[0001] The present invention relates to optical fibres and to glasses suitable for the manufacture
of optical fibres. The invention is especially concerned with graded index optical
fibres and their production by thermal diffusion using the double crucible drawing
technique.
[0002] In order to produce optical fibres suitable for use in telecommunications systems
it is necessary to ensure that the loss in the optical fibres is 20dB/km or less.
This requirement imposes stringent conditions on the quality of the glasses from which
the fibres are made. For example, it is important that such glasses should have a
low concentration of transition metal ions and water, which give rise to absorption
bands. It is also important that phase separation and devitrification should not occur
in the glasses when the fibre is drawn, because even if present to only a slight extent
these effects will result in glasses with a high scatter loss.
[0003] Up to the present time greatest success has been encountered with pure and doped
vitreous silicas. It is possible to produce vitreous silica in an extremely pure state,
so that absorption losses due to impurities are as low as 2dB/km. In order to produce
a second glass, with a refractive index different from that of pure silica, small
quantities of dopants, for example, titanium dioxide, are added. In this way optical
fibres can be made with a doped silica core and a pure silica cladding. Such optical
fibres have an extremely low loss. Because, however, of the higher softening point
of vitreous silica, there are difficulties in the preparation of optical fibres from
these materials. For example, the usual technique 'used in the fabrication of dielectric
optical waveguides is to prepare a preform consisting of a clad rod and then to draw
this down to a suitable diameter to form the dielectric optical waveguide.
[0004] From the point of view of convenience of manufacture the double crucible technique
for drawing fibres is ideal. This technique involves melting two glasses, one in a
first crucible and the other in a second crucible, the first crucible being located
within the second crucible. Both crucibles have drawing nozzles. The fibre thus formed
is a clad fibre which is capable of acting as a dielectric optical waveguide. Ideally
low melting point glasses are required for the double crucible technique. Such glasses
are however complex, containing as a rule at least three oxides, and this introduces
problems in keeping the glass losses at a sufficiently low level to permit the production
of satisfactory optical fibres. US Patent Specification No 3 957 342 describes and
claims a family of sodium borosilicate glasses of low softening point and low absorption
and scatter loss which have proved highly satisfactory for the production of stepped
index optical fibres.
[0005] The double crucible drawing technique is especially well adapted for the production
of graded index fibre by thermal diffusion: see, for example, US Patent Specification
No 4 040 807 and Proceedings of the Second European Conference on Optical Fibre Communications,
Paris, September 1976, pages 21-26. In this process, the core and clad glasses are
subjected to a heat treatment which permits inter-diffusion of the mobile oxides in
the two glasses, this heat treatment being carried out during the drawing operation
by controlling the length of the drawing nozzle in the double crucible. Using the
glasses described and claimed in US Patent Specification No 3 957 342, graded index
fibre suitable for a wide range of applications can be produced by this process, but
the quality is not of the very highest.
[0006] The present invention is concerned with a family of glasses related to those defined
in US Patent Specification No 3 957 342, but modified by the addition of alkaline
earth metal oxides. These glasses show considerable potential for the production of
high quality graded index fibre by the double crucible method. It is believed that
the oxide responsible for the gradation of refractive index is the alkaline earth
metal oxide. Glass pairs for fibre core and cladding may readily be produced, the
two glasses having significantly different refractive indices. If desired, the glasses
may be matched so as to have substantially the same coefficient of thermal expansion,
but this is not essential.
[0007] Previously it had been thought that calcium oxide.. for example, was not able to
diffuse readily at fibre-drawing temperatures. We have, however, demonstrated that
this is incorrect, and that calcium oxide and other alkaline earth metal oxides can
be used in thermal diffusion techniques for the production of graded index fibre.
This represents a major advance in the state of the art with regard to the production
of graded index fibre using the double crucible; technique.
[0008] According to a first aspect of the present invention they is provided a four-component
glass suitable for the manufacture of optical fibre, the said glass having a 1 composition
calculated by taking a particular notional sodium oxide-boric oxide-silica composition
lying within the range defined by region A of Fig 1 of the accompanying drawings,
and partially replacing sodium oxide or sodium oxide and silica by one or more alkaline
earth metal oxid in such a proportion that the total content of alkaline earth metal
oxide in the glass is within the range of from 0 to 20 mole per cent, the composition
of the glass lying outside the region of compositions that undergo phase separation
or devitrification during optical fibre production.
[0009] The glass of the invention preferably contains only one alkaline earth metal oxide,
and that oxide is preferably calcium oxide or barium oxide.
[0010] It appears that any soda-boro-silicate glass falling within the region A of Fig 1
of the accompanying drawings can be modified by the addition of an alkaline earth
metal oxide to form a glass suitable for use in the production of optical fibre. The
upper limit for silica has been set at about 70 mole per cent because above this limit
difficulties in homogenisation and in melting in silica crucibles are encountered.
The lower limit for silica has been set at about 50 mole per cent because of poor
glass durability below this value. The lower limit for sodium oxide has been set at
13 mole per cent because of problems due to phase separation of the glass below this
limit and . the upper limit has been set at 33 mole per cent because of lack of data
on glasses with higher soda content.
[0011] A glass according to the invention may advantageously be paired with a glass having
the corresponding unsubstituted soda-boro-silicate composition to make optical fibre,
the glass of the present invention being used for the core and the unsubstituted glass
for the cladding. Advantageously, the thermal expansivities of the two glasses may
be matched, ie, the proportion of alkaline earth metal oxide in the core glass may
be such that the thermal expansion coefficient between O°C and the glass transition
temperature of the four-component glass is substantially the same as that of the corresponding
soda-boro-silicate glass.
[0012] If the alkaline earth metal oxide is calcium oxide, thermal expansivity matching
may be achieved if substitution of sodium oxide and silica by calcium oxide is in
such a proportion that the total molar percentage (Na
20 + XCaO) in the four-component glass is equal to the molar percentage of Na
20 in the three-component glass, where X = 0.34 ±0.03. The basis of this relationship
is given in detail in Example 1 below.
[0013] According to a second aspect of the present invention there is provided a glass optical
fibre having a core and a cladding, the core comprising a first glass, according to
the invention, as previously defined, and the cladding comprising a second glass of
different refractive index from the first glass and having a soda-boro-silicate composition
lying within the range defined by region A of Fig 1 of the accompanying drawings.
[0014] As indicated above, the composition of the cladding glass is advantageously also
the notional composition from which the four-component composition of the core glass
is derived by substitution. This is not, however, essential.
[0015] The thermal expansion coefficients of the core and clad glasses are advantageously
substantially equal.
[0016] Preferably the said optical fibre is a graded index fibre and the gradation of refractive
index is produced by thermal diffusion.
[0017] According to a third aspect of the present invention there is provided a glass optical
fibre having a core and a cladding both made of glasses according to the invention
as previously defined, the refractive indices of the core and cladding glasses being
different from one another.
[0018] Preferably the said optical fibre is a graded index fibre and the gradation of refractive
index is produced by thermal diffusion. Advantageously the core and clad glasses contain
different alkaline earth metal oxides, the oxide of the heavier metal normally being
in the core glass. For example, the core glass may contain barium oxide and the cladding
glass calcium oxide, or the core glass may contain calcium oxide and the cladding
glass magnesium oxide.
[0019] According to a fourth aspect of the present invention there is provided a graded
index glass optical fibre having a core of a glass comprising
(a) silica,
(b) boric oxide,
(c) one or more alkali metal oxides selected from sodium oxide and potassium oxide,
and
(d) one or more alkaline earth metal oxides selected from calcium oxide, strontium
oxide and barium oxide,
and a cladding of a glass comprising
(a) silica,
(b) boric oxide,
(c) one or more alkali metal oxides selected from sodium oxide and potassium oxide,
and, optionally,
(d) one or more alkaline earth metal oxides selected from calcium oxide, strontium
oxide, barium oxide and magnesium oxide,
the said core and said cladding glasses having different refractive indices and having
compositions selected to exclude glasses which undergo phase separation or devitrification
during fibre production, the said gradation of refractive index being at least partly
caused by a composition gradient of one or more alkaline earth metal oxides.
[0020] If desired, the thermal expansion coefficients of the core and clad glasses may be
matched.
[0021] Calcium oxide, barium oxide and strontium oxide all behave similarly in glasses and
all of these oxides are suitable additives for the core glass of the fibre according
to the invention. The dependence of refractive index on alkaline earth metal oxide
content is much stronger for barium oxide than for calcium oxide, so that a given
molar percentage of barium oxide should give a fibre of higher numerical aperture
than could be produced using the same amount of calcium oxide. Magnesium oxide lowers
the refractive index slightly and is therefore useful as an additive to cladding glasses.
Possible combinations of alkaline earth metal oxides giving the correct refractive
index relationships include the following:

Furthermore, the alkali metal oxide present in the core and cladding glasses may be
either sodium oxide or potassium oxide, giving a further area of choice. The potash-boro-silicate
glass system is in many ways similar to the soda-boro-silicate system except that
the region of stable glass formation is smaller. If, for example, sodium oxide is
used in the core glass and potassium oxide in the clad glass, sodium-potassium exchange
can occur in the double crucible in addition to alkaline earth metal oxide diffusion.
The provision of several diffusion species enables a better approach to the optimum
refractive index profile to be produced.
[0022] One glass pair which has been tested and found to be promising (see Example 5 below)
is one in which the core glass contains barium oxide, sodium oxide, silica and boric
oxide and the cladding glass contains calcium oxide, potassium oxide, silica and boric
oxide. During fibre production sodium-potassium exchange occurs with a fast diffusion
coefficient and barium oxide-calcium oxide exchange occurs with a slower diffusion
coefficient, the diffusion taking place with little change to the glass network.
[0023] Other oxides may be added to the glasses according to the invention, up to a total
of about 5 mole per cent, the only limitation on these additives being that they should
not cause substantial worsening of the optical properties, for example, absorption
loss of the glass. For example, arsenic trioxide may be added, as described in US
Patent Specification No 3 957 342, to stabilise the redox state of the glass, or alumina
may be added to improve the chemical durability. The use of the latter additive may
be advantageous in the case of glasses containing potassium oxide.
[0024] The following Examples illustrate the invention. The batch materials used for the
preparation of the various glassen described were commercially available materials.
The boric oxide, sodium carbonate, potassium carbonate, alumina and silica used in
Examples 1 to 4 typically contained from 0.05 to 0.2 ppm by weight of iron, 0.01 to
0.04 ppm by weight of copper, less than 0.05 ppm by weight of chromium and less thnn
0.01 ppm of other transition elements.
[0025] The ultra-pure calcium carbonate and barium carbonate used contained less than 100
parts by weight in 10
9 of manganese, less than 20 parts by weight in 10
9 of iron, less than 10 parts by weight in 109 of copper, less than 10 parts by weight
in 10
9 of nickel, less than 30 parts by weight in 10
9 of chromium and less than 5 parts by weight in 10
9 of cobalt. Less pure materials were used in Examples 5 and 6.
[0026] In the Examples reference will be made to the accompanying drawings, in which:
Fig 1 shows a triaxis plot of the soda-boro-silicate glass system,
Fig 2 shows the refractive index profile of the optical fibre of the invention described
in Example 1,
Fig 3 shows a plot of total insertion loss against wavelength for the fibre of Example
1,
Fig 4 shows the pulsewidth response for the fibre of
Example 1,
[0027]
Fig 5 shows the refractive index profile of the fibre of Example 2,
Fig 6 shows the refractive index profile of the fibre of Example 3,
Fig 7 shows the refractive index profile of the fibre of Example 4, .
Fig 8 shows the refractive index profile of the fibre of Example 5,
Fig 9 shows the refractive index profile of the fibre of Example 6,
Fig 10 shows a triaxis plot of thermal expansion coef ficient data for the soda-lime-silicate
glass system based on published data, and
Fig 11 shows a triaxis plot of thermal expansion coefficient data for the soda-boro-silicate
glass system based on published data.
COMPARATIVE EXAMPLE
[0028] Referring to Fig 1 of the accompanying drawings, points representing two soda-boro-silicate
glasses which have been used to produce graded index optical fibre by thermal diffusion
with a double crucible are labelled 1 and 2, 1 being the core glass and 2 the cladding
glass. Graded index fibre produced from these glasses had a total optical loss of
9-15dB/km, a part of which was of unknown origin, ie, due neither to absorption loss
nor to Rayleigh scatter loss..The pulse broadening of this fibre was in the range
of from 1-5ns/km. Furthermore, when viewed optically, the core displayed a ring structure
of uncertain origin. Finally, the numerical aperture had a typical value of 0.12.
While this fibre is of use for certain applications, it is not ideal for telecommunications
purposes. The low pulse broadening is probably caused at least in part by inter-mode
coupling which would account for the poor total loss. It is suspected that the visible
ring may in some way be produced by thermal mismatch between the core and cladding
glasses. The diffusing species producing the graded index in this glass pair is of
course sodium oxide. Using soda-boro-silicate glasses the problem of obtaining a thermal
expansion match between core and cladding end at the same time getting a reasonably
large numerical aperture by obtaining a significant difference between core and cladding
refractive indices is extremely difficult to solve. ,For this reason it was decided
to look into the possibility of modifying the simple soda-boro-silicates by the addition
of a further oxide.
[0029] Despite the fact that calcium oxide would appear to be an unlikely material to use
because it was believed to have a low diffusion coefficient, it was decided to try
this material because there was a little ultra-pure calcium carbonate available in
the laboratory at a time when no other ultra-pure materials apart from boric oxide,
silica and sodium carbonate were available. Much to our surprise •we discovered that,
contrary to previously held beliefs, calcium oxide was capable of diffusing at the
drawing temperature of the optical fibres with a diffusion coefficient of from 10-
8 to 10
-7cm
2 sec-
1, only very slightly slower than that of sodium oxide. The explanation for this discovery
would appear to be that previous measurements of diffusion coefficient for calcium
oxide were made at or below the glass transition temperature where the diffusion coefficient
of calcium oxide is at least 100 times lower than that for sodium oxide. Calcium oxide
has, however, a high activation energy for diffusion. This means that the diffusion
coefficient increases with temperature much more rapidly for calcium oxide than for
sodium oxide, hence the high diffusion coefficient for calcium oxide at the fibre
drawing temperature.
EXAMPLE 1
[0030] A core glass was produced having the following composition: sodium oxide 22.30 mole
per cent, boric oxide 15.00 mole per cent, silica 54.70 mole per cent, calcium oxide
8 mole per cent. The glass was prepared by the method described in detail in US Patent
Specification No 3 957 342, ie, appropriate batch material was melted to produce molten
glass, and a mixture of carbon monoxide and carbon dioxide was bubbled through the
molten glass in order simultaneously to optimise the redox state of the glass and
to homogenise and dry it. The glass also contained about 0.1 mole per cent of arsenic
trioxide as a redox buffering oxide, as also described in US Patent Specification
No 3 957 342.
[0031] The glass composition was derived from a notional soda-boro-silicate composition
of sodium oxide 25.00 mole per cent, boric oxide 15.00 mole per cent and silica 60.00
mole per cent (indicated by point 3 in Fig 1), the calcium oxide replacing both soda
and silica.
[0032] A graded index fibre was drawn using the four-component glass described above for
the core and, for the cladding, a soda-boro-silicate glass of the composition given
in the previous paragraph. The fibre was drawn using a Johnson Mathey platinum double
crucible with a 10cm npzzle. The core diameter of the fibre was 46 microns.
[0033] The refractive index profile of the fibre is shown in Fig 2. This is a slightly over-diffused
profile, ie, too much diffusion has occurred to give the optimal parabolic refractive
index distribution. The extent of diffusion φ, which ideally should have a value of
from 0.06 to 0.08, was calculated from the measured profile to have a value of 0.20.
The quantity φ is given by the equation:

where D is the diffusion coefficient (dependent on temperature),
t is the residence time of the glass in the nozzle (also temperature-dependent),
A is the radius of the core stream in the double crucible,
L is the length of the diffusion nozzle of the double crucible,
a is the radius of the fibre, and
v is the pulling speed of the fibre.
[0034] It will be seen that the extent of diffusion can be reduced without much difficulty,
by, for example, reducing the length of the nozzle, increasing the pulling speed or
decreasing the core size. Increasing the amount of diffusion is much more difficult.
[0035] Fig 3 shows a plot of total loss against wavelength for full numerical aperture launch.
From this Figure it can be seen that the total insertion loss of the fibre at 850
to 900 nanometres is 8.2dB/km. The absorption loss at selected wavelengths is indicated
on Fig 3 by a series of crosses, showing the scatter loss to be approximately 2.5dB/km
which approaches the theoretically predicted loss due to Rayleigh scattering. This
means that pulse width measurements on this fibre will give meaningful results. The
pulse width of a one-nanosecond pulse after transmission through 1.91km of fibre is
shown in Fig 4. From this it can be shown that the pulse broadening for the fibre
is 2.8ns/km.
[0036] The numerical aperture was calculated from the refractive index profile to be 0.18.
As will be seen below (Examples 5 and 6) the use of barium oxide instead of calcium
oxide in the core glass gives higher numerical aperture values: the use of a higher
proportion of calcium oxide has a similar but less marked effect.
[0037] From the various figures quoted above it will be apparent that this glass pair is
an extremely good combination to use for high-bandwidth low-loss graded index fibre.
Successive lengths of fibre drawn from this glass pair gave completely reproducible
properties, as did fibre from different fibre patches. It will be noted that the composition
of the core glass was computed from the clad glass composition in accordance with
the equation

mentioned above, ie, the thermal expansivities of the core and clad glasses are matched.
The matching was tested by melting samples of the two glasses, one on top of the other,
in a crucible, and then cooling. annealing and sectioning the resulting composite.
The sample obtained was free from cracks and exhibited only minor stress at the interface
when examined in a strain viewer. This indicates that both glasses had substantially
the same thermal expansion coefficient.
[0038] The matching occurs because the substitution of calcium oxide for sodium oxide and
silica has been carried out in such a manner that glass compositions with increasing
calcium oxide lie on a line of constant expansion coefficient. In Fig 10 lines of
equal expansion coefficient for the soda-lime-silicate system are shown. In Fig 11
lines of equal expansion coefficient for the soda-boro- silicate system are shown.
Figs 5 and 6 are based on published data originating from different sources. While
the data for both Figs 10 and 11 are reasonably internally consistent, there is disagreement
between the absolute values. To overcome this problem, it has been assumed that, in
the region of interest, the expansivity of soda-boro-silicate glasses is independent
of the ratio of boric oxide to silica; this can be clearly seen from Fig 11. Turning
to Fig 10, in terms of expansivity boric oxide and silica can be regarded as the same
material so that only the variation of expansivity with sodium oxide and calcium oxide
need be cohsidered. The equation of a line of constant expansivity in the soda-lime-silicate
system is therefore determined. For the line marked "B" in Fig 10 the equation is

content of the binary soda-silicate glass having a given thermal expansion coefficient,
By varying sodium oxide and calcium oxide in accordance with this equation glasses
having the same thermal expansion coefficient will be produced. The coefficient of
0.34 appearing in the above equation should not vary appreciably with varying glass
compositions in the region A of Fig 1, since when these are transposed to Fig 10,
the lines of constant expansion coefficient are all substantially parallel.
EXAMPLE 2
[0039] A fibre was prepared from a core glass having a composition as described in Example
1 and a cladding glass having the composition sodium oxide 25.00 mole per cent, boric
oxide 12.50 mole per cent and silica 62.50 mole per cent. The clad composition is
represented by point 4 on Fig 1. The glass was prepared as described in Example 1
and the fibre. was again drawn using a Johnson Mathey platinum double crucible with
a 10cm nozzle: the core diameter was 53 microns.
[0040] The refractive index profile is shown in Fig 5. The extent of diffusion p was calculated
to be 0.05, ie, the fibre is slightly under-diffused.
[0041] The best loss value on this fibre was found to be 6.5dB/km at 850nm, and the pulse
broadening was about 2ns/km. The maximum numerical aperture was 0.197.
[0042] This glass pair is clearly suitable for use in the production of high-bandwidth low-loss
graded index fibre. Use of barium oxide instead of calcium oxide in the core should
result in a higher numerical aperture.
[0043] EXAMPZE 3 Graded-index fibre was produced from a core glass having the composition
sodium oxide 17.30 mole per cent, boric oxide 17.50 mole per cent, calcium oxide 8.00
mole per cent, silica 57.20 mole per cent and a clad glass having the composition
sodium oxide 20.00 mole per cent, boric oxide 17.50 mole per cent and silica 62.50
mole per cent. The glasses were prepared as described in Example 1. The clad composition
is represented by point 5 on Fig 1, and the core composition is derived from that
composition by substitution of calcium oxide, to an extent of 8.00 mole per cent,
for soda and silica.
[0044] The fibre was drawn using a Johnson Mathey platinum double crucible with a 10cm nozzle.
The core diameter of the fibre was 46 microns. Its refractive index profile is shown
in Fig 6· this is a slightly under-diffused profile. the A-value being approximately
0.04. The best loss value obtained with this fibre was 6.4dB/km at 850nm.
EXAMPLE 4
[0045] A soda-boro-silicate glass having the composition sodium oxide 22.50 mole per cent,
boric oxide 17.50 mole per cent and silica 60.00 mole per cent (point 6 on Fig 1)
was chosen as a suitable cladding glass for graded-index fibre and this time a core
composition was selected by replacing soda only, not soda and silica, by calcium oxide.
The core composition was sodium oxide 15.00 mole per cent, boric oxide 17.50 mole
per cent, calcium oxide 7.50 mole per cent and silica 60.00 mole per cent. Both glasses
were prepared as described in Example 1.
[0046] Fibre was drawn from this glass pair using a Johnson Mathey platinum double crucible
with a 10cm nozzle. The core diameter was 40 microns. The refractive index profile
is shown in Fig 7; the p-value was calculated to be 0.06, which is at the lower end
of the ideal range. The maximum numerical aperture was 0.150, and the best loss value
was 9.0dB/km at 850nm.
[0047] It will be seen that this glass pair is exceptionally suitable for the production
of low-loss graded-index optical fibre.
EXAMPLE 5
[0048] A core glass having the following composition was prepared: sodium oxide 19.27 mole
per cent boric oxide 7.23 mole per cent, barium oxide 12.04 mole per cent, alumina
3.62 mole per cent, silica. 57.82 mole per cent. The clad glass chosen had the following
composition: potassium oxide 19.27 mole per cent, boric oxide 7.23 mole per cent,
calcium oxide 12.04 mole per cent, alumina 3.62 mole per cent, silica 57.82 mole per
cent. It will be noted that the percentages of silica and of boric oxide are the same
in core and cladding, and the molar percentages of the monovalent diffusing species
(Na
+ and K
+) and of the divalent diffusing species (Ba2+ and Ca2+) are matched. The alumina was
included to improve the chemical durability of the glass. The starting materials used
in this Example were not of such high purity as in the previous Examples, and the
gas-bubbling stage was omitted. Because of this it was not possible to obtain loss
and pulse-broadening measurements on the fibre produced in this run, which was carried
out purely in order to obtain a refractive index profile.
[0049] Fibre having a core diameter of 55 microns was drawn using a Johnson Mathey platinum
double crucible with a 10cm nozzle. The refractive index profile is shown in Fig 8.
The φ-value was 0.08, the best yet obtained with this class of glasses, and the maximum
numerical aperture was 0.21. It will be seen that this glass pair is extremely promising
for use in the production of graded-index fibre.
EXAMPLE 6
[0050] This Example illustrates the use of barium oxide in the core and calcium oxide in
the clad. all other components of the two glasses being the same. As in Example 5,
the starting materials were not sufficiently pure for loss and pulse-broadening measurements
to be carried out.
[0051] The core composition was sodium oxide 20.00 mole per cent. . boric oxide 10.00 mole
per cent, barium oxide 10.00 mole per cent and silica 60.00 mole per cent, and the
clad composition was identical except that 10.00 mole per cent of calcium oxide replaced
the 10.00 mole per cent of barium oxide. Fibre having a core diameter of 80 microns
was drawn in an Engelhard platinum double crucible with a
10cm nozzle.
[0052] The refractive index profile is shown in Fig 9. The φ-value was calculated to be
about 0.02, ie, the fibre was considerably under-diffused. This is believed to be
largely attributable to the fact that it was made in a crucible designed for large-core
slightly-graded fibre: use of the Johnson Mathey crucible used in Examples 1 to 5
would be expected. on the basis of previous experiments, to increase significantly
the extent of diffusion. The maximum numerical aperture of the fibre was 0.210.
1 A four-component glass suitable for the manufacture of optical fibre, the said glass
being characterised in that its composition is calculated by taking a particular notional
sodium oxide-boric oxide-silica composition lying within the range defined by region
A of Fig 1 of the accompanying drawings, and partially replacing sodium oxide or sodium
oxide and silica by one or more alkaline earth metal oxides in such a proportion that
the total content of alkaline earth metal oxide in the glass is within the range of
from 0 to 20 mole per cent, the composition of the glass lying outside the region
of compositions that undergo phase separation or devitrification during optical fibre
production.
2 A glass as claimed in Claim 1, characterised in that the replacement of sodium oxide
or of sodium oxide and silica is such that the thermal expansion coefficient between
0°C and the glass transition temperature of the glass is substantially the same as
that of the corresponding notional sodium oxide-boric oxide-silica glass.
3 A glass as claimed in Claim 1 or Claim 2, characterised in that the alkaline earth
metal oxide is barium oxide.
4 A glass as claimed in Claim 1 or Claim 2, characterised in that the alkaline earth
metal oxide is calcium oxide.
5 A glass as claimed in Claim 4, characterised in that sodium oxide and silica are
so replaced by calcium oxide that the molar percentage of (Na20 + XCaO) in the said glass is equal to the molar percentage of Na20 in the corresponding notional sodium oxide-boric oxide-silica composition, where
X = 0.34 +0.03.
6 An optical fibre having a core and a cladding, characterised in that the core comprises
a first glass having a composition calculated by taking a particular notional sodium
oxide-boric oxide-silica composition lying within the range defined by region A of
Fig 1 of the accompanying drawings, and partially replacing sodium oxide or sodium
oxide and silica by one or more alkaline earth metal oxides in such a proportion that
the total content of alkaline earth metal oxide in the glass is within the range of
from 0 to 20 mole per cent, and in that the cladding comprises a second glass of different
refractive index from the first glass and having a sodium oxide-boric oxide-silica
composition lying within the range defined by region A of Fig 1, the compositions
of the first and second glasses being selected to exclude compositions which undergo
phase separation or devitrification during optical fibre production.
7 An optical fibre as claimed in Claim 6, characterised in that the notional sodium
oxide-boric oxide-silica composition from which the composition of the first glass
is derived is the composition of the second glass.
8 An optical fibre having a core and a cladding, characterised in that the core and
the cladding each comprises a glass having a composition calculated by taking a particular
notional sodium oxide-boric oxide-silica composition lying within the range defined
by region A of Fig 1 of the accompanying drawings. and partially replacing sodium
oxide or sodium oxide and silica by one or more alkaline earth metal oxides in such
a proportion that the total content of alkaline earth metal oxide in the glass is
within the range of from 0 to 20 mole per cent, the compositions of both glasses being
selected to exclude compositions that undergo phase separation or devitrification
during optical fibre production,-and the refractive indices of the core and cladding
glasses being different from one another.
9 An optical fibre as claimed in Claim 8, characterised in that the core glass contains
the oxide of a first alkaline earth metal and the cladding glass contains the oxide
of a second alkaline earth metal, the atomic number of the said first alkaline earth
metal being greater than the atomic number of the said second alkaline earth metal.
10 An optical fibre as claimed in Claim 8 or Claim 9, characterised in that the compositions
of the core and cladding glasses are based on the same notional sodium oxide-boric
oxide-silica composition.
11 A graded index glass optical fibre having a core and a cladding, characterised
in that the core glass comprises
(a) silica,
(b) boric oxide,
(c) one or more alkali metal oxides selected from sodium oxide and potassium oxide,
and
(d) one or more alkaline earth metal oxides selected from calcium oxide, strontium
oxide and barium oxide.
and in that the cladding comprises
(a) silica,
(b) boric oxide,
(c) one or more alkali metal oxides selected from sodium oxide and potassium oxide,
and, optionally,
(d) one or more alkaline earth metal oxides selected from calcium oxide, strontium
oxide, barium oxide and magnesium oxide, the core and cladding glasses having different
refractive indices and having compositions selected to exclude compositions which
undergo phase separation or devitrification during optical fibre production, and the
said gradation of refractive index being at least partly caused by a composition gradient
of one or more alkaline earth metal oxides.
12 An optical fibre as claimed in Claim 11, characterised in that component (d) of
the core glass comprises calcium oxide or barium oxide and the cladding glass contains
no component (d).
13 An optical fibre as claimed in Claim 11, characterised in that component (d) of
the core glass comprises the oxide of a first alkaline earth metal and component (d)
of the cladding glass comprises the oxide of a second alkaline earth metal, the atomic
number of the first alkaline earth metal being greater than that of the said second
alkaline earth metal.
14 An optical fibre as claimed in any one of Claims 11 to 13, characterised in that
component (c) of the core glass comprises sodium oxide and component (c) of the cladding
glass comprises sodium oxide or potassium oxide.
15 An optical fibre as claimed in any one of Claims 11 to 14, characterised in that
the core and cladding glasses each contain from 50 to 70 mole per cent of component
(a), and from 13 to 33 mole per cent of component (c).