A team of researchers has set out to investigate the possibilities of employing 3D printing techniques or additive manufacturing in the fabrication of optical fibres – a new way of fabrication that could eventually pave way for more complex structure capable of unlocking a host of applications in a wide range of industries, from biotechnology to aerospace and telecommunications.
Manufacturing of optical fibres is a complex process that involved drawing of optical fibre preform made from glass tube until it is of the required diameter. The process seems simple, but the overall process makes it difficult to control the shape and composition of the fibre in 3D thereby limiting the degree of flexibility that engineers can exercise in the design of the fibre and as a consequence, the capabilities that the fibres can offer.
Researchers at the University of Southampton have devised a new technique that will allow engineers to manufacture preforms with far more complex structures and different features along their lengths. The work is a collaborative effort of Professor Jayanta Sahu at University of Southamtpon, his colleagues from the University’s Zepler Institute and co-investigator Dr Shoufeng Yang from the Faculty of Engineering and Environment.
The team revealed that they will be designing, fabricating and employing novel Multiple Materials Additive Manufacturing (MMAM) equipment using which they will make optical fibre preforms (both in conventional and microstructured fibre geometries) in silica and other host glass materials
“Our proposed process can be utilised to produce complex preforms, which are otherwise too difficult, too time-consuming or currently impossible to be achieved by existing fabrication techniques”, said Sahu.
The making of the preform is one of the most challenging stages of optical fibre manufacturing, especially when the preform has a complex internal structure, such as in photonic bandgap fibre – a new type of microstructured fibre, which is hotly anticipated to revolutionise the telecoms and datacoms industries in particular.
Currently, most microstructured fibres are made using the labour intensive ‘stack and draw’ process which involves stacking several smaller glass capillaries or canes together by hand to form the preform.
However, using the new additive manufacturing technique, the researchers will be able to form complex fibre structures from ultra-pure glass powder, layer-by-layer, gradually building up the shape to create a preform several tens of centimetres in lengths.
There are numerous challenges including the high melting temperature of the glass (over 2000?C in case of silica); the need for precise control of dopants, refractive index profiles and waveguide geometry; and the need for transitions between the layers to be smooth, otherwise the properties of the resultant fibre will be altered.
As part of the project, funded by the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC), the researchers will be working with three companies: ES Technology (Oxford, UK), a provider of laser material processing systems; Fibercore (Southampton, UK) a supplier of specialty fibre; and SG Controls (Cambridge UK) a leading manufacturer of optical fibre equipment.
“We hope our work will open up a route to manufacture novel fibre structures in silica and other glasses for a wide range of applications, covering telecommunications, sensing, lab-in-a-fibre, metamaterial fibre, and high-power lasers,” says Professor Sahu. “This is something that has never been tried before and we are excited about starting this project.”