Drawing
The preform, however constructed, is placed in a device known as a drawing tower,
where the preform tip is heated and the optical fiber is pulled out as a
string. By measuring the resultant fiber width, the tension on the
fiber can be controlled to maintain the fiber thickness.
Coatings
The light is guided down the core of the fiber by an optical cladding
with a lower refractive index that traps light in the core through
total internal reflection.
The cladding is coated by a buffer that protects it from moisture and physical damage.[47]
The buffer coating is what gets stripped off the fiber for termination
or splicing. These coatings are UV-cured urethane acrylate composite
materials applied to the outside of the fiber during the drawing
process. The coatings protect the very delicate strands of glass
fiber—about the size of a human hair—and allow it to survive the rigors
of manufacturing, proof testing, cabling and installation.
Today’s glass optical fiber draw processes employ a dual-layer
coating approach. An inner primary coating is designed to act as a shock
absorber to minimize attenuation caused by microbending. An outer
secondary coating protects the primary coating against mechanical damage
and acts as a barrier to lateral forces. Sometimes a metallic armor
layer is added to provide extra protection.
These fiber optic coating layers are applied during the fiber draw,
at speeds approaching 100 kilometers per hour (60 mph). Fiber optic
coatings are applied using one of two methods: wet-on-dry and wet-on-wet.
In wet-on-dry, the fiber passes through a primary coating application,
which is then UV cured—then through the secondary coating application,
which is subsequently cured. In wet-on-wet, the fiber passes through
both the primary and secondary coating applications, then goes to UV
curing.
Fiber optic coatings are applied in concentric layers to prevent
damage to the fiber during the drawing application and to maximize fiber
strength and microbend resistance. Unevenly coated fiber will
experience non-uniform forces when the coating expands or contracts, and
is susceptible to greater signal attenuation. Under proper drawing and
coating processes, the coatings are concentric around the fiber,
continuous over the length of the application and have constant
thickness.
Fiber optic coatings protect the glass fibers from scratches that
could lead to strength degradation. The combination of moisture and
scratches accelerates the aging and deterioration of fiber strength.
When fiber is subjected to low stresses over a long period, fiber
fatigue can occur. Over time or in extreme conditions, these factors
combine to cause microscopic flaws in the glass fiber to propagate,
which can ultimately result in fiber failure.
Three key characteristics of fiber optic waveguides can be affected
by environmental conditions: strength, attenuation and resistance to
losses caused by microbending. External fiber optic coatings protect
glass optical fiber from environmental conditions that can affect the
fiber’s performance and long-term durability. On the inside, coatings
ensure the reliability of the signal being carried and help minimize
attenuation due to microbending.
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