Six fibers. One array. Zero tolerance for error.
Fluorescence spectroscopy requires absolute precision. Every micron matters – both in how light is delivered and how background signals are suppressed. At FOS Inon Optics GmbH, we developed a linear fiber array consisting of six fibers that achieves the impossible: 600 µm core-to-core spacing, with only 50 µm of physical gap between neighboring fibers.
Technical Overview: Geometry and Design
The array is built from step-index optical fibers with the following specifications:
- Core diameter: 500 µm
- Cladding diameter: 550 µm
- Numerical Aperture (NA): 0.12
- Core-to-core spacing: 600 µm (50 µm inter-fiber gap)
This spacing ensures that each fiber is close enough for compact linear alignment, yet sufficiently separated to avoid cladding contact or unwanted optical coupling. The resulting inter-fiber gap of 50 µm is small enough to maintain a compact footprint, but large enough to guarantee mechanical stability and clean optical isolation.
Optical Considerations
The numerical aperture defines how much light a fiber can accept:

This small acceptance angle ensures low angular dispersion and minimizes stray light between adjacent fibers – a critical factor when the fibers are separated by only 50 µm.
Linear fiber arrays are especially valuable in fluorescence spectroscopy for line-scan excitation/detection and multiplexing. Here, the precision of the core-to-core alignment directly determines spatial resolution and measurement fidelity.
Manufacturing the Array: Precision in Microns
The fiber holes for the six fibers are drilled using an in-house CNC micromachining system capable of:
- Hole-to-hole spacing: exactly 600 µm
- Positioning tolerance: <±2.5 µm
- Depth precision: <1 µm
- Carrier material: synthetic quartz composite (non-fluorescent)
To control thermal drift during machining, the entire process is performed under temperature-stabilized conditions. Final inspection via high-resolution vision metrology guarantees that cumulative alignment errors across the full array remain under ±5 µm.
Eliminating Background: Low-Fluorescence Materials
Fluorescence spectroscopy is highly sensitive to background signals. Even small amounts of autofluorescent adhesive or carrier material can distort results. FOS Inon therefore uses:
- Carrier: quartz-based composite with negligible autofluorescence
- Adhesive: 2-component epoxy with measured background <5 cps/nm (450–650 nm range)
- Cleaning process: acetone + isopropanol rinses, deionized water final wash
- Curing: controlled humidity (<40% RH), followed by a 70 °C thermal cure
This process ensures extremely low background fluorescence – ideal for time-resolved and low-intensity fluorescence detection.
Application Example: Fluorescence Spectroscopy
The array was designed for a customer developing time-resolved fluorescence spectroscopy instrumentation. With linear core-to-core spacing of 600 µm, the array allows for:
- Compact integration into line-scan optical systems
- Efficient channel separation for multiplexing
- Highly reproducible excitation and collection geometries
Conclusion: Six Fibers, Infinite Possibilities
The linear fiber array may appear simple – six fibers in a row – but its precision engineering allows breakthroughs in advanced optical diagnostics. With micron-level control and zero background signal, it sets a new benchmark for fluorescence spectroscopy.

FOS Inon Optics:
Multidisciplinary Expertise
WFOS Inon Optics GmbH combines optical fiber manufacturing, CNC micromachining, materials science, and assembly under one roof. This unique combination enables:
- Full prototyping support for spectroscopy systems
- Tailored fiber geometries and NA values
- Precision-machined linear and custom arrays
- Low-autofluorescence materials screening
