Optical Fiber Connections Joints and Couplers
Optical Fiber Connections Joints and Couplers
Optical Fiber Connections Joints and Couplers
These losses depends upon the fiber type , core diameter and
the distribution of the optical power.
End separation Loss
Fiber Splice
is to be achieved.
Fusion Splice
Melts the fibers together to form a
continuous fiber
The source of heat is usually an
electric arc, but can also be a laser, or a
gas flame, or a tungsten filament
through which current is passed.
Fusion Splice Principles
If cost is the issue, we've given you the clues to make a choice:
fusion is expensive equipment and cheap splices, while
mechanical is cheap equipment and expensive splices. So if you
make a lot of splices (like thousands in an big telco or CATV
network) use fusion splices. If you need just a few, use
mechanical splices. Fusion splices give very low back reflections
and are preferred for singlemode high speed digital or CATV
networks. However, they don't work too well on multimode
splices, so mechanical splices are preferred for MM, unless it is
an underwater or aerial application, where the greater reliability
of the fusion splice is preferred.