Raw Materials: Optical Fibre Cable Manufacturing Process
Raw Materials: Optical Fibre Cable Manufacturing Process
Deposition
An oxy-hydrogen burner heats a section of the rotating quartz substrate tube to 1700 °C. This
creates a radial reaction zone where the oxidation of the halides occurs. The silicon dioxide
(SiO) and germanuim dioxide (GeO ) particles are
deposited in the inside of the tube, downstream from the
burner, by a process known as thermophoresis. Chlorine
which acts as a drying agent, is produced as a waste
product. As the burner repeatedly passes over the tube, it
sinters and melts the layers of sooty particles into
successive layers of glass. In the final few layers, the concentration of germanuim dioxide (GeO
) is increased, thereby creating a region of higher refractive index that will become the fibre
core.
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Sleeving
In order to increase the length of fibre that can be drawn cost effectively
from a single preform, the preform volume is increased by sleeving.
This is done by inserting the preform into a thick syntetic quartz glass
tube. The two are then fused together at 2000 °C using an oxy-
hydrogen ring burner, which moves vertically upwards.
Optical fibre is drawn by inserting the preform into a high temperature graphite
resistance furnace at 2100 °C. Argon and nitrogen gases provide an inert
atmosphere to prevent oxidation of the graphite. A laminar, filtered airflow
ensures that the preform surface remains clean. The furnace is located at the
top of the tower in a Class 100 clean room environment. The latter is very
important as any particles that adhere to the optical fibre during the drawing
process may act as a defect centre for crack propagation, causing the fibre to
break. The preform's tip softens in the furnace and is drawn down to a 125 µm
diameter optical fibre in a free-flow process (no dies are used). The core to
cladding ratio is maintained from the preform to the fibre. The optical fibre is
cooled in a helium cooling tube and coated with dual layers of ultraviolet
radiation cured acrylate resin, which provide protection against mechanical
damage and moisture ingress. For identification purposes, optical fibres are
coloured either by inking or by pigmentation in the coating process during fibre
drawing.