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Fiber Preforms Fabricated by ‘Core Suction’

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Technique is suited for use with rare or toxic materials.

Breck Hitz

Adding to the variety of techniques for fabrication of optical fibers, scientists at Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University in Blacksburg and at Fisk University in Nashville, Tenn., have developed a method they call “core suction.” The technique is especially useful in the fabrication of compound-glass-core fibers, which are important for their optical nonlinearity and their transmission into the infrared spectral region. In the core-suction technique, a molten core is vacuum-sucked into a cladding tube and allowed to cool. A fiber subsequently is drawn from the resulting...Read full article

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    Published: April 2006
    compound-glass-core fibersfiber opticsoptical fibersResearch & TechnologyVirginia Polytechnic Institute

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