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Category Archives: optical network

Fiber array connector; Lightwire LLC; U.S. Pat. No. 8,200,056

U.S. Patent No. 8,200,056, issued on June 12, 2012 to Lightwire LLC of San Jose, CA, discloses a multi-fiber connector for photonic subassemblies.

    

According to the ’056 patent, optical fiber network interfaces can be expensive to manufacture, largely due to the difficulty in mounting and aligning the optical fibers with the corresponding devices, and the manufacturing costs have been a factor in slowing the penetration of fiber optic technology into local area networks.  The connector disclosed in the ’056 patent is designed to interconnect a fiber array with a planar photonic subassembly using “low-cost alignment techniques, while relaxing manufacturing tolerances … and permitting the use of inexpensive materials.”

Lightwave, headquartered in Allentown, PA, was recently acquired by Cisco Systems in March 2012 for $271 million in cash and retention-based incentives.  According to the Cisco press release, Lightwire’s advanced optical interconnect technology for high-speed networking ”will allow Cisco to deliver cost-effective, high-speed networks with the next generation of optical connectivity.”  In Cisco’s blog, the company explains that Lightwire’s CMOS (complementary metal-oxide-semiconductor) technology results in “lower power consumption, higher densities, and lower costs,” and the acquisition will allow Cisco to use the advanced silicon optical technology across its entire product portfolio.

According to the USPTO database, Lightwave received two U.S. patents in 2012, including the ’056 patent, and had 75 U.S. patents overall.

 

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U.S. Patents of the 2012 Prism Awards Finalists: Optics and Optical Components Category

I will be attending the upcoming 2012 Photonics West conference in January 2012, and I’d enjoy meeting any readers of the Photonics Patents™ blog that may also be attending.  If interested, please feel free to contact me at @Itchkawitz or at bsi “at” kmob “dot” com.

One of the highlights of the Photonics West conference will be the 2011 “Prism Awards”, scheduled to be presented by SPIE and Photonics Media on Wednesday, January 25th for innovations in the field of photonics.  Prior to the awards, I thought it’d be interesting to look at the U.S. patents and published patent applications of some of the finalists in various categories.

The three finalists in the Optics and Optical Communications category each have filed U.S. patent applications directed to the products for which they have been nominated:

Haas LTI’s recently-published U.S. patent application US2011/0249342A1 describes a method for thermally compensating lenses in an optical system for high power lasers by “harnessing the thermal advantages of fused silica and offsetting the [positive] change in index of refraction [versus temperature, i.e., dn/dT] with a second material having a negative dn/dT.”  Listed examples of suitable materials include CaF2, BaF2, LiF2, NaCl, and KCl.  According to the USPTO website, Haas’ application was recently examined by the USPTO, which found that some of the claims recite allowable subject matter.  I expect that Haas will make the relatively minor changes which will place the application in condition for allowance, likely resulting in the patent issuing in early 2012.  The company will likely also file a continuation application (perhaps via the company’s pending PCT application: WO2011/127356) to pursue additional scope of protection, perhaps including apparatus claims (which can often be more desirable than method claims).

Optotune’s recently-published patent application US2011/0267680A1 describes a device using an optical element connected to a polymer film that is electroactive, i.e., is responsive to an electric field applied to the film.  In response to an oscillating electric field, the polymer film distorts so as to displace the optical element back and forth, thereby destroying visible speckling effects.  While the USPTO has yet to examine the U.S. application, a corresponding PCT application has been examined by the European Patent Office, which found that the claims were not patentable in view of prior art references.  Optotune will have the opportunity to respond, either by presenting arguments regarding the prior art, amending the claims, or both.

Earlier this year, PixelOptics received U.S. Pat. No. 7,971,994, directed to spectacles having a pair of electroactive lenses and a synchronization transmitter which coordinates changes of the refractive indices of the two lenses to adjust the optical power of the lenses while they are worn.  This U.S. patent is one of a series of patents owned or licensed by PixelOptics, directed to adaptive focusing lenses, which have the potential of making bifocals and progressive lenses a thing of the past.  The core technology was developed by researchers at the University of Arizona (UA), and PixelOptics has a license to UA’s patent application US2006/0164593A1, which even though filed in 2006, is still winding its way through the USPTO.  While the application has received multiple rejections, a review of the file history shows that the examiner has recently agreed that some proposed claim amendments overcome the existing rejections, but that further searching of the prior art and consideration will be necessary to determine patentability. 

So which product do you think will win the Prism Award?  Based on the sizes of the patent portfolios, as well as the consumer goods aspect of the product, PixelOptics seems to have an edge over either Haas LTI or Optotune.  Take the poll below to see if the collective wisdom of the internet can make the right guess.

 

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Reconfigurable OADM using polarization diversity; Capella Photonics, Inc.; U.S. Reissue Pat. No. RE42,521

U.S. Reissue Patent No. RE42,521, reissued on July 5, 2011 to Capella Photonics, Inc. of San Jose, CA, discloses a wavelength-separating-routing (WSR) apparatus that can be used to construct a dynamically reconfigurable optical add-drop multiplexer (OADM) for wavelength-division multiplexing (WDM).

 

Fiber optic networks commonly support many data channels, each having its own wavelength.  An optical add-drop multiplexer (OADM) is used to receive all of these data channels, to selectively remove (or drop) the one of interest (e.g., to read the information on that data channel), and/or to selectively add a data channel to the data traffic stream.  The OADM therefore allows the data stream to be manipulated without disrupting the overall data traffic flow.  According to the ’521 reissued patent, conventional OADMs are difficult to dynamically reconfigure, require stringent fabrication tolerances and alignments, are susceptible to thermal and vibration disturbances, and require power or gain equalization.  The ’521 reissued patent discloses a polarization diversity arrangement to overcome polarization-dependent effects and an array of micromirrors that can be actuated to pivot about two axes to selectively reflect certain data channels to selected output ports and to control the power at these ports. 

According to its website, Capella was founded in 2000 and is a leading provider of wavelength selective switches for use in ROADM and optical cross connects, having “an extensive intellectual property portfolio with 27 patents issued and over 30 pending.”  Earlier this year, Capella closed a $20 million financing which is earmarked for expanding and strengthening the company’s presence in the ROADM market “which is expected to grow to $1.8 billion over the next four years.”   

The ’521 reissue patent was actually reissued by the USPTO twice.  Reissue is a mechanism through which a patentee can correct mistakes in an issued U.S. patent that if uncorrected, would make the patent partially or wholly invalid.  Examples of such errors are not naming the correct inventors, or having claims that do not encompass the full scope of the invention.  If a reissue application seeks to broaden the scope of protection, it must be filed within two years of the original patent’s issuance.  Reissue applications that seek to narrow the scope of protection (e.g., in view of newly discovered prior art) or to correct other mistakes can be filed at any time during the lifetime of the patent. 

To start the reissue process, the patentee has to relinquish the patent back to the USPTO and must identify an error that is sought to be corrected.  The USPTO will then review the application again, and if permissible under the patent laws, will make the correction.  Once corrected, the patent is “reissued,” but it still has the same expiration date as did the original patent. 

The subject matter claimed in the ’521 reissue patent originally issued as U.S. Pat. No. 6,760,511 in July 2004.  Five months later, Capella relinquished the patent to the USPTO with a reissue application that sought to correct the inventorship of the patent.  Apparently, the original patent omitted one of the actual inventors (incorrect inventorship would have made the patent invalid).  After almost three years, the USPTO granted Reissue U.S. Patent No. RE39,515.  Three years later, Capella again sought to correct an error, this time because some of the claims were too broad in view of the prior art, and to correct some typographical errors in the claims that affected their clarity.  This time, it took the USPTO only one year to grant the reissue, resulting in the ’521 reissue patent. 

The claims of a reissue patent show the changes that were made during the reissue process: deletions are shown between two bolded brackets (e.g., [deleted text]) and additions are shown as italicized text (e.g., additional text).  Take a look at claim 1 at the top of this blogpost to see how it was narrowed by including additional features that were not in the claim as originally issued.

 

 

   

 
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Posted by on September 19, 2011 in fiber optics, mems, optical network

 

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Stereo telestration for robotic surgery; Intuitive Surgical Operations, Inc.; U.S. Pat. No. 7,907,166

U.S. Patent No. 7,907,166, issued on March 15, 2011 to Intuitive Surgical Operations, Inc. of Sunnyvale, CA, discloses a telestrator of three-dimensional images for robotic surgery.

                

Anyone who has watched sports on television in the past 30 years has seen a “telestrator” in action.  John Madden became famous in part for using telestrations to annotate his football color commentary with X’s, O’s, and arrows to demonstrate the inner workings of the game.  The telestrations we are familiar with are displayed on a single television monitor, so they are limited to two-dimensional images.  However, for robotic surgery, three-dimensional images are provided by two monitors, which display two complementary images that, when presented to the surgeon’s two eyes, generate a dual-image, stereo-view of the surgical site.  According to the ’166 patent, it can be helpful for a mentor (e.g., a teacher or instructor) to provide guidance to the operator of the system using telestrations, but a mono-visual telestration overlaying only one of the images can be difficult to use.  The ’166 patent discloses a system and method for generating and displaying three-dimensional, stereo-view telestration graphics using both the left-eye image and the right-eye image.

According to its website, Intuitive Surgical, founded in 1995, is “the global technology leader in robotic-assisted minimally invasive surgery (MIS)” and markets the da Vinci Surgical System, the first robotic surgical system cleared by the FDA.  Worldwide, there are now almost 1,700 da Vinci systems installed in over 1,500 hospitals.  The company’s website includes a number of videos that demonstrate the uses and advantages of the da Vinci system. 

UPDATE: For anyone too squemish to watch the da Vinci system being used in an operation, I recently saw this video that shows a da VInci system being used to fold a tiny paper airplane.

As would be expected for such intricate medical devices, Intuitive Surgical holds hundreds of U.S. and foreign patents and hundreds of field-of-use licenses on various aspects of the company’s technology, including the user’s console, robotic arms, vision system, and positioning system.  In 2010, the company was awarded 30 U.S. patents, and has received 11 U.S. patents so far in 2011, including the ’166 patent. 

 

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Compact, high-resolution, tunable optical filter; Dicon Fiberoptics, Inc.; U.S. Pat. No. 7,899,330

U.S. Patent No. 7,899,330, issued on March 1, 2011 to DiCon Fiberoptics, Inc. of Richmond, CA, discloses a tunable optical filter for optical communication networks.

 

Conventional optical communication networks utilize optical add/drop multiplexers (OADMs) with fixed optical filters to select/remove a particular wavelength from the multiple-wavelength optical signal.  However, there’s a need for reconfigurable OADMs (ROADMs) with tunable optical filters which provide flexibility by allowing dynamic selection of the wavelength being manipulated.  The ’330 patent discloses a tunable optical filter in which the received multiple-wavelength light is diffracted by cascaded optical diffraction gratings, and a microelectromechanical system (MEMS) mirror reflects the diffracted light again onto the cascaded optical diffraction gratings.  In this way, the light is diffracted twice and only light having the selected wavelength propagates out of the optical filter to an output port.  According to the ’330 patent, this configuration “results in a compact device structure and allows the use of low-cost gratings” with low power consumption and high reliability.

According to its website, DiCon “is one of the world’s largest suppliers of passive components, modules and test instruments for the fiberoptic communications industry.”  DiCon markets tunable optical filters that are touted as having a compact form factor and superior optical performance, but its website does not provide information regarding whether the configuration of the ’330 patent is being used in these products.  The company continues to develop other optical devices based on this technology.   

According to the USPTO database, DiCon Fiberoptics received two U.S. patents in 2010, and the ’330 patent is the company’s first U.S. patent in 2011. 

 
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Posted by on March 17, 2011 in filter, mems, optical network, wdm

 

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Package with multiple WDM devices; Oclaro (No. Am.), Inc.; U.S. Pat. No. 7,894,722

U.S. Patent No. 7,894,722, issued on February 22, 2011 to Oclaro (North America), Inc. of San Jose, CA, discloses an optical system package containing two or more WDM optical devices.

 

In wavelength-division multiplexing (WDM) fiber-optic communication systems, a single optical fiber can carry multiple optical signals, each having its own unique wavelength.  Such optical systems generally include optical add-drop multiplexers (OADMs) or wavelength selective switches (WSSs) that manipulate the multiple signals based on their wavelengths to separate out selected signals from the optical fiber or to join selected signals to the optical fiber.  Also, dynamic gain equalizers (DGEs) are used to level out the power levels of the multiple signals being transmitted by the optical fiber.  The ’722 patent discloses a packaged optical system containing multiple WDM devices that share one or more optical elements to provide ”a reduced per-channel manufacturing cost and an improved mean time between failures over individual optical switching devices.” 

According to the company’s website, Oclaro was formed in 2009 by the merger of Bookham, Inc. and Avanex Corp.  In its 2010 Annual Report, Oclaro states that the company has “750 U.S. patents and 293 non-U.S. patents” and that its “IP base represents significant investment in the optical industry over the past 20 years.”  A check of the USPTO database shows that the company received 22 U.S. patents in 2010, and three so far in 2011, including the ’722 patent.

 
 

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Photonic IC transceiver; Infinera Corp.; U.S. Pat. No. 7,877,016

U.S. Patent No. 7,877,016, issued on January 25, 2011 to Infinera Corp. of Sunnyvale, CA, discloses a photonic integrated circuit (PIC) for a receiver of a passive optical network (PON).

    

According to the ’016 patent, passive optical networks (PONs) are part of the architecture in “fiber-to-the-premises” (FTTP) fiber-optic networks.  In contrast to active optical networks, the PON uses passive components, such as optical splitters, isolators, circulators, and filters, that do not require electrical power to operate.  The PON receives and transmits optical signals between a central source, called an optical line terminal (OLT), and a number of optical network units (ONU).  These OLTs and ONUs utilize the bidirectional communication provided by the PON to provide high bandwidth data transmission to the subscribers of a fiber-optic system (FiOS).  The ’016 patent discloses a photonic integrated circuit (PIC), formed on a semiconductor substrate, that can be used as a transceiver for either OLTs or ONUs. 

According to its website, Infinera’s PIC technology provides a bandwidth of hundreds of gigabits per second and has been demonstrated in the lab to be capable of 1.6 terabits per second.  Infinera’s website also includes many videos, podcasts, and presentations that explain various aspects of optical networks and their components.  A presentation about photonic integration makes a strong case for the benefits of PICs and digital optical networks mirroring the advances already made possible by electrical integrated circuits in digital electronics. 

Infinera’s co-founder and chief strategy officer, Dr. David Welch, has been announced to be the recipient of the 2011 John Tyndall Award from the Optical Society of America and the IEEE Photonics Society for his “seminal contributions to photonic integrated circuits (PICs) and semiconductor lasers deployed in fiber optic communication systems around the world.”  The award will be presented at the upcoming “Optical Fiber Conference” in Los Angeles in March.     

According to the company’s 2010 annual report, as of December 26, 2009, Infinera owned 115 U.S. patents and 139 pending U.S. patent applications.  A recent search of the USPTO database shows 130 U.S. patents that have issued to Infinera, with 30 in 2009 and 24 in 2010.   

 
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Posted by on February 16, 2011 in optical network, pic, transceiver

 

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