Patents by Inventor James C. Fajardo

James C. Fajardo has filed for patents to protect the following inventions. This listing includes patent applications that are pending as well as patents that have already been granted by the United States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO).

  • Patent number: 7697197
    Abstract: The present invention provides devices and methods for Raman amplification and dispersion compensation. According to one embodiment of the present invention, a dispersion compensating device includes a dispersion compensating fiber having a dispersion more negative than about ?50 ps/nm/km over a wavelength range of about 1555 nm to about 1615 nm; a Raman gain fiber having a dispersion more positive than about ?40 ps/nm/km over a wavelength range of about 1555 nm to about 1615 nm; and a pump source operatively coupled to the dispersion compensating fiber and the Raman gain fiber, the pump source operating at a pump wavelength, wherein the dispersion compensating fiber has a Raman Figure of Merit at the pump wavelength, and wherein the Raman gain fiber has a Raman Figure of Merit at least about equivalent to the Raman Figure of Merit of the dispersion compensating fiber, and wherein the dispersion compensating fiber and the Raman gain fiber are arranged in series between the input and the output of the device.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: July 1, 2008
    Date of Patent: April 13, 2010
    Assignee: Corning Incorporated
    Inventors: Phong Diep, James C. Fajardo
  • Publication number: 20080266649
    Abstract: The present invention provides devices and methods for Raman amplification and dispersion compensation. According to one embodiment of the present invention, a dispersion compensating device includes a dispersion compensating fiber having a dispersion more negative than about ?50 ps/nm/km over a wavelength range of about 1555 nm to about 1615 nm; a Raman gain fiber having a dispersion more positive than about ?40 ps/nm/km over a wavelength range of about 1555 nm to about 1615 nm; and a pump source operatively coupled to the dispersion compensating fiber and the Raman gain fiber, the pump source operating at a pump wavelength, wherein the dispersion compensating fiber has a Raman Figure of Merit at the pump wavelength, and wherein the Raman gain fiber has a Raman Figure of Merit at least about equivalent to the Raman Figure of Merit of the dispersion compensating fiber, and wherein the dispersion compensating fiber and the Raman gain fiber are arranged in series between the input and the output of the device.
    Type: Application
    Filed: July 1, 2008
    Publication date: October 30, 2008
    Inventors: Phong Diep, James C. Fajardo
  • Patent number: 7411728
    Abstract: The present invention provides devices and methods for Raman amplification and dispersion compensation. According to one embodiment of the present invention, a dispersion compensating device includes a dispersion compensating fiber having a dispersion more negative than about ?50 ps/nm/km over a wavelength range of about 1555 nm to about 1615 nm; a Raman gain fiber having a dispersion more positive than about ?40 ps/nm/km over a wavelength range of about 1555 nm to about 1615 nm; and a pump source operatively coupled to the dispersion compensating fiber and the Raman gain fiber, the pump source operating at a pump wavelength, wherein the dispersion compensating fiber has a Raman Figure of Merit at the pump wavelength, and wherein the Raman gain fiber has a Raman Figure of Merit at least about equivalent to the Raman Figure of Merit of the dispersion compensating fiber, and wherein the dispersion compensating fiber and the Raman gain fiber are arranged in series between the input and the output of the device.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: June 23, 2006
    Date of Patent: August 12, 2008
    Assignee: Corning Incorporated
    Inventors: Phong Diep, James C. Fajardo
  • Patent number: 7102812
    Abstract: The present invention provides devices and methods for Raman amplification and dispersion compensation. According to one embodiment of the present invention, a dispersion compensating device includes a dispersion compensating fiber having a dispersion more negative than about ?50 ps/nm/km over a wavelength range of about 1555 nm to about 1615 nm; a Raman gain fiber having a dispersion more positive than about ?40 ps/nm/km over a wavelength range of about 1555 nm to about 1615 nm; and a pump source operatively coupled to the dispersion compensating fiber and the Raman gain fiber, the pump source operating at a pump wavelength, wherein the dispersion compensating fiber has a Raman Figure of Merit at the pump wavelength, and wherein the Raman gain fiber has a Raman Figure of Merit at least about equivalent to the Raman Figure of Merit of the dispersion compensating fiber, and wherein the dispersion compensating fiber and the Raman gain fiber are arranged in series between the input and the output of the device.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: September 9, 2003
    Date of Patent: September 5, 2006
    Assignee: Corning Incorporated
    Inventors: Phong Diep, James C. Fajardo
  • Patent number: 7082242
    Abstract: The present invention relates to a microstructured optical fiber including a photonic band gap-guided core; and at least one index-guided core. Another embodiment of the present invention relates to a microstructured optical fiber including a set of main cores; a microstructured region surrounding the set of main cores; and at least alignment core, the alignment cores having substantially different optical propagation properties than the main cores. The present invention also includes methods for coupling, monitoring, and locating discontinuities in the fibers of the present invention.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: January 31, 2003
    Date of Patent: July 25, 2006
    Assignee: Corning Incorporated
    Inventors: James C. Fajardo, Michael T. Gallagher, James A. West
  • Patent number: 7043125
    Abstract: Disclosed is a single mode optical waveguide fiber having a low cut off wavelength, and mode field diameter and bend resistance similar to step index single mode optical waveguide fiber designed for use at 1310 nm. By including a clad region of raised refractive index spaced apart from the core region of the single mode optical waveguide fiber, the cut off wavelength can be reduced to 850 nm. The single mode optical waveguide fiber in accord with the invention may also have a core region having a reduced refractive index on centerline surrounded by a region of higher refractive index and a clad region which is substantially uniform. The single mode optical waveguide fiber is thus ideally suited for use with the low cost, reliable VCSEL operating at 850 nm, a Fabry-Perot laser operating at 1310 nm, or a distributed feedback laser operating at 1550 nm thereby enabling low cost, easily installed, home access portions of the broadband telecommunications system.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: May 13, 2002
    Date of Patent: May 9, 2006
    Assignee: Corning Incorporated
    Inventors: Phong Diep, James C. Fajardo, Ming-Jun Li, Daniel A. Nolan, Gang Qi
  • Patent number: 6987783
    Abstract: An optically-active air-clad fiber (30) includes a core (34, 84) that facilitates doping with an ion optically excitable and having a three-level optical transition when pumped at a first end (28) of an optical cavity (46) by a multimode pump source (72) at a pump wavelength (64) for lasing at a signal wavelength (66) different than the pump wavelength (64) at a second end (29) of the optical cavity (46), the core (34, 84) having a refractive index, wherein the core (34, 84) is transformed from the first end to proximate the second end (29) thereof such that the optically-active fiber (30) is multimode at the pump wavelength proximate to the first end (28), and is single-mode at the signal wavelength proximate to the second end (29). An air-clad (36, 86) surrounds at least one portion of the core (34, 84) and has a lower effective refractive index than the refractive index of the core (34, 84).
    Type: Grant
    Filed: December 19, 2003
    Date of Patent: January 17, 2006
    Assignee: Corning Incorporated
    Inventors: James C. Fajardo, Michael T. Gallagher, Anping Liu, (Ying) Lisa Peng, Carlton M. Truesdale, Luis A. Zenteno
  • Patent number: 6870999
    Abstract: An isotopically-altered, silica based optical fiber is provided having lower losses, broader bandwidth, and broader Raman gain spectrum characteristics than conventional silica-based fiber. A heavier, less naturally abundant isotope of silicon or oxygen is substituted for a lighter, more naturally abundant isotope to shift the infrared absorption to a slightly longer wavelength. In one embodiment, oxygen-18 is substituted for the much more naturally abundant oxygen-16 at least in the core region of the fiber. The resulting isotopically-altered fiber has a minimum loss of 0.044 dB/km less than conventional fiber, and a bandwidth that is 17 percent broader for a loss range between 0.044-0.034 dB/km. The fiber may be easily manufactured with conventional fiber manufacturing equipment by way of a plasma chemical vapor deposition technique. When a 50 percent substitution of oxygen -18 for oxygen-16 is made in the core region of the fiber, the Raman gain spectrum is substantially broadened.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: August 25, 2004
    Date of Patent: March 22, 2005
    Assignee: Corning Incorporated
    Inventors: Douglas C. Allan, John T. Brown, Lisa C. Chacon, Adam J. G. Ellison, James C. Fajardo, Stuart Gray, Keith L. House, Karl W. Koch, III, Dale R. Powers, James A. West
  • Patent number: 6847771
    Abstract: A microstructured optical fiber is described. The microstructured optical fiber comprises an inner region and an outer region. The inner region includes an inner material and a plurality of holes formed in the inner material. The outer region surrounds the inner region, and includes an outer material. The softening point temperature of the inner material is greater than the softening point temperature of the outer material by at least about 50° C. Microstructured optical fiber preforms and methods for making the microstructured optical fibers are also described. The microstructured optical fiber may be made to have substantially undistorted holes in the inner region.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: June 12, 2002
    Date of Patent: January 25, 2005
    Assignee: Corning Incorporated
    Inventors: James C. Fajardo, Michael T. Gallagher, James A. West, Natesan Venkataraman
  • Patent number: 6829911
    Abstract: A method for manufacturing optical fiber with enhanced photosensitivity comprising the step of: forming a molten layer of glass and drawing a fiber from the molten layer of glass at a temperature of between about 1900° C. and 1995° C. Draw tension can be adjusted to attain the desired draw speed.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: August 13, 2001
    Date of Patent: December 14, 2004
    Assignee: Corning Incorporated
    Inventors: Monica K Davis, James C Fajardo, Glenn E Kohnke, Gang Qi
  • Publication number: 20040233941
    Abstract: An optically-active air-clad fiber (30) includes a core (34, 84) that facilitates doping with an ion optically excitable and having a three-level optical transition when pumped at a first end (28) of an optical cavity (46) by a multimode pump source (72) at a pump wavelength (64) for lasing at a signal wavelength (66) different than the pump wavelength (64) at a second end (29) of the optical cavity (46), the core (34, 84) having a refractive index, wherein the core (34, 84) is transformed from the first end to proximate the second end (29) thereof such that the optically-active fiber (30) is multimode at the pump wavelength proximate to the first end (28), and is single-mode at the signal wavelength proximate to the second end (29). An air-clad (36, 86) surrounds at least one portion of the core (34, 84) and has a lower effective refractive index than the refractive index of the core (34, 84).
    Type: Application
    Filed: December 19, 2003
    Publication date: November 25, 2004
    Inventors: James C. Fajardo, Michael T. Gallagher, Anping Liu, (Ying)Lisa Peng, Carlton M. Truesdale, Luis A. Zenteno
  • Patent number: 6819852
    Abstract: Disclosed is a photonic band-gap crystal waveguide having the physical dimension of the photonic crystal lattice and the size of the defect selected to provide for optimum mode power confinement to the defect. The defect has a boundary which has a characteristic numerical value associated with it. The ratio of this numerical value to the pitch of the photonic crystal is selected to avoid surface modes found to exist in certain configurations of the photonic band-gap crystal waveguide. Embodiments in accord with the invention having circular and hexagonal defect cross sections are disclosed and described. A method of making the photonic band-gap crystal waveguide is also disclosed and described.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: November 13, 2003
    Date of Patent: November 16, 2004
    Assignee: Corning Incorporated
    Inventors: Douglas C. Allan, Nicholas F. Borrelli, James C. Fajardo, Karl W. Koch, III, James A. West
  • Patent number: 6810197
    Abstract: An isotopically-altered, silica based optical fiber is provided having lower losses, broader bandwidth, and broader Raman gain spectrum characteristics than conventional silica-based fiber. A heavier, less naturally abundant isotope of silicon or oxygen is substituted for a lighter, more naturally abundant isotope to shift the infrared absorption to a slightly longer wavelength. In one embodiment, oxygen-18 is substituted for the much more naturally abundant oxygen-16 at least in the core region of the fiber. The resulting isotopically-altered fiber has a minimum loss of 0.044 dB/km less than conventional fiber, and a bandwidth that is 17 percent broader for a loss range between 0.044-0.034 dB/km. The fiber may be easily manufactured with conventional fiber manufacturing equipment by way of a plasma chemical vapor deposition technique. When a 50 percent substitution of oxygen-18 for oxygen-16 is made in the core region of the fiber, the Raman gain spectrum is substantially broadened.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: December 18, 2002
    Date of Patent: October 26, 2004
    Assignee: Corning Incorporated
    Inventors: Douglas C. Allan, John T. Brown, Lisa C. Chacon, Adam J. G. Ellison, James C. Fajardo, Stuart Gray, Keith L. House, Karl W. Koch, III, Dale R. Powers, James A. West
  • Patent number: 6778749
    Abstract: Disclosed is a photonic band-gap crystal waveguide having the physical dimension of the photonic crystal lattice and the size of the defect selected to provide for optimum mode power confinement to the defect. The defect has a boundary which has a characteristic numerical value associated with it. The ratio of this numerical value to the pitch of the photonic crystal is selected to avoid surface modes found to exist in certain configurations of the photonic band-gap crystal waveguide. Embodiments in accord with the invention having circular and hexagonal defect cross sections are disclosed and described. A method of making the photonic band-gap crystal waveguide is also disclosed and described.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: February 4, 2002
    Date of Patent: August 17, 2004
    Assignee: Corning Incorporated
    Inventors: Douglas C. Allan, Nicholas F. Borrelli, James C. Fajardo, Karl W. Koch, III, James A. West
  • Publication number: 20040151454
    Abstract: The present invention relates to a microstructured optical fiber including a photonic band gap-guided core; and at least one index-guided core. Another embodiment of the present invention relates to a microstructured optical fiber including a set of main cores; a microstructured region surrounding the set of main cores; and at least alignment core, the alignment cores having substantially different optical propagation properties than the main cores. The present invention also includes methods for coupling, monitoring, and locating discontinuities in the fibers of the present invention.
    Type: Application
    Filed: January 31, 2003
    Publication date: August 5, 2004
    Inventors: James C. Fajardo, Michael T. Gallagher, James A. West
  • Publication number: 20040105645
    Abstract: Disclosed is a photonic band-gap crystal waveguide having the physical dimension of the photonic crystal lattice and the size of the defect selected to provide for optimum mode power confinement to the defect. The defect has a boundary which has a characteristic numerical value associated with it. The ratio of this numerical value to the pitch of the photonic crystal is selected to avoid surface modes found to exist in certain configurations of the photonic band-gap crystal waveguide. Embodiments in accord with the invention having circular and hexagonal defect cross sections are disclosed and described. A method of making the photonic band-gap crystal waveguide is also disclosed and described.
    Type: Application
    Filed: November 13, 2003
    Publication date: June 3, 2004
    Inventors: Douglas C. Allan, Nicholas F. Borrelli, James C. Fajardo, Karl W. Koch, James A. West
  • Publication number: 20040070818
    Abstract: The present invention provides devices and methods for Raman amplification and dispersion compensation.
    Type: Application
    Filed: September 9, 2003
    Publication date: April 15, 2004
    Inventors: Phong Diep, James C. Fajardo
  • Publication number: 20030231846
    Abstract: A microstructured optical fiber is described. The microstructured optical fiber comprises an inner region and an outer region. The inner region includes an inner material and a plurality of holes formed in the inner material. The outer region surrounds the inner region, and includes an outer material. The softening point temperature of the inner material is greater than the softening point temperature of the outer material by at least about 50° C. Microstructured optical fiber preforms and methods for making the microstructured optical fibers are also described. The microstructured optical fiber may be made to have substantially undistorted holes in the inner region.
    Type: Application
    Filed: June 12, 2002
    Publication date: December 18, 2003
    Inventors: James C. Fajardo, Michael T. Gallagher, James A. West, Natesan Venkataraman
  • Patent number: 6652163
    Abstract: An optical splice joint and splicing process are provided for joining an end portion of a microstructured optical fiber having a microstructure formed from an array of holes, and a conventional optical fiber. The optical splice joint is formed from a fused portion of opposing end portions of the microstructured optical fiber and optical fiber, wherein the microstructured optical fiber is surrounded by a jacket that is at least 1.6 times thicker along its radius than the microstructure, and has a tensile strength of at least 30 Kpsi with an optical loss of less than 0.30 dB, and relatively little shrinkage (i.e., about 30%) of the holes forming the microstructure. The splice joint is formed by aligning end portions of the microstructured optical fiber and the optical fiber, in a fusion splicer, and applying fusion heat to the fiber ends in a two step process with a low current arc that is offset with respect to the end of the microstructured optical fiber.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: October 31, 2001
    Date of Patent: November 25, 2003
    Assignee: Corning Incorporated
    Inventors: James C. Fajardo, Michael T. Gallagher, Qi Wu
  • Publication number: 20030128955
    Abstract: An isotopically-altered, silica based optical fiber is provided having lower losses, broader bandwidth, and broader Raman gain spectrum characteristics than conventional silica-based fiber. A heavier, less naturally abundant isotope of silicon or oxygen is substituted for a lighter, more naturally abundant isotope to shift the infrared absorption to a slightly longer wavelength. In one embodiment, oxygen-18 is substituted for the much more naturally abundant oxygen-16 at least in the core region of the fiber. The resulting isotopically-altered fiber has a minimum loss of 0.044 dB/km less than conventional fiber, and a bandwidth that is 17 percent broader for a loss range between 0.044-0.034 dB/km. The fiber may be easily manufactured with conventional fiber manufacturing equipment by way of a plasma chemical vapor deposition technique. When a 50 percent substitution of oxygen-18 for oxygen-16 is made in the core region of the fiber, the Raman gain spectrum is substantially broadened.
    Type: Application
    Filed: December 18, 2002
    Publication date: July 10, 2003
    Inventors: Douglas C. Allan, John T. Brown, Lisa C. Chacon, Adam J. G. Ellison, James C. Fajardo, Stuart Gray, Keith L. House, Karl W. Koch, Dale R. Powers, James A. West