An arragement of flexible and rigid glass optical fibers

Glass optical fibers: Properties, applications, manufacturing

Fiber optics made of glass, also called glass optical fibers, are a thin, flexible, and transparent material used for transmitting light or images across various applications. They are ideal for fields requiring robust and reliable performance, including medical, industrial, aviation, automotive and defense sectors, where light and images need to be transmitted over long distances, through tight spaces, or in harsh environments. The advanced properties of glass fibers make them resistant to extreme temperatures, corrosive, wet, and vacuum environments. Discover all you need to know about fiber optics.
Glass types

Types of glass used

There are several types of glass used in fiber optics:

  • High-purity silica: This glass provides exceptional optical clarity and low attenuation. It has a numerical aperture of about 0.2. Therefore, it is especially suitable for applications such as telecommunication.
  • Doped silica: Compared to high-purity silicia, it enhances the refractive index for specialized applications. The numerical aperture is usually between 0.37 and 0.39. Typical applications include fiber optic measurement systems.
  • Multi-component glass such as borosilicate glass: This type has the highest numerical aperture of the three. Light guides made of multi-component glass offer an acceptance angle of up to 120 degrees, while image guides can achieve acceptance angles of up to 180 degrees and a numerical aperture of 1. It is customizable for specific performance and cost requirements and is mainly used for lighting and imaging applications.
Puravis - Glass Optical Fibers with Ferrule - with light

Understanding the properties and applications of glass optical fibers

Glass fibers are highly flexible and unaffected by a range of environmental factors, such as chemical exposure, high and low temperatures or pressure. Additionally, they offer no risk of electrical interference. The unique characteristics of these fibers make them essential for developing reliable and efficient systems in challenging environments – for instance, decoupling electronic devices such as light sources, sensors or cameras from the actual area of application.
Functional principle

How do glass optical fibers work?

Glass optical fibers transmit light through a core made from ultra-pure optical glass surrounded by a glass cladding. The light is guided through the core by total internal reflection. This is made possible by combining two materials with different refractive indices: a high refractive index core and a low refractive index cladding. The principle of total internal reflection says that when light hits the boundary between the core and the cladding below the critical angle, it is reflected and carried further along the fiber to the end.

Functional principle of fiber optics

A rendering showing the functional principle of glass optical fibers

Core and cladding of glass optical fibers

Core and cladding before they are drawn to glass optical fibers

Light transmission

Illustration of how a glass optical fiber light guide transfers light

Light guides carry light from one end to the other. The arrangement of SCHOTT’s fibers can be randomized to create very homogenous illumination.

Image transmission

Illustration of how a glass optical fiber image guide transfers an image of a sail boat

Image guides are able to transport images over a long distance and magnify, reduce or invert them. Each fiber in the image guide can be seen as a single image pixel which makes the arrangement of the fibers critical.

Single-mode vs. multi-mode fibers

Different glass types are used to realize different fiber types.

Single-mode fiber

Illustration of the functional principle of a single-mode fiber

Single-mode fibers have a small core (< 10 µm) and a large cladding. As a result, only one light ray is transmitted, which leads to low loss and only minor scattering. Those fibers are usually preferred for long distance datacom.

Multi-mode fiber

Illustration of the functional principle of a multi-mode fiber

Multi-mode fibers have a large core (> 10 µm) and small cladding. The large core allows all light rays at all angels below the critical angle to travel along the fiber. This makes it ideal for lighting and imaging applications.

Properties and advantages

Why are optical fibers made of glass flexible?

By heating glass rods, it is possible to draw glass fibers that are about as thin as a human hair. The speed of the drawing process determines the fiber thickness, which in turn determines the flexibility of the fiber. The smaller the fiber diameter, the smaller the bending radius. In this respect, fibers made of specialty glass are even more pliable and flexible than plastic fibers.

The breaking loop test is used to test the flexibility of glass fibers. This is performed by placing a flexible glass fiber in a loop, which is pulled tighter until the fiber breaks. This test has shown that for example glass fibers with a thickness of 50 micrometers can withstand a bending radius of about five millimeters.

Glass optical fibers that are tied into a knot
Types

Types of fiber optic guides

Glass optical fibers can be made into flexible and rigid products, usually referred to as guides or cables. Flexible fiber optic cables are often longer than rigid ones and normally used when the inspection target lies around a corner or in a narrow, hard-to-reach space. This demands a high level of flexibility and movement, required for example in flexible endoscopes.

Rigid light or image guides are made up of bundles of fused fibers. Typical lighting applications include light guides for dentistry equipment or rigid endoscopes. For imaging applications, they are used to make a wide range of tapers and faceplates, which can transmit magnified, reduced or inverted images from an input surface to an output surface. To give an example from the medical field: faceplates are used in x-ray imaging. Hybrid variants are also available.

An array of flexible and rigid fiber optic guides
Manufacturing process

Glass optical fiber cables: How they are made

Fiber drawing

Fiber drawing

SCHOTT’s multi-fiber drawing equipment is loaded with suspended glass rods, which are heated at the lower end to fuse the core and the cladding glass. This creates a single glass fiber for each system. The fibers are then drawn downwards, with the speed of the draw determining the fiber’s diameter. For image conductors, the process is repeated multiple times, with several fibers collected and drawn together in a multi-draw process.
Precision bundling and extrusion

Precision bundling and extrusion

a) Precision bundling

Several primary bundles are gathered to form a final fiber bundle, with the fiber arrangement within flexible bundles usually arbitrary. For certain applications it may be necessary to arrange the fibers in a randomized pattern (light guide) or specific pattern (image guide).

b) Extrusion

The final fiber bundle has the option to be sheathed with polymer in an extrusion line to form a cable. In subsequent assembly processes, fiber bundles and cables are cut to length according to customer requirements and fitted with end sleeves.

End termination

End termination

Depending on the application, a special a) gluing or b) fusing process is used to fix the bundles in the sleeves. During hot fusing, the ends of the fiber bundle are softened and squeezed together under heat and pressure, which eliminates the spaces between individual fibers and reduces the bundle’s diameter. This increases the amount of individual fibers, giving the bundles extra-high transmission and a very dense surface. Since no organic adhesive is required, the bundles can withstand very high temperatures.
Redrawing and reshaping Redrawing and reshaping Redrawing and reshaping Redrawing and reshaping
  • Redrawing and reshaping
  • Redrawing and reshaping
  • Redrawing and reshaping
  • Redrawing and reshaping

Redrawing and reshaping

Multicore rods made from numerous fibers can be stretched into conical shapes or bent or twisted into custom forms. This is especially relevant for rigid guides made into rods, cones, tapers or inverters.
Grinding and polishing

Grinding and polishing

To ensure the best possible light transmission, both ends of the fiber bundle are ground and polished to optical grade quality. While our standard option is polishing perpendicular to the optical axis, curve polishing is also available for special applications such as faceplates.
Quality inspection

Quality inspection

SCHOTT ensures consistent and reliable product quality to meet defined requirements. Standard measurements include optical performance measurements according to DIN 58141 Part 1, Part 2 and Part 3, as well as customized optical measurements depending on specific applications.
Glass vs. plastic optical fibers

Why are optical fibers made of glass?

Optical fibers are made of glass because of its exceptional optical properties, including high clarity and low attenuation. Glass fibers provide reliable and efficient light transmission, essential for critical applications in medical, industrial, aviation, automotive and defense. In addition, glass offers exceptional mechanical, thermal, and chemical properties, making them well suited for use in harsh environments.

 

Glass vs. plastic in optical fibers

While both materials have specific uses, glass optical fibers are superior for high-performance applications. They offer lower attenuation, higher bandwidth, and better environmental resistance compared to plastic fiber optics.

 

1. Superior light performance

Glass optical fibers, foundational for both flexible and rigid light guides, deliver a very high light transmission performance. The high color rendering index of glass ensures minimal wavelength alteration of the light entering and exiting the fiber. Glass fibers also boast a large numerical aperture of up to 1, allowing more light to pass through and illuminating larger areas with smaller fiber bundles. Conversely, polymer optical fibers are limited by material constraints to a maximum aperture of 0.5.

 

2. Strength and flexibility

Glass fibers combine exceptional strength with flexibility when reduced to very thin diameters. This unique combination allows glass fibers to be manufactured as thin as 30 microns, enabling tight bending radii. In contrast, polymer fibers typically have diameters starting at 500 microns, often exceeding 1 mm. For imaging applications, individual glass fibers can be as small as 4 microns in diameter, providing high pixel resolution and detailed, clear images.

 

3. Thermal stability

Glass maintains stability at temperatures up to 350 °C, making glass fiber bundles or rigid light guides suitable for high temperature application like autoclaving sterilization in medical applications or hostile industrial environments. Polymer fibers, however, generally withstand temperatures only up to 80 °C, making them unsuitable for such high-temperature processes.

 

4. Design flexibility

The extremely small diameters of glass fibers allow a high number of individual fibers to fit into a compact bundle, facilitating complex geometries in small spaces. Glass fiber bundles can also distribute light from a single source to multiple locations efficiently, mixing red, green, and blue LED light to produce homogeneous white light. The higher number of glass fibers in a bundle results in a more uniform light output compared to thicker polymer fibers.

 

5. Chemical resistance

Glass’s high chemical resistance ensures it remains inert when exposed to cleaning agents, detergents, acids, bases, solvents, or glues, making glass components durable and easy to clean. In contrast, polymers can react with various chemicals.
Applications

Applications of glass optical fibers

Endoscopic examination to the patient in intensive care unit
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Medical

Accurate and reliable light delivery is vital during minimally invasive surgery. Pure white, homogeneous light in visible wavelengths offers intense illumination with a very natural color impression. This light is delivered via multi-component glass optical fibers that maintain high transmission over long distances to provide a true-to-life view of human tissue.

By using fiber optic image guides, images from inside the body can be transferred to a screen to give the surgeon a complete picture of the area of treatment.
An industrial street with robots
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Industrial applications

Fiber optic glass cables play a crucial role in industrial applications by carrying light from a source to a measurement device or from an object under scrutiny to a detector. Whether guiding light and images around a corner, out of a tight space, or away from a hot, dark, or challenging area, fiber optics are critical for many of the world’s most advanced technologies, essential for semiconductor manufacturing, industrial automation, control systems, and quality monitoring.
A soldier with a fiber optic imaging bundle
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Defense and security

In defense, glass fiber optic cables are used for situational awareness and advanced sensor systems. As glass is passive, it can be used without power in degraded mode. Fiber optic glass solutions are used for night vision and information transfer, for turbine and fuel monitoring as well as for remote engine monitoring in hostile environments.
A car illuminated with side-emitting fibers
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Automotive

Side-emitting glass optical fibers are used in the automotive industry to generate bright, clear, colorful and uniform contour illumination throughout a car's interior. In exterior applications, they can create outstanding light effects for contour or accent illumination, even in harsh conditions.
A passenger seat in an aircraft illuminated with seat lighting
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Aviation

In the aviation industry, fiber optic lighting solutions are used for seats, cabins and monuments. The individual light designs do not only represent the airlines' brand, but even more importantly, they contribute to crew and passenger comfort and well being during a flight.
The world from above and many dots that are connected with lines
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Fiber optic communication

Glass optical fibers based on silica are foundational to modern communication networks due to their ability to transmit large amounts of data rapidly and reliably over long distances.

SCHOTT is specialized on light and image transmission via multi-component glass optical fibers and does not offer fiber optic solutions for communication.
SCHOTT products and expertise

We are certified

SCHOTT strictly adheres to tight regulatory directives and holds a number of quality assurance certificates, including ISO-13485, 50001, and 9001/14001, as well as ASD9100D and MIL-STAN-810G.

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