL FIBRES
This invention relates to optical fibres and, in particular, to the manufacture of optical fibres.
According to one aspect of the present invention there is a method of manufacturing silica optical fibre including the step of directly nitriding the surface of a silica preform or fibre.
According to another aspect of the present invention there is a method of providing a silica optical fibre with a silicon nitride or silicon oxynitride layer thereon including the step of direct nitridation of the surface of the fibre or a preform from which the fibre is to be drawn.
Embodiments of the present invention will now be described with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
Fig. 1 shows schematically a furnace arrangement for the direct nitridation of the surface of optical fibres, and
Fig. 2 shows schematically the production of a preform for optical fibres with a surface layer of silicon oxynitride under compressive loading.
Optical fibres with a thin surface layer of silicon nitride or silicon oxynitride are known to show significant improvements in static fatigue performance as stress corrosion due to water attack is retarded. More recently, such surface layers have been found to be very effective barriers to the diffusion of free hydrogen into optical fibres. The thickness of the coating required is of the order of 200A. The methods of production of such known silicon nitride or silicon oxynitride layers on optical fibres involve chemical vapour phase (CVD) techniques.
The basic method proposed by the present invention, however, involves direct nitridation of the silicate surface of an optical fibre preform (or a fibre) to a silicon oxynitride based surface. The glass is converted in the presence of a reducing and nitriding atmosphere at high temperature ( 9000C). Direct nitridation, in order to produce a surface layer of silicon oxynitride on nitride on the surface of silica, is a surface modification technique. That is that existing silica surface is chemically charged, as opposed to CVD methods which deposit further material onto a surface.
Fig. 1 illustrates schematically a furnace arrangement for the direct nitridation of optical fibre surfaces. The furnace illustrated is of the carbon resistance type with carbon hearths and element 1 and has a top gas injection means including a port 2 for the introduction of a furnace purge gas and a port 3 for the introduction of a chosen recipe of reactive gases (nitriding atmosphere) into the furnace atmosphere. All gases exiting the furnace are extracted using a radial port 4. A silica based optical fibre preform 5 is, in use of the furnace, drawn into fibre 6 in the conventional manner. Typically the reactive gas may comprise ammonia. The silica based fibre 6 drawn using the furnace has its surface impregnated with nitrogen.
That is, the glass surface has amounts of oxygen substituted by nitrogen in the form of oxynitrides.
Compressive claddings comprising titania doped silica have previously been applied to silica fibres in order to yield fibres with elevated tensile strength, static fatigue due to water attack is not overcome thereby. Such titania doped silica claddings may be applied to silica glass preforms, which are subsequently drawn down to fibres. When SiC14 and TiC14 are heated in an oxy/hydrogen flame, a SiO2/TiO2 soot results. The size and SiO2:TiO2 ratio of the soot can be controlled by controlling the various gas flow-rates passing through the oxy/hydrogen torch.
A glass preform 7 (Fig. 2) can be coated with the SiO2/TiO2 soot 8 by rotating it across the flame of the oxy/hydrogen torch 9 and traversing the torch along the length of the preform. The fragile soot adheres loosely to the glass preform when first deposited and may be immediately sintered into compact glass under the action of a heat source, which may be the deposition torch itself. Alternatively, the soot can be sintered during drawing into fibre in the drawing furnace.
TiO2 in solution with SiO2 in low concentrations (Tio2 10%wt) is a low, or negative, expansion glass.
When, for example, a 125um silica glass fibre has a thin Sum) layer of this glass over its surface, the "silica bulk" of the fibre draws the TiO2/SiO2 surface into compression yielding, as mentioned above, a fibre with elevated tensile strength but still subject to water attack. The water attack problem can be eliminated by producing a very thin layer ( 200A) of silicon oxynitride or silicon nitride over the glass fibre.
Ammonia is able to substitute nitrogen for oxygen in SiO2 or TiO2. Therefore in one way of obtaining the silicon oxynitride or nitride layer it is proposed that during the deposition process the torch also injects NH into the vapour stream to yield a soot of silica/titania oxynitride/nitride. The soot is applied to a preform and processed in a similar manner to that described above, resulting in an optical fibre with high strength and high retention of strength. The titania/silica glass contains nitrogen at the molecular level.
Typically the gas flows to the oxyhydrogen torch -l . -l may be as follows: TiCl 198cc min ; SiCl 185cc min
4 4 1
H2 4 to 20 litres min t 02 2 to 10 litres min (the actual 2 and H2 values depend on the level of sinter required); and NH3 200cc min . Without the ammonia the glass obtained is SiO2/ 3%TiO2. The torch is specially designed in order to burn a predetermined ratio of titanium and silicon tetrachloride vapours in an oxy/hydrogen flame to produce the aforementioned soot.
The torch provides the reactants and heat for the reactions:
2H2 + 2 + TiC14 = TiO2 + 4HC1
2H2 + 2 + SiC14 = Sio2 + 4HC1
The torch also burns to produce heat which sinters the TiO2/SiO2 2 soot onto the surface of the silica preform.
Alternatively, the silicon oxynitride or nitride layer may be produced after the SiO2/TiO2 soot as a separate process, in which case the soot applied to the preform may be only partially sintered prior to direct nitridation and drawing in a furnace as described above with respect to Fig. 1, for example. In both cases, the ratio of coating thickness must be carefully chosen to effect the maximum compressive stress in the surface of the optical fibre. A compressive stress can result in the surface of an optical fibre (silica based) because silica containing traces of titania can exhibit significantly lower thermal expansion coefficients than silica glass. The glass containing titania can also exhibit a slightly high glass transition temperature.
Therefore, as an optical fibre is drawn from its preform and freezes in, the bulk of the fibre will contract and compress the low contraction surface.
Claims (4)
1. A method of manufacturing silica optical fibre having a compressive surface layer, including the steps of incorporating TiC14, SiC14 and a nitriding atmosphere in the flame of an oxyhydrogen torch X whereby to form a glass soot, depositing the soot on a silica preform and sintering the soot.
2. A method as claimed in claim 1 wherein the nit riding atmosphere is ammonia.
3. A method as claimed in claim 2 including the step of heating the preform, subsequently to said soot sintering step, to a fibre-drawing temperature and drawing optical fibre therefrom, the drawn fibre having a said compressive surface layer therein which is comprised of titania/silica glass containing nitrogen at a molecular level.
4. A method of manufacturing silica optical fibre having a compressive surface layer as claimed in claim 1 and substantially as herein described with reference to the accompanying drawings.
4. A method of manufacturing silica optical fibre having a compressive surface layer including the steps of incorporating TiC14, SiC14 and ammonia in the flame of an oxyhydrogen torch whereby to form a soot of silica/titania oxynitride/nitride, depositing the soot on a silica preform, sintering the soot, heating the preform with the sintered soot to a fibre-drawing temperature and drawing optical fibre therefrom, the drawn fibre having a said compressive surface layer comprised of titania/silica glass containing nitrogen at a molecular level.
5. A method of manufacturing silica optical fibre having a compressive surface layer as claimed in claim 1 and substantially as herein described with reference to the accompanying drawings.
Amendments to the claims
have been filed as follows
CLAIMS:1. A method of manufacturing silica optical fibre having a compressive surface layer, including the steps of incorporating TiC14, SiC14 and a nitriding atmosphere in the flame of an oxyhydrogen torch whereby to form a glass soot, depositing the soot on a silica preform and sintering the soot.
2. A method as claimed in claim 1 wherein the nitriding atmosphere is ammonia.
3. A method as claimed in claim 2 including the step of heating the preform, subsequently to said soot sintering step, to a fibre-drawing temperature and drawing optical fibre therefrom, the drawn fibre having a said compressive surface layer thereon which is comprised of titania/silica glass containing nitrogen at a molecular level.
Priority Applications (1)
Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
---|---|---|---|
GB08800641A GB2199320B (en) | 1984-09-29 | 1988-01-13 | Optical fibres |
Applications Claiming Priority (2)
Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
---|---|---|---|
GB08424641A GB2164934B (en) | 1984-09-29 | 1984-09-29 | Optical fibres |
GB08800641A GB2199320B (en) | 1984-09-29 | 1988-01-13 | Optical fibres |
Publications (3)
Publication Number | Publication Date |
---|---|
GB8800641D0 GB8800641D0 (en) | 1988-02-10 |
GB2199320A true GB2199320A (en) | 1988-07-06 |
GB2199320B GB2199320B (en) | 1988-12-21 |
Family
ID=26288278
Family Applications (1)
Application Number | Title | Priority Date | Filing Date |
---|---|---|---|
GB08800641A Expired GB2199320B (en) | 1984-09-29 | 1988-01-13 | Optical fibres |
Country Status (1)
Country | Link |
---|---|
GB (1) | GB2199320B (en) |
-
1988
- 1988-01-13 GB GB08800641A patent/GB2199320B/en not_active Expired
Also Published As
Publication number | Publication date |
---|---|
GB8800641D0 (en) | 1988-02-10 |
GB2199320B (en) | 1988-12-21 |
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Legal Events
Date | Code | Title | Description |
---|---|---|---|
PCNP | Patent ceased through non-payment of renewal fee |
Effective date: 19920929 |