University of Pittsburgh

Enhanced Small Diameter Optical Fiber with Integrated Gratings

This invention is a small diameter single-mode optical fiber that has optical gratings formed directly within its core through an intact, protective coating. This novel method eliminates the time-consuming and fiber-damaging process of removing and reapplying the coating, significantly improving the efficiency and reliability of forming Bragg gratings in optical fibers.

Description

The core innovation is a method for forming optical gratings within a single-mode optical fiber without stripping its protective polymer coating. The optical fiber has a core and cladding with a small combined outer diameter of 100 μm to 125 μm and a thin coating with a thickness of less than or equal to 20 μm. This coating is a single high-modulus layer (Young's modulus ≥0.5 GPa) or a two-layer structure composed of a low-modulus layer (Young's modulus ≤5 MPa) surrounded by a high-modulus layer (Young's modulus ≥0.5 GPa). To form the grating, the optical fiber is exposed to a pattern of ultraviolet (UV) radiation directly through the coating and into the core. The thin, specialized coating and small diameter allow the UV light to pass through and create a change in the refractive index (an optical grating) within the fiber's core. This process can be performed continuously while the fiber is transferred from one reel to another, providing a method to manufacture optical fibers with integrated gratings over long lengths, which is a significant improvement over existing techniques that are limited by fiber vibration during the draw process or coating removal after the draw.

Applications

- Distributed Optical Fiber Sensors (DOFS): For detecting changes in temperature, strain, pressure, and chemical concentration.
- Pipeline Monitoring: Used for security and leak monitoring on oil and gas pipelines.
- Intrusion Detection Systems: Can be used in perimeter and area security for detecting unwanted entry.
- Down-Hole Sensing: Applicable in oil and gas wells for monitoring conditions deep underground.
- Compact Medical Devices: The small diameter makes them suitable for use in minimally invasive medical sensing applications.

Advantages

- Improved Fiber Reliability: The protective polymer coating remains intact during grating formation, preventing surface defects on the glass that can cause reliability issues.
- Reduced Manufacturing Complexity and Cost: The costly and time-consuming steps of coating removal and re-application are eliminated.
- Enhanced Grating Uniformity: Gratings can be fabricated on long fiber lengths at high speed without issues caused by fiber draw vibration, leading to more uniform grating properties.
- Increased Sensing Sensitivity: The fiber structure, which may include a Titania-doped layer in the cladding, increases the Rayleigh scattering backscattered power, improving the resolution and sensitivity of fiber sensors.
- Small Diameter Profile: The fiber and its coating maintain a compact size (coated diameter ≤145 μm), enabling easier packaging and deployment, especially in small spaces.

Invention Readiness

The technology has been successfully demonstrated in a laboratory setting. Experimental data has been generated showing that the method can form Bragg gratings, which are reflected light with good uniformity and with central reflected power increasing with pulse energy. Further studies would involve optimizing the UV exposure process parameters (e.g., energy, counts) for various fiber compositions and testing the long-term reliability and performance of the gratings in diverse real-world operating environments

IP Status

https://patents.google.com/patent/US11698483B2