Abstract:
The invention concerns an optical device comprising an optical fiber including at least an integrated component, a support including two fixing zones wherein the optical fiber is fixed respectively at the two zones located on either side of the component. The invention is characterized in that the support comprises, between the two fixing zones, at least a linking beam capable of bending and the device further comprises means for imposing a controlled bending to the beam, adapted to adjust the distance between the two fixing zones.

Description:
The present invention relates to the field of optical fibers. 
     Even more precisely, the present invention relates to the field of optical fibers which include an integrated component. 
     The present invention applies in particular to fiber-optic devices which include an integrated Bragg grating. Within this context, the invention aims to provide a device for temperature stabilization and/or Bragg wavelength adjustment of the gratings photowrittten in the optical fibers. 
     BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION 
     A person skilled in the art knows that it is possible to considerably increase the traffic of optical-fiber networks by the technique of “wavelength multiplexing”. Each series of data to be transported is transmitted over one specific optical frequency, multiplying the capacity of the fiber by the number of wavelengths used. 
     The number of multiplexible wavelengths in a given frequency band cannot, however, be increased ad infinitum. It depends on the levels of drift and on the degrees of precision of the devices capable of inserting a wavelength into the fiber or extracting it therefrom, without disturbing the flux of the other ones. 
     Among devices used, some rely on Bragg gratings written into the core of the fiber. 
     Bragg gratings are periodic optical index structures which have the particular feature of reflecting light of a well-defined wavelength, called the Bragg wavelength of the grating. Systems based on Bragg gratings have already been of great service. However, it turns out that this reflected wavelength, which depends on the periodicity of the grating and on the parameters of propagation in the fiber, is: 
     an increasing function of temperature and 
     an increasing function of the tension applied to the fiber. 
     Means for limiting the temperature drift of devices using Bragg gratings are known. The means most in use at the present time are known as tabletop or semi-tabletop arrangements. A description of illustrative examples of these means will be found in documents [1] and [2]. 
     The appended FIGS. 1 and 2 show tabletop and semi-tabletop structures according to the prior art, respectively. 
     Tabletop or semi-tabletop arrangements consist of a beam  20  made of a material having a low expansion coefficient—invar, ceramic, etc.—and of one or two blocks  30 ,  32  made of a material having a high expansion coefficient, for example aluminum. The fibers  10  which include a Bragg grating are mounted so as to be held taught between the two blocks  30 ,  32  in the case of a tabletop or between the block  30  and the opposite end of the beam  20  in the case of a semi-tabletop, depending on the type of arrangement. The points for fixing the fiber  10  are labeled  12  and  14 . 
     The distance between these two points  12 ,  14  decreases with increasing temperature and the tension applied to the fiber decreases and tends to reduce the Bragg wavelength, whereas, since temperature induces the opposite effect, an equilibrium is established between the two phenomena. 
     For this type of device to be stable over time requires the Bragg grating to be definitively held in place in this arrangement by adhesive bonding or welding. Any error between the Bragg wavelength obtained and the desired wavelength then becomes uncorrectable. 
     Moreover a person skilled in the art knows that the optical signal propagating in a fiber is attenuated over the course of its path. After a certain distance, it then becomes necessary to reamplify it. Many of the amplifiers used are fiber amplifiers which have the drawback of amplifying the light passing through them to a degree which varies with wavelength. To equalize the output levels of the various wavelengths, a gain-equalizing filter is added to these devices. 
     Gain-equalizing filters based on Bragg gratings consist of a succession of gratings with slanted lines. Each of these gratings extracts from the fiber a small portion of the light in the wavelength band corresponding to it, this amounting to producing a certain absorption in this band. The distribution of these various absorptions allows the output level of the light to be evened out, independently of its wavelength. 
     There is one tension value to be applied to the gain-equalizing filter in order to obtain the optimum result or, formulated another way, there is a value of the overall wavelength shift to be applied to the filter in order to have the flattest possible response. 
     In general, certain optical functions may require the Bragg gratings to be adjusted as desired; these are thus tunable gratings. 
     SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION 
     The objective of the invention is to provide a means of adjusting the response of fiber-optic-based devices which include an integrated component. 
     In particular, the objective of the present invention is to provide a means of adjusting the Bragg wavelength of tabletop or semi-tabletop arrangements. 
     The aforementioned objectives are achieved within the context of the present invention by a fiber-optic device comprising: 
     an optical fiber which includes at least one integrated component, 
     a support having two fixing regions to which the optical fiber is fixed at the two regions lying respectively on each side of the component, characterized in that: 
     the support comprises, between the two fixing regions, at least one linking beam capable of bending, and in that 
     the device furthermore comprises means which can impose a controlled bending on the beam, suitable for adjusting the distance between the two fixing regions. 
    
    
     BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS 
     Further features, objectives and advantages of the present invention will become apparent on reading the detailed description which follows and in conjunction with the appended drawings, given by way of nonlimiting examples and in which: 
     FIGS. 1 and 2, described above, show schematically two arrangements, in tabletop and semi-tabletop form, according to the prior art; 
     FIG. 3 shows a device according to the present invention, at rest; 
     FIG. 4 shows schematically the same device according to the present invention, during an adjustment phase; and 
     FIGS. 5 to  7  show three variants according to the present invention, FIG. 7 showing a view in a plane orthogonal to FIGS. 3 to  6 . 
    
    
     DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION 
     FIGS. 3 to  7  according to the present invention show a device comprising an optical fiber  10  fixed at  12 ,  14  to a support  40 . 
     The support  40  comprises a beam  20  made of a material having a low expansion coefficient—invar, ceramic or equivalent, etc.—and, depending on whether it is a tabletop or a semi-tabletop arrangement, one or two blocks  30 ,  32  made of a material having a high expansion coefficient, for example aluminum. 
     The fibers  10  which include a Bragg grating are mounted so as to be held taught between the two blocks  30 ,  32  in the case of a tabletop or between the block  30  and the opposite end of the beam  20  in the case of a semi-tabletop. 
     The materials making up the support  40  and their dimensions are tailored so that the effect of temperature on the Bragg grating and on the reflected wavelength is compensated for by the variation in tension in the fiber (the variation in distance between the two fixing points  12 ,  14 , which distance decreases with increasing temperature, and the resulting variation in the tension applied to the fiber decrease and tend to reduce the Bragg wavelength, whereas temperature intrinsically induces the opposite effect on the Bragg grating). 
     These arrangements, well known in themselves to those skilled in the art, will not be described in detail below. 
     However, as indicated above, according to the present invention: 
     the support  40  comprises, between the two fixing regions  12  and  14 , at least one linking beam  20  capable of bending; and 
     the device furthermore comprises means, shown schematically by the reference  50  in FIG. 4, which can impose a controlled bending on the beam  20 , suitable for adjusting the distance between the two fixing regions  12 ,  14 . 
     When a bending force is applied to the beam  20 , the fixed points  12 ,  14  of the Bragg grating formed in the fiber  10  are brought closer together. The relaxation of the tension which results therefrom reduces the wavelength to a defined value. 
     According to the embodiment in accordance with the present invention illustrated in FIG. 3, that region of the support  40  which is located between the two fixing regions  12  and  14  consists of a beam  20  recessed at its center. Thus, the beam is formed from two parallel sidewalls or bars  22 ,  23 . 
     More precisely, according to the embodiment illustrated in FIG. 3, the central recess  21  delimiting the bars  22 ,  23  is oblong and defines bars  22 ,  23  having at least, approximately the same cross section over their entire length. However, the invention is not limited to this recess geometry  21 , nor to bars  22 ,  23  of constant cross section. Thus, it may be envisioned to have recesses defining a controlled variation in the cross section of the bars  22 ,  23  in order to control the bending region of the latter. 
     However, it should be noted that it is preferable within the context of the present invention, for the beam  20  providing the link between the two fixing regions  12 ,  14  to be symmetrical with respect to a longitudinal plane passing through the axis of the fiber  10 . This symmetry, whatever the bending applied to the beam  20 , prevents harmful mechanical stresses being applied to the fiber  10 . 
     The means  50  capable of controlling the bending of the beam  20 , and more precisely of bringing the sidewalls  22 ,  23  of the said beam  20  closer together, may be the subject of many embodiments. 
     According to a first embodiment illustrated in FIG. 5, these means  50  for controlling the bending by bringing the sidewalls  22 ,  23  of the recessed beam  20  closer together, comprise a screw  52  transverse to the beam. 
     Such a screw  52  may comprise two portions of reverse pitch which respectively engage with one of the sidewalls  22  and  23 , or else a single threaded portion which engages with one of the sidewalls  22  or  23 , a head or stop on the screw resting against the other sidewall  23  or  22 . 
     According to yet another embodiment, the screw  52  may be designed to control the bending of the beam  20  by moving the sidewalls  22 ,  23  further apart, and not closer together. 
     FIG. 6 illustrates another embodiment according to the present invention, whereby the beam  20 , delimited in the two symmetrical sidewalls  22 ,  23  by a central recess  21 , has a conical overall envelope. In other words, the beam  20  has a cross section which increases from the fixing region  12  toward the fixing region  14 . In this case, the means for adjusting the bending is formed by a ring  52 , the internal cross section of which is complementary to the external cross section of the beam  20  in its region of smallest cross section and which ring can be moved along the beam  20 . A person skilled in the art will understand that the bending of the beam is a minimum when the ring  55  is close to the first fixing region  12  and, in contrast, the bending of the beam  20  is a maximum when the ring  55  is close to the fixing region  14 . 
     According to the embodiments described above, the beam  20  is composed of two symmetrical bars  22 ,  23 . As a variant however, devices according to the present invention may be produced with the aid of a single linking bar. 
     Moreover, according to the embodiments described above, the beam  20  is deformed in bending by deformation of the beam or of the bars  22 ,  23  in a direction perpendicular to the plane of symmetry of the fixing regions  12 ,  14  (which plane of symmetry is perpendicular to the plane of FIGS. 3 to  6 ). 
     However, as a variant, it may be envisioned to control the bending of the beam  20  by deformation in a direction parallel to the plane of symmetry of the fixing regions  12 ,  14 . An embodiment for this purpose is illustrated in FIG.  7 . 
     This FIG. 7 illustrates a variant which includes a screw  56  whose axis lies in the aforementioned plane of symmetry, the said screw engaging with a bar  24  located between the two fixing regions  12 ,  14 , while its head rests on a rigid support or on a second symmetrical bar, in order to control at least the bending of the bar  24 . 
     Of course, the present invention is not limited to the particular embodiment that has just been described, but encompasses all variants falling within its spirit. 
     It should be noted, for example, that within the context of the present invention the various means for adjusting the bending of the support  40  may be controlled manually or by a motor drive. 
     BIBLIOGRAPHY 
     [1]V. Fleury 
     “Stabilisation thermique des réseaux de Bragg photoinscrits sur fibre optique [ Thermostabilization of photowritten Bragg gratings in an optical fiber ]”, DESS INGENERIE LASER Training Course Report at the Université des Sciences et Technologies de Lille [ Lille University of Sciences and Technologies].    
     [2]J. Rioublanc et al. 
     “Optimisation d&#39;un système de stabilisation passive de la dérive en température de la longueur d&#39;onde d&#39;accord des réseaux de Bragg [ Optimization of a system for the passive stabilization of the temperature drift of the tuning wavelength of Bragg gratings ]”, JNOG96, Paper No. 85.