Design and Development of a Battery Powered Electrofusion Welding System for Optical Fiber Microducts

At present, optical fiber microducts are coupled together by mechanical types of joints. Mechanical joints are thick, require a large space, and reduce the installation distance in multi-microduct installation. They may leak or explode in the blown fiber installation process. Mechanical joints are s...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Shazad Akram, Johan Siden, Jiatong Duan, Muhammad Farhan Alam, Kent Bertilsson
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: IEEE 2020-01-01
Series:IEEE Access
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/9201284/
id doaj-a1bd7491556d4e96b4a87fbe3a445a7e
record_format Article
spelling doaj-a1bd7491556d4e96b4a87fbe3a445a7e2021-03-30T03:59:34ZengIEEEIEEE Access2169-35362020-01-01817302417304310.1109/ACCESS.2020.30253559201284Design and Development of a Battery Powered Electrofusion Welding System for Optical Fiber MicroductsShazad Akram0https://orcid.org/0000-0001-8367-2942Johan Siden1https://orcid.org/0000-0003-0232-0465Jiatong Duan2https://orcid.org/0000-0002-1155-4362Muhammad Farhan Alam3https://orcid.org/0000-0002-4506-3326Kent Bertilsson4https://orcid.org/0000-0002-0208-9112Department of Electronics Design, Mid Sweden University, Sundsvall, SwedenDepartment of Electronics Design, Mid Sweden University, Sundsvall, SwedenDepartment of Electronics Design, Mid Sweden University, Sundsvall, SwedenDepartment of Electronics Design, Mid Sweden University, Sundsvall, SwedenDepartment of Electronics Design, Mid Sweden University, Sundsvall, SwedenAt present, optical fiber microducts are coupled together by mechanical types of joints. Mechanical joints are thick, require a large space, and reduce the installation distance in multi-microduct installation. They may leak or explode in the blown fiber installation process. Mechanical joints are subjected to time dependent deterioration under long service times beneath the earth's surface. It may start with a small leakage, followed by damage due to water freezing inside the optical fiber microduct. Optical fiber microducts are made up of high-density polyethylene, which is considered most suitable for thermoelectric welding. For thermoelectric welding of two optical fiber microducts, the welding time should be one second, and should not cause any damage to the inner structure of the microducts that are being coupled. To fulfill these requirements, an LTspice simulation model for the welding system was developed and validated. The developed LTspice model has two parts. The first part models the power input to joule heating wire and the second part models the heat propagation inside the different layers of the optical fiber microduct and surrounding joint by using electro-thermal analogy. In order to validate the simulation results, a battery powered prototype welding system was developed and tested. The prototype welding system consists of a custom-built electrofusion joint and a controller board. A 40 volt 4 ampere-hour Li-Ion battery was used to power the complete system. The power drawn from the battery was controlled by charging and discharging of a capacitor bank, which makes sure that the battery is not overloaded. After successful welding, a pull strength test and an air pressure leakage test were performed to ensure that the welded joints met the requirements set by the mechanical joints. The results show that this new kind of joint and welding system can effectively replace mechanical joints in future optical fiber duct installations.https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/9201284/Optical fiber microducthigh density polyethylenelow density polyethyleneIP68electrofusion weldingelectro-thermal analogy
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Shazad Akram
Johan Siden
Jiatong Duan
Muhammad Farhan Alam
Kent Bertilsson
spellingShingle Shazad Akram
Johan Siden
Jiatong Duan
Muhammad Farhan Alam
Kent Bertilsson
Design and Development of a Battery Powered Electrofusion Welding System for Optical Fiber Microducts
IEEE Access
Optical fiber microduct
high density polyethylene
low density polyethylene
IP68
electrofusion welding
electro-thermal analogy
author_facet Shazad Akram
Johan Siden
Jiatong Duan
Muhammad Farhan Alam
Kent Bertilsson
author_sort Shazad Akram
title Design and Development of a Battery Powered Electrofusion Welding System for Optical Fiber Microducts
title_short Design and Development of a Battery Powered Electrofusion Welding System for Optical Fiber Microducts
title_full Design and Development of a Battery Powered Electrofusion Welding System for Optical Fiber Microducts
title_fullStr Design and Development of a Battery Powered Electrofusion Welding System for Optical Fiber Microducts
title_full_unstemmed Design and Development of a Battery Powered Electrofusion Welding System for Optical Fiber Microducts
title_sort design and development of a battery powered electrofusion welding system for optical fiber microducts
publisher IEEE
series IEEE Access
issn 2169-3536
publishDate 2020-01-01
description At present, optical fiber microducts are coupled together by mechanical types of joints. Mechanical joints are thick, require a large space, and reduce the installation distance in multi-microduct installation. They may leak or explode in the blown fiber installation process. Mechanical joints are subjected to time dependent deterioration under long service times beneath the earth's surface. It may start with a small leakage, followed by damage due to water freezing inside the optical fiber microduct. Optical fiber microducts are made up of high-density polyethylene, which is considered most suitable for thermoelectric welding. For thermoelectric welding of two optical fiber microducts, the welding time should be one second, and should not cause any damage to the inner structure of the microducts that are being coupled. To fulfill these requirements, an LTspice simulation model for the welding system was developed and validated. The developed LTspice model has two parts. The first part models the power input to joule heating wire and the second part models the heat propagation inside the different layers of the optical fiber microduct and surrounding joint by using electro-thermal analogy. In order to validate the simulation results, a battery powered prototype welding system was developed and tested. The prototype welding system consists of a custom-built electrofusion joint and a controller board. A 40 volt 4 ampere-hour Li-Ion battery was used to power the complete system. The power drawn from the battery was controlled by charging and discharging of a capacitor bank, which makes sure that the battery is not overloaded. After successful welding, a pull strength test and an air pressure leakage test were performed to ensure that the welded joints met the requirements set by the mechanical joints. The results show that this new kind of joint and welding system can effectively replace mechanical joints in future optical fiber duct installations.
topic Optical fiber microduct
high density polyethylene
low density polyethylene
IP68
electrofusion welding
electro-thermal analogy
url https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/9201284/
work_keys_str_mv AT shazadakram designanddevelopmentofabatterypoweredelectrofusionweldingsystemforopticalfibermicroducts
AT johansiden designanddevelopmentofabatterypoweredelectrofusionweldingsystemforopticalfibermicroducts
AT jiatongduan designanddevelopmentofabatterypoweredelectrofusionweldingsystemforopticalfibermicroducts
AT muhammadfarhanalam designanddevelopmentofabatterypoweredelectrofusionweldingsystemforopticalfibermicroducts
AT kentbertilsson designanddevelopmentofabatterypoweredelectrofusionweldingsystemforopticalfibermicroducts
_version_ 1724182545915969536