Patents by Inventor Lisa Chacon

Lisa Chacon 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).

  • Publication number: 20050144986
    Abstract: A method for manufacturing an optical fiber preform and fiber. According to the method, a first glass rod is formed, preferably by an OVD method, with a refractive index delta preferably between 0.2% and 3%. A glass sleeve tube is formed, preferably by an MCVD or PVCD method. The first glass rod is inserted into the sleeve and an alkali metal vapor is flowed between the sleeve tube and the first glass rod. Additional glass may optionally be formed on the inside surface of the sleeve tube prior to inserting the first glass rod and flowing the alkali metal vapor. The additional glass may be up-doped, down-doped, or both. The sleeve may then be collapsed onto the first glass rod to form a second glass rod doped with an alkali metal oxide. The second glass rod is drawn to form a third glass rod. Additional glass may then be formed on the third glass rod to form an optical fiber preform from which optical fiber may be drawn.
    Type: Application
    Filed: December 30, 2003
    Publication date: July 7, 2005
    Inventors: Dana Bookbinder, Lisa Chacon, Adam Ellison, Gregory Gausman, Michael Murtagh, William Whedon
  • Publication number: 20050120752
    Abstract: Methods, apparatus and precursors for producing substantially water-free silica soot, preforms and glass. The methods and apparatus make substantially water-free fused silica preforms or glass by removing water as a reaction product, removing water from the atmosphere, removing water from the transport process, or combinations thereof. In a first embodiment, substantially water-free soot, preforms or glass are achieved by using a hydrogen-free fuel, such as carbon monoxide, in the deposition process. In another embodiment, a soot producing burner has parameters that enable operation on a substantially hydrogen-free fuel. End burners, which minimize water production, are also described. Such water-free methods are useful in depositing fluorine-doped soot because of the low water present and the efficiency in which fluorine is incorporated. In another embodiment, glassy barrier layer methods and apparatus are described for minimizing dopant migration, especially fluorine.
    Type: Application
    Filed: January 10, 2005
    Publication date: June 9, 2005
    Inventors: John Brown, Lisa Chacon, Steven Dawes, V. Srikant, Pushkar Tandon, Joseph Whalen
  • Publication number: 20050092030
    Abstract: The invention includes methods and apparatus for depositing soot onto a glass surface to minimize water in the deposited soot and the diffusion of the water into the glass surface. The invention includes depositing a first layer of soot a on the glass surface at a first forward traverse rate and depositing a second layer of soot at a second forward traverse rate.
    Type: Application
    Filed: October 31, 2003
    Publication date: May 5, 2005
    Inventors: Jitendra Balakrishnan, Dana Bookbinder, Lisa Chacon, Steven Dunwoody, Kintu Early, Daniel Hawtof, Prantik Mazumder, Amy Rovelstad, Susan Schiefelbein, Pushkar Tandon
  • Publication number: 20050084440
    Abstract: Glasses are disclosed which are used to produce substrates in flat panel display devices. The glasses exhibit a density less than about 2.45 gm/cm3 and a liquidus viscosity greater than about 200,000 poises, the glass consisting essentially of the following composition, expressed in terms of mol percent on an oxide basis: 65-75 SiO2, 7-13 Al2O3, 5-15 B2O3, 0-3 MgO, 5-15 CaO, 0-5 SrO, and essentially free of BaO. The glasses also exhibit a strain point exceeding 650° C.
    Type: Application
    Filed: October 7, 2004
    Publication date: April 21, 2005
    Applicant: Corning Incorporated
    Inventors: Lisa Chacon, Adam Ellison, George Hares, Jeffrey Kohli, Josef Lapp, Robert Morena
  • Publication number: 20050063663
    Abstract: Disclosed is an optical fiber having a core with an alkali metal oxide dopant in an peak amount greater than about 0.002 wt. % and less than about 0.1 wt. %. The alkali metal oxide concentration varies with a radius of the optical fiber. By appropriately selecting the concentration of alkali metal oxide dopant in the core and the cladding, a low loss optical fiber may be obtained. Also disclosed are several methods of making the optical fiber including the steps of forming an alkali metal oxide-doped rod, and adding additional glass to form a draw perform. Preferably, the draw preform has a final outer dimension (d2), wherein an outer dimension (d1) of the rod is less than or equal to 0.06 times the final outer dimension (d2). In a preferred embodiment, the alkali metal oxide-doped rod is inserted into the centerline hole of a preform to form an assembly.
    Type: Application
    Filed: August 27, 2004
    Publication date: March 24, 2005
    Inventors: James Anderson, Dana Bookbinder, Lisa Chacon, Calvin Coffey, Adam Ellison, Gregory Gausman, Rostislav Khrapko, Stephan Logunov, Michael Murtagh, Clinton Osterhout, Sabyasachi Sen, William Whedon
  • Publication number: 20050022562
    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: August 25, 2004
    Publication date: February 3, 2005
    Inventors: Douglas Allan, John Brown, Lisa Chacon, Adam Ellison, James Fajardo, Stuart Gray, Keith House, Karl Koch, Dale Powers, James West
  • Patent number: 6160158
    Abstract: A method for fluorinating a carbon compound or cationic carbon compound utilizes a fluorination agent selected from thermodynamically unstable nickel fluorides and salts thereof in liquid anhydrous hydrogen fluoride. The desired carbon compound or cationic organic compound to undergo fluorination is selected and reacted with the fluorination agent by contacting the selected organic or cationic organic compound and the chosen fluorination agent in a reaction vessel for a desired reaction time period at room temperature or less.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: February 19, 1998
    Date of Patent: December 12, 2000
    Assignee: The Regents of the University of California
    Inventors: Neil Bartlett, J. Marc Whalen, Lisa Chacon