Thursday, 21 August 2025

The life of Professor William Alexander Gambling (1926 – 2021) – Optoelectronics pioneer

Summary

William Alexander (Alec) Gambling, after graduating from Bristol University, entered Liverpool University in 1950, where he studied for a PhD and where he was later appointed as a lecturer in electrical power engineering.  A research fellowship at the University of British Columbia followed.  He returned to the UK in 1957 to a lectureship in electronics at Southampton University.  Alec Gambling’s research work to this point had been entirely devoted to the study of hydrogen arc plasmas, but in Southampton he turned to the study of masers and lasers and their use as a carrier source in communications.  In 1964, Alec Gambling suggested the use of optical fibres as a conducting medium for light signals.  Much research on the composition and manufacture of glass fibres with low signal attenuation followed.  Alec’s team grew rapidly in size and prominence owing to the technological developments it made in optical communications, not only with the conducting medium but also optical devices for amplifying and manipulating light signals.  Alec Gambling’s role as a leader for his diverse and ever-changing research group was a significant success factor.  In 1989, the team was incorporated within the newly formed Optoelectronics Research Centre at Southampton University.  Major advances made in Southampton included the invention of the erbium-doped fibre amplifier and work on fibre lasers, photonic crystals, and fibre gratings.  This institution is still today one of the foremost centres for optoelectronic research.  It owes much to the pioneering work and exemplary leadership of Alec Gambling.  In retirement he lived in Spain, where he died in 2021.

 

Early life

William Alexander (Alec) Gambling was born in Port Talbot, Glamorganshire on 11 October 1926, the son of George Alexander Gambling (1889−1975), sometime master tailor, and his wife, Muriel (née Bray) (1904−1977).  ‘Gambling’ is not a Welsh name, Alec’s grandfather having arrived in South Wales in about 1875 from Devonport.

In the aftermath of World War I, in which he served, George Alexander Gambling found that economic circumstances in South Wales were difficult, with a lack of jobs and depression in the coal and steel industries.  This caused him, of necessity, to abandon his trade and, with his wife, take any available employment to provide a household income.  Thus, Alec Gambling was born and raised in straitened financial circumstances, which were later brought home to him directly when he was mocked by other children for having to wear suitably altered hand-me-downs from his father.  This humiliation awakened in the young Alec a desire to succeed both at school and in life.

Alec Gambling’s place of primary education was the Trefelin School in Port Talbot, from where he took the Glamorgan County intermediate and secondary school entrance examination, which he passed and entered the Port Talbot County School, a selective grammar school, in 1938.  He was a successful pupil, but before taking the Higher Certificate examination, out of a feeling of responsibility to contribute to the family’s finances, he accepted a job working with the Forestry Commission.  When the Higher results were announced in 1944 he had performed well, gaining passes in Pure and Applied Mathematics, Physics (with distinction) and Chemistry.  Also, in May 1944, Alec Gambling sat the entrance scholarship examination at University College Aberystwyth, in which he was successful, being awarded the Mold Eisteddfod Scholarship.  Although Alec was tempted to continue with his employment, he decided instead to proceed to university, believing that it was through education that he would fulfil his potential in life.

 

University of Bristol and National Service

In late 1944, at the age of 18, Alec Gambling entered the University of Bristol, on the east side of the Severn Estuary, to study electrical engineering, possibly preferring this institution over a university college in his country of birth owing to its prestige as a centre of engineering excellence.  University gave Alec the opportunity not only to explore an academic subject in depth but also to indulge his typically Welsh passion for playing rugby.  But again, as at grammar school, his sense of responsibility kicked in and he gave up sport to concentrate on his academic work.  He graduated with first class honours in Electrical Engineering in 1947, garnering both the Alfred Fry Prize (jointly) and the Institution of Electrical Engineers (Southern Centre) Prize along the way.

Bristol University also led to Alec meeting his future wife, Margaret Pooley, who was studying botany there.  She hailed from Dorset, where her family kept chickens, ducks and rabbits, and grew their own vegetables, a handy attribute in the immediate aftermath of World War II.  Alec spent many holidays at the Pooley home.

After graduation in 1947, Alec was invited to remain in the Bristol Engineering Department.  He was also offered employment on a research project at the University of Cambridge, but this latter prospect vanished when funding was suddenly withdrawn.  The duty of National Service then called, and, though this obligation could have been postponed, Alec decided to undertake his service immediately.  After basic training at Maindy Barracks, Cardiff, where he passed out top of his draft, he joined the Royal Electrical and Mechanical Engineers, achieving the rank of staff sergeant.

 

University of Liverpool

In 1950, Alec Gambling entered the University of Liverpool as a research student and two years later he was appointed as a lecturer in electrical power engineering.  Alec and Margaret were married in 1954.  She had remained at Bristol for a further year to undertake teacher training, and in 1952 was appointed to teach biology (and hockey) at Waterloo Park School, Liverpool.  Alec remained at the University of Liverpool until 1955, researching hydrogen arc plasmas, publishing his first scientific papers and earning a PhD. His thesis was entitled, ‘An investigation of the high-pressure glow discharge’.  Alec Gambling’s daughter, Alison, has relayed a significant story from his time on Merseyside.  ‘Alec recalled that one of the staff in the laboratory was often quiet, taciturn, unsmiling, never joining in the younger chaps’ conversation, and appearing aloof and unfriendly.  Puzzled, Alec made a point of trying to make friends.  Asking him why he never seemed to smile, the reply came back:  ‘Young man, after you have seen what I have seen, you no longer can smile.’  The co-worker was Jewish, from Poland.’  It was experiences such as this that moulded Alec Gambling’s internationalist outlook, which will emerge throughout this account of his life.

 

University of British Columbia

After five years at the University of Liverpool, Alec Gambling saw an advertisement for a National Research Council fellowship at the University of British Columbia, in the Canadian northwest.  He applied for and was appointed to this position.  In Canada he continued his research on electric arc discharges.

Towards the end of his two-year stint in North America, Alec Gambling began to think about his future direction in life and investigated job opportunities with major industrial companies in the USA, including Bell Telephone Laboratories, the Radio Corporation of America (RCA) and Thomas A. Edison Industries, which resulted in several offers of employment.  Significantly, he also applied for, and was offered, a lectureship in electronics at the University of Southampton.  The cable from Professor Eric Zeppler confirming the available position, which is still in the possession of the Gambling family, reads, ‘Offer appointment lecturer thirteen hundred please wire acceptance’.  Those were the days when long distance communications were sent as electrical pulses, in Morse Code, along copper wires.  Extreme brevity was an essential feature of such messages.  This was a crucial moment in Alec Gambling’s life. Should he continue with academic research, or should he take the commercial dollar?  It was not an easy decision for Alec, then aged 31, married with a small child and standing on the threshold of a major career bifurcation, as he explained to Edison: ‘After much deliberation I have decided to continue in University-type research and have accepted a post at the University of Southampton.’  As will be seen, Alec’s verdict would have profound consequences for the future development of telecommunications.

 

University of Southampton

In October 1957, Alec Gambling, with his wife, Margaret, and their infant son, who had been born in Canada, arrived in Southampton on the Cunard liner RMS Saxonia from Montreal, to take on the role of lecturer in the Department of Electronics at the University of Southampton.  This was one of the first such university departments in the world, having been established in 1947 by Professor Eric Zeppler, a Jewish refugee, and this significant event even predated Southampton’s achievement of full university status in 1952. 

At Southampton, Alec Gambling experienced some difficulty in securing funding for research on gas discharges, the subject that had occupied his attention since 1950.  In marked contrast, funding was available for work on microwave electronics, and his research interests turned to masers (invented 1953) and, later, to lasers (invented 1960), devices that use stimulated emission of radiation to amplify microwaves and light respectively.  This led to the investigation by Alec Gambling of suitable media for conducting light and his work on optical fibres of various compositions. He later described his change of interests in the following terms.

“A question which the author has frequently been asked is how the idea of taking up research on optical fibres arose in the first place and whether it was an accidental quirk of fate.  The truth is rather less romantic.  After eight years investigating hydrogen arc plasmas at the Universities of Liverpool and British Columbia, I came to Southampton (and this really was a fortuitous accident but that is another story) and became interested in active devices for pushing the frontiers of electronic communication to even higher frequencies.  A study of noise in the (then) conventional backward-wave electron beam oscillator led on to the new semiconductor diode parametric, and tunnel diode, oscillators.  I also took an active interest in the construction of the first ammonia maser oscillator in a parallel project in the Department under D.J.E. Ingram (now Vice-Chancellor at the University of Kent). On the departure of Dr. Ingram to a chair at Keele I collaborated with Dr. T.H. Wilmshurst on the use of the ammonia maser as a 24 GHz amplifier for electron spin resonance spectroscopy. Thus began a research programme on quantum electronic devices which ultimately led to a separate research group being formed”.

 

The Laser Research Group becomes the Optical Fibre Group

The invention of the laser caused much excitement for Alec Gambling because of its potential use as a carrier source in communications.  Visible light, being of shorter wavelength than microwave radiation, increased the carrier frequency and bandwidth of a conducting medium.  A fortuitous donation of £3750 allowed the employment of a research fellow, Dr Bob Smith, in 1961 to collaborate with Alec Gambling on the development of lasers suitable for use in communications, and this was quickly achieved using a ruby rod as the gain medium, producing pulses of coherent red light of 694.3 nm wavelength.  The grouping known as the Laser Research Group, led by Alec Gambling, emerged in the Department of Electronics in 1961.

In 1963, Eric Zeppler, the founder of the Department of Electronics at the University of Southampton, retired and Alec Gambling and Dr Geoff Sims were the two internal candidates in the frame to succeed Zeppler in the chair of electronics and as head of department.  Sims was chosen, and, though he and Gambling remained on cordial and mutually respectful terms, the decision seems to have unsettled Alec Gambling and he considered looking for promotion to a chair elsewhere, though in the end he decided to remain in Southampton.  In 1964 a second chair of electronics was created by his employer and this time Alec Gambling was successful.

In the mid-1960s, a second issue concerned Alec Gambling in his pursuit of using light for transmitting messages.  This was the identification of a suitable transmission medium.  It quickly became clear that line-of-sight passage of a collimated light beam through the atmosphere would be of limited utility owing to local variations in atmospheric conditions, and such a system would likely be restricted to communication over distances of a few kilometres at most.  The next thought was to protect the beam from degradation by confining it in a protective pipe, but to limit scattering and absorption at the surface of the pipe it would have to be of large diameter and, as far as possible, devoid of curves.  Other ideas for improving on the protective pipe idea were to line the pipe with a highly reflective material to reduce absorption losses, to use evacuated tubes, and to incorporate weakly converging lenses to concentrate the light beam.  However, to Alec Gambling and his colleagues such refinements to the tubular waveguide principle were impractical for the design of a cost effective medium for transmitting messages over long distances, and the Southampton group therefore moved in a different direction.

An optical fibre is a cylindrical, dielectric waveguide that transmits light along its axis through the process of total internal reflection.  At that stage in the early 1960s Alec Gambling considered the use of glass fibres as the conducting medium.  Unfortunately, the performance of then state-of-the-art fibres from the point of view of light transmission was rather poor as they would significantly attenuate the light over only a few metres.  Furthermore, the fibres were rather fragile in use.  Cladded glass fibres, consisting of a transmitting core surrounded by a material of lower refractive index, were already in use for the bundles of fibres employed in medical endoscopes.  This cladding protected the core from degradation by exposure to the atmosphere and ensured the maintenance of the evanescent field at the reflecting surface, but such fibres also suffered rapid attenuation of passing light and were unsuitable for telecommunications applications.  It was the work of Charles Kao (subsequently Sir Charles Kao, FRS, FRSE) in 1966 that first demonstrated that silica glass might be a suitable carrier medium for photons and proposed the use of glass fibres for communications.

By 1966, Alec Gambling, keen to receive recognition for his published research work, sought the advice of a member of the Bristol University professoriate on his prospects for securing the award of the degree of DSc from his alma mater.  He received the caution that Bristol’s standards were very high, but, undaunted, he pressed on with his submission.  The higher doctorate was awarded.  In the same year, the work of Alec Gambling and his collaborators on optical telecommunications had aroused sufficient attention for the University of Southampton to dignify Alec and his collaborators with the title ‘The Optical Fibre Group’ (OFG) within the Electronics Department, though he said of this period that ‘there was no hint of all the excitement to come’.  Alec Gambling spent the academic year 1966−1967 on sabbatical leave at the University of Colorado and so was absent from the OFG for the early phase of its work, which was theoretical.

With a measure of optimism, later described by Gambling as ‘wild in the extreme’, he discussed the potential of glass fibres for use in telecommunications as early as 1964 at the British Association for the Advancement of Science annual meeting, held that year in Southampton.  Eventually, in 1966, Alec Gambling obtained a government research contract to work with the Signals Research and Development Establishment, based in Christchurch, Dorset, UK, with the aim of creating a cheap, low bandwidth, optical fibre communications system suitable for distances of several kilometres.  By that year it had been shown that silica (silicon dioxide)-based glass could be prepared to have sufficiently low optical loss to be employed as a transmission medium for visible light.  Peter Laybourn, FRSE, now Professor Emeritus of Electronic Engineering, Glasgow University, was employed to pursue the work on silica fibres, while electronic components of the system were investigated in Christchurch, though the experimental studies could not begin until finance became available in 1968.

The first problem to be overcome in this new field of research was that no-one in the Electronics Department had any knowledge about, nor experience of, fabricating glass fibres.  In an attempt to rectify this deficiency, Alec Gambling approached a major glass company in the UK to ask for help and advice.  Unobligingly, it provided neither, leaving Alec and his colleagues entirely dependent on their general scientific wit and intuition.  Some years later, Alec wrote, ‘Whilst in the University group there was considerable experience in microwave and laser techniques no-one had any knowledge of glass, nor the faintest idea of how to make fibres.’  Their approach, therefore, was to control and measure all parameters of the fabrication process precisely to gain an understanding of which factors were important.

The design and construction of the apparatus for controlling the conditions under which a fibre was drawn from a heated billet of glass was entrusted to a new arrival in the team, PhD student David (later Sir David) Payne, FRS, who was supervised by Alec Gambling.  Payne’s machine had a vertical layout with two upright bars to which all components were clamped, the whole structure being stable and vibration-free.  The billet of glass to be melted and drawn into a fibre was lowered at a controlled rate through a heating coil, where it softened and was drawn out into a fibre; this was pulled at a controlled rate to achieve the desired fibre diameter and fed onto a slowly rotating aluminium drum which also traversed back and forth, allowing the fibre to accumulate as a series of monolayers.  Temperature control was better than 0.1°C up to 1200°C and drawing speed accurate to 0.1%.  This machine was so successful that it remained in constant use until it was lost in a fire in 2005.  Such was its significance that it had been promised, on retirement, to the Science Museum in London.

With the means available to draw fibres of constant characteristics, the next aim was to examine production parameters to generate fibres that had reduced signal attenuation.  Equipment to measure loss during transmission and by scattering in bulk glasses was set up by another PhD student under Alec Gambling’s supervision, John Dakin (now Emeritus Professor at the Optoelectronics Research Centre, University of Southampton).  The scattering was shown to be elastic (Rayleigh) in nature in high-quality, commercially available, optical glasses.  These measurements were then transferred to fibres drawn on Payne’s drawing tower, early fibres being derived from commercially available Schott F7 glass rods encased with Chance Pilkington ME1 glass tubing.  These fibres had an attenuation of about 1000 dB km−1, but this rate of loss was progressively reduced through experimentation to about 150 dB km−1, about the same rate as in the starting, bulk glass.  Another line of enquiry was directed at the quantity of information (bandwidth) that these multi-mode fibres could transmit.  This was expected to be of the order of 10−20 MHz over 1 km, but that value was soon increased to 1 GHz over the same distance.

It is important to emphasize at this stage that Alec Gambling was principally a theoretician and team leader, rather than a laboratory-based experimentalist, and that the remarkable advances being made by the Southampton OFG depended greatly upon this combination of an insightful, politically well connected leader and multiple capable laboratory workers (many from overseas), together with suitable facilities and sufficient financial resources.  This critical mass of personnel interacted cooperatively so that, although most of the research students were formally supervised by Alec Gambling, in practice individuals were receiving guidance simultaneously from other team members.  Alec and Margaret Gambling also played a vital social role in melding together this diverse group of researchers to form a coherent team through regular social evenings held at their home.  In this way many life-long friendships were created.  Their daughter, Alison, recently commented on her memory of family life with the team.

“During the early days of the OFG there was the most wonderful feeling of camaraderie and teamwork.  Difficulties were openly discussed over coffees, and opinions on solutions openly shared.  Alec was always approachable and on hand with wise counsel.  When in the office it seemed that he worked tirelessly both to hold the group together and importantly, to raise the funding required to take forward new ideas.  He and Margaret always sought to make overseas students and researchers welcome, regularly inviting them and their families to their home or on outings, to foster a keen sense of belonging.  Many of the students went on to have incredibly successful careers either as entrepreneurs or as experts in Optoelectronics”.

About the end of 1970, the OFG, frustrated by the practical limitations of available commercial glasses, began to collaborate with Harold Rawson, Professor of Glass Technology at the University of Sheffield. Rawson’s group manufactured glass preforms from a double-layered melt, which were then drawn into fibres in Southampton, resulting in a fibre with reduced signal attenuation of about 50 dB km−1 and a numerical aperture of 0.4.  However, Rawson’s group was only able to provide limited quantities of experimental glass.  An alternative configuration of hollow glass fibres filled with hexachlorobutadiene, a stable but toxic liquid, achieved a transmission loss of only 10 dB km−1. Although impractical for commercial use, such a fibre was employed to carry the signal over 1 km for a live colour TV broadcast demonstration by the BBC in 1973, the first such transmission using an optical fibre.


Early members of the Optical Fibre Group (L-R: Alec Gambling, Peter Laybourn, David Payne, John Dakin, Hiro Matsumura and Harish Sunak

The 1960s had seen the Southampton OFG operating in a limited market with few other competing research teams, but the following decade was quite different, owing to the widespread recognition of the potential of glass fibres for deployment in telecommunications.  These groups were all seeking the holy grail of a cheap and efficient technique for manufacturing silica fibres with good transmission characteristics.  Fibres had been drawn elsewhere consisting of a silica core coated with a borosilicate glass layer, and this technique was repeated and modified in Southampton.  In 1974 there was a major breakthrough involving a homogeneous vapour-phase reaction inside a substrate tube, which resulted in fine particles of glass being deposited on the inner surface; these particles were then incorporated into a fused clear glass layer and the tube then collapsed to a solid rod. The new core material consisted of phosphosilicate glass with a pure silica cladding.  The technique was cheap, and the fibre had excellent transmission loss and scatter characteristics.  This chemical vapour deposition technique quickly became the method of choice for optical fibre manufacture throughout the world.  It was from that time that optical fibres started to be deployed in telecommunications.

Early research work at Southampton had concentrated on producing multi-mode fibres, whereas groups elsewhere were working towards single-mode transmission.  Single-mode fibres, with a core only about 10 μm in diameter, restrict transmission to one transverse mode, but as a result they were considered difficult to join.  This caused other groups to turn their attention from single- to multi-mode fibres.  But multi-mode fibres proved to have their Achilles’ heel too: with a larger core they support multiple transverse modes, leading to intermodal dispersion limiting transmission bandwidth, and several techniques were examined to overcome this issue.  At Southampton a new method - near-field scanning -  was devised to measure the variation in core refractive index in multi-mode fibres.  In consequence there was a realisation that leaky modes also caused significant problems for the employment of multi-mode fibres, which would be expensive to engineer out of fibres.  In the mid-1970s, the Southampton group therefore turned its attention to single-mode fibres, which were both easier and cheaper to manufacture; less material had to be deposited, and slight variations in refractive index along the fibre were of lesser significance than with the multi-mode alternative.  The OFG was the only major research team at the time to make that switch of emphasis.

Initial single-mode fibres were manufactured using the Modified Chemical Vapour Deposition (MCVD) technique, by which doped silica particles, produced by the oxidation of silicon tetrachloride and additives inside a substrate tube, were deposited on the inner surface, followed by sintering and drawing into the final, solid fibre.  Losses induced by bends in the fibre were found to be acceptable, and the problem of achieving mechanical alignment for jointing also turned out to be practicable.  Dispersion of the light pulse passing through these single-mode fibres was examined and found to have two main causes: material dispersion, owing to change in index with wavelength; and waveguide dispersion, which is related to the geometry of the fibre core and local cladding.  Wavelength dispersion was close to that of pure bulk silica when evaluated with a light pulse produced by a gallium arsenide laser emitting light at a wavelength of 840 nm.  The results produced by the OFG team showed that material dispersion would fall to zero if light of 1300 nm wavelength was employed.  Also, at this longer wavelength, attenuation was reduced from 2 to 0.4 dB km−1.  This was a significant finding and led to the search for light sources operating at the longer wavelength.  Another significant finding was that the dispersion components (material, mode and profile) could be made to add to zero at a chosen wavelength between 1300 and 2000 nm.  Further, attenuation is minimal at a wavelength of 1550, being 0.2 dB km−1. Such single-mode fibres can transmit light of this wavelength over distances of 200 km, and the rate of transmission is only limited by the speed with which the light source can be modulated.

By the mid-1970s, the growing status of the OFG and especially its leader, Alec Gambling, received major recognition when he was approached to take the chair of engineering at Oxford University.  Although he gave serious consideration to this opportunity, Alec Gambling decided to stay at Southampton for both family and professional reasons.  The optical fibre research was making rapid progress, he had an able and enthusiastic team of researchers to pursue his ideas, and he had funding and facilities in which this work could continue.  He decided not to risk losing momentum.

Alec was also a director of York Ventures and Special Optical Products Ltd, a spin-out company from the OFG, from 1980 to 1997.

 

The origin of the Optoelectronics Research Centre

It was perhaps inevitable that the OFG, the creation of Alec Gambling, with the assistance of his assembled team of colleagues, visitors and research students would generate technically and commercially significant discoveries.  No development was more important than the erbium-doped fibre amplifier (EDFA) invented by members of the OFG, first details of which were published by Mears and colleagues in1986 and more specifically at the beginning of 1987 by Mears and colleagues. Motivated by early reports from Southampton, Emmanuel Desurvire, then a member of the technical staff at AT&T’s Bell Laboratories, also initiated research on the EDFA and published his work in late 1987.  Optical amplification of a light signal without involving conversion to an electrical signal was not a new concept in the mid-1980s. Erbium, a Rare Earth metal, is incorporated in optical fibres usually as the Er3+ ion; when pumped with a laser to a higher level of excitement from the ground state, emission of light at a different wavelength occurs when stimulated by a transmitted light signal, resulting in its amplification.  In this way optical signals can be passed many thousands of miles along optical fibres, simply by the incorporation of EDFAs periodically, typically every 80−100 km.  The significance of this invention for telecommunications technology would be hard to exaggerate.


Alec Gambling photographed with a fibre preform glass deposition lathe

The rapid development of optoelectronic technologies during the 1980s led to government action in the UK to bolster national pre-eminence in this area.  The Science and Engineering Research Council (SERC) decided to set up interdisciplinary research centres, and one was established concentrating on optoelectronic technologies, principally involving the University of Southampton and University College London, but with collaboration involving the universities of Oxford, Liverpool, Sussex and Kent.  The centre was named the Optoelectronics Research Centre (ORC) and it was formally established in October 1989 with a grant of £11.5 million to cover the first six years of its operations. Alec Gambling was instrumental in negotiating the funding for this new development and he was nominated as the founding director of this major research centre, assisted by three deputy directors, each with a different area of responsibility. They were Professor David Hanna, FRS, University of Southampton (Optical Physics), Professor David Payne, FRS, University of Southampton (Optical Technology) and Professor John Midwinter, FRS, University College, London (Optical Systems).

The pre-eminence established by the Southampton OFG was reflected in the institutional affiliations of the members of the directorate.  Southampton University also, wisely, supplemented the SERC finance by making a major contribution of seconded staff (who were largely free of teaching duties), facilities and accommodation from its own resources.  It also gave the centre a special status by placing it outside the faculty structure, with direct access to the vice-chancellor.  Over the next few years, the ORC evolved from being an interdisciplinary research centre with multi-institutional participation to becoming essentially a Southampton initiative.

Optoelectronic research is costly and the practical consequence of this truth was that, even before the formation of the ORC, Alec Gambling spent much of his time liaising with funding bodies to ensure that his colleagues had the wherewithal to pursue their ideas.  He was particularly successful in attracting commercial funding, with major financial input coming from industrial sponsors, such as British Telecom (BT) and Pirelli.  As examples, the latter firm provided the finance that allowed David Payne to continue as a research student and to complete his PhD.  Subsequently Pirelli funded a readership for Payne and thereafter for Simon Poole and Richard Laming in the ORC (Optoelectronics Research Centre, Southampton University). BT sponsored Alec Gambling’s chair between 1980 and 1989.

Alec Gambling had been appointed as director of the ORC on its inception in 1989.  He remained in that role until 1995, when he retired.  Between 1986, when the EDFA was invented at Southampton, and 1995 significant advances were made in several areas of optoelectronic technology.  During the period of Alec’s tenure, work on fibre lasers by Mears and colleagues in 1985, photonic crystal fibres by Birks and colleagues in 1995, and Knight and colleagues in 1996, and fibre gratings by Russell and colleagues in 1993, and Loh and colleagues in 1996, was extensively pursued within the ORC, ultimately leading to notable commercial successes.

In addition, various other research areas were pursued, including novel soft glasses, such as chalcogenide fibres, low phonon-energy glasses for efficient 1.3 μm optical fibre amplifiers by Hewak in 1993, fibre sensing by Hartog and colleagues in 1985, birefringent optical fibres for sensors, solitons by Richardson and colleagues in 1991, and poled, enhanced, non-linearity fibres by Kazansky and colleagues in 1994.

Over his working life, Alec Gambling published more than 250 articles in major scientific journals, or in the proceedings of significant conferences. By the 1970s Alec Gambling had assumed the mantle of doyen of the optoelectronics community, certainly in Britain and Europe and to some extent also in the Far East. As early as 1964 he had speculated on the use of glass fibres for the transmission of signals, and increasingly, from the 1970s to the end of the century, he was a regular contributor of invited talks at conferences, review papers and the likes, summarizing the current situation and speculating on future directions of research and deployment of optical communications. Alec also had concern for the education of engineers, especially with regard to the new optoelectronic technologies. He was a member of the Engineering Industries Training Board between 1985 and 1988 and a member of the National Advisory Body for Local Authority Higher Education: Engineering Working Group between 1982 and 1984.


Alec Gambling pictured in his ORC office at Southampton University

 

After the Optoelectronics Research Centre

Retirement did not signal the retreat of Alec Gambling from the forefront of optoelectronic technology research.  Rather, it gave new impetus to both his curiosity and his internationalist leanings.  He was no longer tied to wide responsibilities within the ORC and externally in its relationships with government, industry and the funding bodies, and he could indulge his own penchant for travel and international collaboration.  Between 1996 and 2001 he took the position of Royal Society Kan Tong Po Visiting Professor and member of the International Advisory Centre at the City University of Hong Kong, where he collaborated with Dr Y. T. Chow, who had visited the ORC, in creating a new optoelectronics research centre.  From this base he was able to take up a number of other honorary positions, including honorary professor at the Beijing University of Posts and Telecommunications, and at Shanghai, Shandung and Huazhung universities, all in the People’s Republic of China.  Alec Gambling continued to make invited conference presentations, particularly in China, but also in Australia, India and the UK.  Further, he became involved in laboratory research again, and several papers and patent applications were produced with Chinese collaborators.  Between 1998 and 2001 Alec Gambling was director of the Optoelectronics Research Centre at the City University of Hong Kong.

In 2001, Alec Gambling retired from his post as Director of the Optoelectronics Research Centre at the City University of Hong Kong and went to live in retirement in Spain, but was soon tempted back to China, working from Shanghai, to become Director of R&D Optoelectronics with LTK Industries Ltd, a post he occupied until 2005.  During that period Alec considered taking up residence in Hong Kong, but was unsuccessful in his application.  The Gamblings then returned to Spain to resume their retirement.



 

A picture of Alec Gambling at dinner in Hong Kong, May 2006 with (front row, L-R) Pak L. Chu, Allan W. Snyder and Charles Kao and standing (L-R) Anson Yeung, K.S. Chiang and H.P. Chan

 

Leadership and professional roles

It has already been pointed out that one of the most important roles played by Alec Gambling in the development of the OFG, and subsequently the ORC, was as a leader, negotiator and policy-setter.  Within the University of Southampton he was appointed head of the Department of Electronics between 1974 and 1979, a role he had resisted for some years while he developed his research group.  Subsequently, he also served as Dean of the Faculty of Engineering and Applied Science.  Even before he undertook these onerous internal appointments, he had begun to assume a leadership role in the professional institutions and on government bodies, too numerous to list in total.  A few key roles were: Member of the Technology Sub-Committee, University Grants Committee, between 1973 and 1983; Member of the Management Committee, UK Joint Optoelectronics Research Scheme (DTI/SERC), between 1982 and 1987; Chairman of the National Optoelectronics Committee (DTI/SERC), between 1988 and 1991; Member of the Cabinet Office Optoelectronics Mission to Japan; Member of the Devices Committee (DTI/SERC), from 1988 to 1991; Member of the UK Industry Optoelectronics Action Group, between 1988 and 1992; Member of the Council of the Royal Academy of Engineering, from 1989 to 1992.

 

Family life and personality

Alec Gambling and Margaret Pooley had three children together. He married his second wife, Coleen O’Neil, in 1994 and she travelled to China with him. On full retirement in 2005, the couple went to live at Benidorm, in the region of Valencia.

Alec Gambling sometimes came across as a quiet man, but those who knew him well understood that he only spoke when he had something significant to contribute.  He abhorred empty comment.  A strong believer in international collaboration, Alec hoped that the dramatic developments in telecommunications, to which he had made a major contribution, would lead to better understanding between nations and improve humankind.  Alec had a dry wit and loved a wry joke.  In retirement, looking back on his achievements, he was quietly proud that a grammar school boy from a modest social background in Port Talbot could be elected FRS, awarded the Faraday Medal, and made a Freeman of the City of London. Although he was always keenly aware of the practical applications of optoelectronic discoveries, commercial life never appealed to him as much as the fascination he derived from operating near the forefront of research in his chosen subject.

William Alexander Gambling died at Benidorm in 2021, having reached the age of 94.

 

Don Fox and Richard Laming

20250602

donaldpfox@gmail.com 

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