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Advances in laser-based manufacturing techniques for speciality optical fiber

Advances in laser-based manufacturing techniques for speciality optical fiber
Advances in laser-based manufacturing techniques for speciality optical fiber
As demand for customized specialty fibers grows, standardized production methods face challenges. This article reviews industry standards and discusses potentially disruptive techniques that enable rapid prototyping and fabrication of optical fiber devices. Furthermore, we showcase laser powder deposition's (LPD) potential for additive manufacturing (AM) of customized glass structures. In the case of, for example, fiber preforms, although the feasible size is smaller than the industry standard, utilizing laser-based manufacturing techniques for a small batch production presents an attractive avenue for rapid prototyping and expedites material and design optimization. In the realm of AM of glass, LPD offers numerous benefits, including minimal shrinkage, high densification, and the ability to tailor glass composition to achieve desired optical properties. The article reviews the latest achievements and highlights future directions in this technology.
0002-7820
5143-5158
Maniewski, Pawel
f1ddd84b-cd48-4e2f-a05e-b2f7dc042342
Wörmann, Tim J.
cce643f9-66a4-4434-86aa-ecdadf9cccb9
Pasiskevicius, Valdas
1a3665b3-07de-4d9b-83d8-7676592e8923
Holmes, Christopher
16306bb8-8a46-4fd7-bb19-a146758e5263
Gates, James C.
b71e31a1-8caa-477e-8556-b64f6cae0dc2
Laurell, Fredrik
0e2c1feb-6779-4d58-a9a2-7d41a1457f14
Maniewski, Pawel
f1ddd84b-cd48-4e2f-a05e-b2f7dc042342
Wörmann, Tim J.
cce643f9-66a4-4434-86aa-ecdadf9cccb9
Pasiskevicius, Valdas
1a3665b3-07de-4d9b-83d8-7676592e8923
Holmes, Christopher
16306bb8-8a46-4fd7-bb19-a146758e5263
Gates, James C.
b71e31a1-8caa-477e-8556-b64f6cae0dc2
Laurell, Fredrik
0e2c1feb-6779-4d58-a9a2-7d41a1457f14

Maniewski, Pawel, Wörmann, Tim J., Pasiskevicius, Valdas, Holmes, Christopher, Gates, James C. and Laurell, Fredrik (2024) Advances in laser-based manufacturing techniques for speciality optical fiber. Journal of the American Ceramic Society, 107 (8), 5143-5158. (doi:10.1111/jace.19838).

Record type: Article

Abstract

As demand for customized specialty fibers grows, standardized production methods face challenges. This article reviews industry standards and discusses potentially disruptive techniques that enable rapid prototyping and fabrication of optical fiber devices. Furthermore, we showcase laser powder deposition's (LPD) potential for additive manufacturing (AM) of customized glass structures. In the case of, for example, fiber preforms, although the feasible size is smaller than the industry standard, utilizing laser-based manufacturing techniques for a small batch production presents an attractive avenue for rapid prototyping and expedites material and design optimization. In the realm of AM of glass, LPD offers numerous benefits, including minimal shrinkage, high densification, and the ability to tailor glass composition to achieve desired optical properties. The article reviews the latest achievements and highlights future directions in this technology.

Text
Journal of the American Ceramic Society - 2024 - Maniewski - Advances in laser‐based manufacturing techniques for specialty - Version of Record
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Accepted/In Press date: 26 March 2024
Published date: 20 April 2024

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 497926
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/497926
ISSN: 0002-7820
PURE UUID: 2e09e636-8f63-413e-84ae-98c3e2cdd490
ORCID for Christopher Holmes: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-9021-3760
ORCID for James C. Gates: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-8671-5987

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 04 Feb 2025 17:56
Last modified: 22 Aug 2025 01:56

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Contributors

Author: Pawel Maniewski
Author: Tim J. Wörmann
Author: Valdas Pasiskevicius
Author: James C. Gates ORCID iD
Author: Fredrik Laurell

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