By Jeff Hecht
The following information
is originally from this Internet location:
http://www.sff.net/people/Jeff.Hecht/chron.html
This information is cached
here so that it will be easily available to Open Net Craft
participants.
Note: This chronology is an early
version of the one that appears in my book City of Light: The
Story of Fiber Optics, published by Oxford University Press
as part of the Sloan Technology Series. It is available from
your local bookseller, Oxford, or Amazon.com. Your questions
and comments are welcome via e-mail. I have also posted a short
narrative history Circa 2500 B.C.:
Earliest known glass
Roman Times: Glass is drawn into fibers
1713: Rene de Reaumur makes spun glass
fibers
1790s: Claude Chappe invents 'optical telegraph'
in France
1841: Daniel Colladon demonstrates light
guiding in jet of water Geneva
1842: Jacques Babinet reports light guiding
in water jets and bent glass rods Paris
1853: Paris Opera uses Colladon's water
jet in the opera Faust
1854: John Tyndall demonstrates light guiding
in water jets, duplicating but not acknowledging Colladon
1873: Jules de Brunfaut makes glass fibers
that can be woven into cloth
1880: Alexander Graham Bell invents Photophone,
Washington
1880: William Wheeler invents system of
light pipes to illuminate homes from an electric arc lamp
in basement, Concord, Mass.
1884: International Health Exhibition in
South Kensington district of London has first fountains with
illuminated water jets, designed by Sir Francis Bolton
1887: Charles Vernon Boys draws quartz
fibers for mechanical measurements
1887: Royal Jubilee Exhibition in Manchester
has illuminated "Fairy Fountains" designed by W.
and J. Galloway and Sons
1888: Illuminated fountains at Glasgow
and Barcelona fairs
1888: Dr. Roth and Prof. Reuss of Vienna
use bent glass rods to illuminate body cavities
1889: Universal Exhibition in Paris shows
refined illuminated fountains designed by G. Bechmann
1895: Henry C. Saint-Rene designs a system
of bent glass rods for guiding light in an early television
scheme (Crezancy, France)
1892: Herman Hammesfahr shows glass dress
at Chicago World's Fair
April 25, 1898: David D. Smith of Indianapolis
applies for patent on bent glass rod as a surgical lamp
1920s: Bent glass rods used for microscope
illumination
June 2, 1926: C. Francis Jenkins applies
for U.S. patent on a mechanical television receiver in which
light passes along quartz rods in a rotating drum to form
an image.
Oct. 15, 1926: John Logie Baird applies
for British patent on an array of parallel glass rods or hollow
tubes to carry image in a mechanical television. He later
built an array of hollow tubes.
December 30, 1926: Clarence W. Hansell
outlines principles of the fiber-optic imaging bundle in his
notebook at the RCA Rocky Point Laboratory on Long Island.
RCA files for U.S. patent Aug. 13, 1927, and later files for
British patent.
1930: Heinrich Lamm, a medical student,
assembles first bundle of transparent fibers to carry an image
(of an electric lamp filament) in Munich. His effort to file
a patent is denied because of Hansell's British patent.
December 1931: Owens-Illinois devises method
to mass-produce glass fibers for Fiberglas.
1937: Armand Lamesch of Germany applies
for U.S. patent on two-layer glass fiber (non-optical)
1939: Curvlite Sales offers illuminated
tongue depressor and dental illuminators made of Lucite, a
transparent plastic invented by DuPont.
Circa 1949: Holger Moller Hansen in Denmark
and Abraham C. S. Van Heel at the Technical University of
Delft begin investigating image transmission through bundles
of parallel glass fibers.
April 11, 1951: Holger Moller Hansen applies
for a Danish patent on fiber-optic imaging in which he proposes
cladding glass or plastic fibers with a transparent low-index
material. Patent claim is denied because of Hansell patent.
October 1951: Brian O'Brien (University
of Rochester) suggests to Abraham C. S. Van Heel (Technical
University of Delft) that applying a transparent cladding
would improve transmission of fibers in his imaging bundle.
July 1952: Harold Horace Hopkins applies
for a grant from the Royal Society to develop bundles of glass
fibers for use as an endoscope at Imperial College of Science
and Technology. Hires Narinder S. Kapany as an assistant when
he receives grant.
Spring 1953: Hopkins tell Fritz Zernicke
his idea of fiber bundles; Zernicke tells van Heel, who decides
to publish quickly
June 12, 1953: van Heel publishes first
report of clad fiber in Dutch-language weekly De Ingeneur
after submitting brief paper to Nature.
January 2, 1954: Hopkins and Kapany
and van Heel publish separate papers in Nature. Hopkins and
Kapany report imaging bundles of unclad fibers; van Heel reports
simple bundles of clad fibers.
1954: Basil Hirschowitz visits Hopkins
and Kapany in London from the University of Michigan
September 1954: American Optical hires
Will Hicks to implement develop fiber-optic image scramblers,
an idea O'Brien proposed to the Central Intelligence Agency
Summer 1955: Kapany completes doctoral
thesis on fiber optics under Hopkins, moves to University
of Rochester.
Summer 1955: Hirschowitz and C. Wilbur
Peters hire undergraduate student Larry Curtiss to work on
their fiber-optic endoscope project.
Summer 1956: Curtiss suggests making glass
clad fibers by melting a tube onto a rod of higher-index glass
December 8, 1956: Curtiss makes first glass-clad
fibers by rod-in-tube method.
February 1957: Hirschowitz is first to
test fiber-optic endoscope in a patient.
1957: Image scrambler project ends after
Hicks tells CIA the code is easy to break.
1958: Hicks, Paul Kiritsy and Chet Thompson
leave American Optical to form Mosaic Fabrications in Southbridge,
Mass., the first fiber-optics company.
1958: Alec Reeves begins investigating
optical communications at Standard Telecommunication Laboratories
1959: Working with Hicks, American Optical
draws fibers so fine they transmit only a single mode of light.
Elias Snitzer recognizes the fibers as single-mode waveguides.
May 16, 1960: Theodore Maiman demonstrates
first laser at Hughes Research Laboratories in Malibu.
December 1960: Ali Javan makes first helium-neon
laser at Bell Labs, the first laser to emit a steady beam.
Circa 1960: George Goubau at Army Electronics
Command Laboratory, Bell Telephone Laboratories and Standard
Telecommunication Laboratories begin investigating hollow
optical waveguides with regularly spaced lenses
January 1961: Charles C. Eaglesfield proposes
hollow optical pipeline made of reflective pipes
May 1961: Elias Snitzer of American Optical
publishes theoretical description of single-mode fibers.
1962-63: Alec Reeves at Standard Telecommunications
Laboratories in Harlow, UK, commissions a group to study optical
waveguide communications under Antoni E. Karbowiak. One system
they study is optical fiber.
Autumn 1962: Four groups nearly simultaneously
make first semiconductor diode lasers, but they operate only
pulsed at liquid-nitrogen temperature. Robert N. Hall's group
at General Electric is first.
1963: Karbowiak proposes flexible thin-film
waveguide.
December 1964: Charles K. Kao takes over
STL optical communication program when Karbowiak leaves to
become chair of electrical engineering at the University of
New South Wales. Kao and George Hockham soon abandon Karbowiak's
thin-film waveguide in favor of single-mode optical fiber.
January 1966: Kao tells Institution of
Electrical Engineers in London that fiber loss could be reduced
below 20 decibels per kilometer for inter-office communications.
Early 1966: F. F. Roberts starts fiber-optic
communications research at British Post Office Research Laboratories
July 1966: Kao and Hockham publish paper
outlining their proposal in the Proceedings of the Institution
of Electrical Engineers.
July 1966: John Galt at Bell Labs asks
Mort Panish and Izuo Hayashi to figure out why diode lasers
have high thresholds at room temperature.
September 1966: Alain Werts, a young engineer
at CSF in France, publishes proposal similar to Kao's in French-language
journal L'Onde Electronique, but CSF does nothing further
for lack of funding.
1966: Roberts tells William Shaver, a visitor
from the Corning Glass Works, about interest in fiber communications.
This leads Robert Maurer to start a small research project
on fused-silica fibers.
1966: Kao travels to America early in year,
but fails to interest Bell Labs. He later finds more interest
in Japan.
Early 1967: British Post Office allocates
an extra 12 million pounds to research; some goes to fiber
optics.
Early 1967: Shojiro Kawakami of Tohoku
University in Japan proposes graded-index optical fibers.
Summer 1967: Corning summer intern Cliff
Fonstad makes fibers. Loss is high, but Maurer decides to
continue the research using titania-doped cores and pure-silica
cladding.
October 1967: Clarence Hansell dies at
68.
Late 1967: Maurer recruits Peter Schultz
from Corning's glass chemistry department to help making pure
glasses.
January 1968: Donald Keck starts work for
Maurer as the first full-time fiber developer at Corning.
The team also includes Frank Zimar, who draws fiber in a high-temperature
furnace he built
1968: Kao and M. W. Jones measure intrinsic
loss of bulk fused silica at 4 decibels per kilometer, the
first evidence of ultratransparent glass, prompting Bell Labs
to seriously consider fiber optics.
August 1968: Dick Dyott of British Post
Office picks up suggestion for pulling clad optical fibers
from molten glass in a double crucible.
1969: Martin Chown of STL demonstrates
fiber-optic repeater at Physical Society exhibition.
April 1970: STL demonstrates fiber optic
transmission at Physics Exhibition in London.
Spring 1970: First continuous-wave room-temperature
semiconductor lasers made in early May by Zhores Alferov's
group at the Ioffe Physical Institute in Leningrad (now St.
Petersburg) and on June 1 by Mort Panish and Izuo Hayashi
at Bell Labs.
June 30, 1970: AT&T introduces Picturephone
in Pittsburgh. The telephone monopoly plans to install millimeter
waveguides to provide the needed extra capacity.
Summer 1970: Maurer, Donald Keck, Peter
Schultz, and Frank Zimar at Corning develop a single-mode
fiber with loss of 17 dB/km at 633 nanometers by doping titanium
into fiber core.
September 30, 1970: Maurer announces results
at London conference devoted mainly to progress in millimeter
waveguides.
November 1970: Measurements at British
Post Office and STL confirm Corning results.
Late Fall 1970: Charles Kao leaves STL
to teach at Chinese University of Hong Kong; Murray Ramsay
heads STL fiber group.
1970-1971: Dick Dyott at Post Office and
Felix Kapron of Corning separately find pulse spreading is
lowest at 1.2 to 1.3 micrometers.
May 1971: Murray Ramsay of Standard Telecommunication
Labs demonstrates digital video over fiber to Queen Elizabeth
at the Centenary of the Institution of Electrical Engineers.
October 13, 1971: Alec Reeves dies in London.
1971-1972: Unable to duplicate Corning's
low loss, Bell Labs, the University of Southampton, and CSIRO
in Australia experiment with liquid-core fibers.
1971-1972: Focus shifts to graded-index
fibers because single-mode offers few advantages and many
problems at 850 nanometers.
June 1972: Maurer, Keck and Schultz make
multimode germania-doped fiber with 4 decibel per kilometer
loss and much greater strength than titania-doped fiber.
Late 1972: STL modulates diode laser at
1 Gbit/s; Bell Labs stops its last work on hollow light pipes.
December 1972: John Fulenwider proposes
a fiber-optic communication network to carry video and other
signals to homes at International Wire and Cable Symposium.
1973: John MacChesney develops modified
chemical vapor deposition process for fiber manufacture at
Bell Labs.
Mid-1973: Diode laser lifetime reaches
1000 hours at Bell Labs.
Spring 1974: Bell Labs settles on graded-index
fibers with 50- to 100 micrometer cores.
December 7, 1974: Heinrich Lamm dies at
66
February 1975: Bell completes installation
of 14 kilometers of millimeter waveguide in New Jersey. After
tests, Bell declares victory and abandons the technology.
June 1975: First commercial continuous-wave
semiconductor laser operating at room temperature offered
by Laser Diode Labs.
September 1975: First non-experimental
fiber-optic link installed by Dorset (UK) police after lightning
knocks out their communication system
October 1975: British Post Office begins
tests of millimeter waveguide; like Bell it declares the tests
successful, but never installs any.
1975: Dave Payne and Alex Gambling at University
of Southampton calculate pulse spreading should be zero at
1.27 micrometers.
January 13, 1976: Bell Labs starts tests
of graded-index fiber-optic system transmitting 45 million
bits per second at its Norcross, Georgia plant. Laser lifetime
is main problem.
Early 1976: Valtec launches Communications
Fiberoptics division.
Early 1976: Masaharu Horiguchi (NTT Ibaraki
Lab) and Hiroshi Osanai (Fujikura Cable) make first fibers
with low loss -- 0.47 decibel per kilometer -- at long wavelengths,
1.2 micrometers.
March 1976: Japan's Ministry for International
Trade and Industry announces plans for Hi-OVIS fiber-optic
"wired city" experiment involving 150 homes.
Spring 1976: Lifetime of best laboratory
lasers at Bell Labs reaches 100,000 hours (10 years) at room
temperature.
Summer 1976: Horiguchi and Osanai open
third window at 1.55 micrometers.
July 1976: Corning sues ITT alleging infringement
of American patents on communication fibers.
Late 1976: J. Jim Hsieh makes InGaAsP lasers
emitting continuously at 1.25 micrometers.
Spring 1977: F. F. Roberts reaches mandatory
retirement age of 60; John Midwinter becomes head of fiber-optic
group at British Post Office.
April 1, 1977: AT&T sends first test
signals through field test system in Chicago's Loop district.
April 22, 1977: General Telephone and Electronics
sends first live telephone traffic through fiber optics, 6
Mbit/s, in Long Beach, California.
May 1977: Bell System starts sending live
telephone traffic through fibers at 45 Mbit/s fiber link in
downtown Chicago.
June 1977: British Post Office begins sending
live telephone traffic through fibers in underground ducts
near Martlesham Heath.
June 29, 1977: Bell Labs announces one-million
hours (100-year) extrapolated lifetime for diode lasers.
Summer 1977: F. F. Roberts dies of heart
attack.
October 1977: Valtec "acquires"
Comm/Scope, but Comm/Scope owners soon gain control of Valtec.
Late 1977: AT&T and other telephone
companies settle on 850 nanometer gallium arsenide light sources
and graded-index fibers for commercial systems operating at
45 million bits per second.
1977-1978: Low loss at long wavelengths
renews research interest in single-mode fiber.
May 22-23, 1978: Fiber Optic Con, first
fiber-optic trade show, held in Boston. (This document copyright
Jeff Hecht, jeff@jeffhecht.com)
July 1978: Optical fibers begin carrying
signals to homes in Japan's Hi OVIS project.
August 1978: NTT transmits 32 million bits
per second through a record 53 kilometers of graded-index
fiber at 1.3 micrometers.
September 1978: Richard Epworth reports
modal noise problems in graded-index fibers.
September 1978: France Telecom announces
plans for fiber to the home demonstration in Biarritz, connecting
1500 homes in early 1983.
1978: AT&T, British Post Office and
STL commit to developing a single mode transatlantic fiber
cable, using the new 1.3-micrometer window, to be operational
by 1988. By the end of the year, Bell Labs abandons development
of new coaxial cables for submarine systems.
Late 1978: NTT Ibaraki lab makes single-mode
fiber with record 0.2 decibel per kilometer loss at 1.55 micrometers.
January 1980: AT&T asks Federal Communications
Commission to approve Northeast Corridor system from Boston
to Washington, designed to carry three different wavelengths
through graded-index fiber at 45 Mbit/s.
Winter 1980: Graded-index fiber system
carries video signals for 1980 Winter Olympics in Lake Placid,
New York, at 850 nanometers.
February 1980: STL and British Post Office
lay 9.5 km submarine cable in Loch Fyne, Scotland, including
single-mode and graded-idex fibers
1980: Bell Labs publicly commits to single-mode
1.3-micrometer technology for the first transatlantic fiber-optic
cable, TAT-8.
September 1980: With fiber optics hot on
the stock market, M/A Com buys Valtec for $224 million in
stock.
July 27, 1981: ITT signs consent agreement
to pay Corning and license Corning communication fiber patents.
1981: Commercial second-generation systems
emerge, operating at 1.3 micrometers through graded-index
fibers.
1981: British Telecom transmits 140 million
bits per second through 49 kilometers of single-mode fiber
at 1.3 micrometers, starts shifting to single-mode.
Late 1981: Canada begins trial of fiber
optics to homes in Elie, Manitoba.
1982: British Telecom performs field trial
of single-mode fiber, changes plans abandoning graded-index
in favor of single-mode.
December 1982: MCI leases right of way
to install single-mode fiber from New York to Washington.
The system will operate at 400 million bits per second at
1.3 micrometers. This starts the shift to single-mode fiber
in America.
Late 1983: Stew Miller retires as head
of Bell Labs fiber development group.
January 1, 1984: AT&T undergoes first
divestiture, splitting off its seven regional operating companies,
but keeping long-distance transmission and equipment manufacture.
1984: British Telecom lays first submarine
fiber to carry regular traffic, to the Isle of Wight.
1985: Single-mode fiber spreads across
America to carry long-distance telephone signals at 400 million
bits per second and up.
Summer 1986: All 1500 homes connected to
Biarritz fiber to the home system.
October 30, 1986: First fiber-optic cable
across the English Channel begins service.
1986: AT&T sends 1.7 billion bits per
second through single-mode fibers originally installed to
carry 400 million bits per second.
1987: Dave Payne at University of Southampton
develops erbium-doped fiber amplifier operating at 1.55 micrometers.
1988: Linn Mollenauer of Bell Labs demonstrates
soliton transmission through 4000 kilometers of single-mode
fiber.
December 1988: TAT-8 begins service, first
transatlantic fiber-optic cable, using 1.3-micrometer lasers
and single-mode fiber.
February 1991: Masataka Nakazawa of NTT
reports sending soliton signals through a million kilometers
of fiber.
February 1993: Nakazawa sends soliton signals
180 million kilometers, claiming "soliton transmission
over unlimited distances."
February 1993: Linn Mollenauer of Bell
Labs sends 10 billion bits through 20,000 kilometers of fibers
using a simpler soliton system.
February 1996: Fujitsu, NTT Labs, and Bell
Labs all report sending one trillion bits per second through
single optical fibers in separate experiments using different
techniques.
Copyright: Jeff Hecht
Acknowledgments Thanks to the Alfred P.
Sloan Foundation for research support.
See a short
history of fiber-optics
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