Description

In the laser-assisted fiber cleaving process, an ultrashort, high-energy laser is used to introduce a flaw on the optical fiber surface, and then the fiber is cleaved under a tension or bending load. The quality of the cleaved end depends on the crack propagation from the artificial flaw. To understand the cleaving process and the effects of flaw parameters on cleaving quality, crack propagation is modeled by considering a pre-existing surface flaw using a graph-based finite element method (GraFEA). GraFEA is based on the nonlocal multiple cracking simulation framework for brittle and quasi-brittle materials. First, a three-point bending test is conducted to calibrate material parameters in GraFEA for commercial fused silica glass. Subsequently, the model is validated by four-point bending and ring-on-ring tests. After validation, the fiber cleaving process is investigated by parametric simulations in which different loading types (bending or tension) are considered. Finally, a beneficial process window is obtained and recommended for improved cleaving quality.

Contributing Authors

  • Lei Mu
    Corning Research & Development Corporation
  • Sachin Velayudhan
    Texas A&M University
  • Lei Yuan
    Corning Research & Development Corporation
  • Chunfeng Zhou
    Corning Research & Development Corporation
  • Chaolan He
    Corning Research & Development Corporation
  • Jonathon Nudd
    Corning Research & Development Corporation
Lei Mu
Corning Research & Development Corporation
Lei Yuan
Corning Research & Development Corporation
Track: Frontiers in Laser Applications
Session: Glass Processing and Sensor Feedback
Day of Week: Tuesday
Date/Time:
Location: Silver Lake

Keywords

  • Crack Propagation
  • Fiber Cleave
  • Graph-Based Finite Element Analysis
  • Optical Fiber
  • Ultrafast Laser