Optical Fiber and Optical Communications Communications
Optical Fiber and Optical Communications Communications
Optical Fiber and Optical Communications Communications
communications
What is optical fiber
• Optical fibers are very fine fibers of glass.
• They consist of a glass core, roughly fifty micrometres in
diameter, surrounded by a glass "optical cladding" giving
an outside diameter of about 120 micrometres.
• They make use of total internal reflection to confine light
within the core of the fiber.
Structure of a Fibre
• The core has a higher refractive index than the cladding.
• Although the cladding does not carry light, it is nevertheless
an essential part of the fibre.
• The cladding is not just a mere covering.
• It keeps the value of the critical angle constant throughout
the whole length of the fibre.
• Optical Fibres are optical waveguides.
• This means that wherever the fibre goes the light, which is
confined to the core of the fibre, also goes.
• So optical fibres can be used to make light bend round
corners
What is optical fiber (continued)
• The basic optical fiber is provided with a buffer coating which
is mainly used for protection during the manufacturing
process.
• This fiber is then enclosed in a central PVC loose tube which
allows the fiber to flex and bend, particularly when going
around corners or when being pulled through conduits.
• Around the loose tube is a braided Kevlar yarn which
absorbs most of the strain put on the fiber during installation.
• Finally, a PVC outer jacket seals the cable and prevents
moisture from entering.
What is optical fiber (continued)
• Basic optical fiber is ideal for most inter-building applications
where extreme ruggedness is not required.
• In addition to the "basic" variety, it is also available for just about
any application, including direct buried, armored, rodent
resistant cable with steel outer jacket.
• Color-coded, multi-fiber cable is also available.
SiO2 Cladding
Ø 125 µm
n ≅ 1.44
n1
n2
Propagation of light in optical fiber
• The angle θA in the Figure is called the Acceptance
Angle.
• Any light entering the fibre at an angle θ < θA will meet the
cladding at an angle greater than θc .
• If light meets the inner surface of the cladding (the core -
cladding interface) at an angle θ greater than or equal to
θc then TotaI Internal Reflection occurs.
• So all the energy in the ray of light is reflected back
into the core and none escapes into the cladding.
•The ray then crosses to the other side of the core and because
the fiber is more or less straight ,the ray will meet the
Cladding on the other side at an angle which again causes
Total Internal Reflection.
• The ray is then reflected back across the core again and the
same thing happens.
• In this way the light zig zags its way along the fiber.
•This means that the light will be transmitted to the end of the
fiber.
How Does fiber optic transmit light
Optical fiber is a wave guide
• Optical fiber is essentially a wave guide.
• It guides electromagnetic wave through it.
• The guiding is done by total internal
reflection, i.e. by suitable choice of
refractive indices of the core and the
cladding.
Source and transmitters
+ –
+ –
Types of Optical Fiber
• there are three types of fiber optic cable
commonly used:
• single mode,
• multimode and
• plastic optical fiber (POF)
Types of Optical Fiber
Optical fibers are the actual media that guides the light
There are three types of fiber optic cable commonly
used
Single Mode
SM
Single-Mode
MM-SI
Multi-Mode
Step Index
MM-GI
Multi-Mode
Graded
Index
1/ 2
r
α
• Multimode:
• Because of the wave nature of light, only certain ray directions can
actually travel down the fibre.
• These are called the "Fibre Modes".
• In a multimode fibre many different modes are supported by the fibre.
• Single mode:
• Because its core is so narrow Single Mode fibre can support only one
mode.
• This is called the "Lowest Order Mode".
• Single mode fibre has some advantages over multimode fibre.
Graded Index Fibre
• Graded Index Fibre has a different core structure from
single mode and multimode fibre.
• Whereas in a step-index fibre the refractive index of the
core is constant throughout the core, in a graded index
fibre the value of the refractive index changes from the
centre of the core onwards.
• In fact it has what we call a Quadratic Profile.
• This means that the refractive index of the core is
proportional to the square root of the distance from the
centre of the fibre.
• Graded index fibre is actually a multimode fibre.
• It can support more than one fibre mode.
• But when we refer to "multimode" fibre we normally mean
"step index multimode".
Fiber classification (1)
MM-SI: Multi Mode - Step Index fiber
FIBER
Performance
+ – Modulation speed
Fiber-coupled power
Light Emitting Diode (LED)
– +
Typical performance data
Power in MM-fiber: 100 µW
Power in SM-fiber: 1 µW
Direct Modulation Bandwidth: 100 MHz
Laser
Typical performance
PIN
APD
Photodiode detector
+ –
Typical performance data
Responsivity: ~1 mA / mW
Bandwidth: 1-20 GHz
Acceptance angle
• Acceptance angle:
• In fiber optics, half the vertex angle of that cone
within which optical power may be coupled into bound
modes of an optical fiber.
• Note 1: The axis of the cone is collinear with the
fiber axis, the vertex of the cone is on the fiber
end-face, and the base of the cone faces the
optical power source.
• Note 2: The acceptance angle is measured with
respect to the fiber axis.
• Note 3: Rays entering an optical fiber at angles
greater than the acceptance angle are coupled into
unbound modes.
Numerical Aperture
Multimode fiber
n0 n2
n0 n2 Critical angle: cos θ c =
n1
θ0 n1
θc Maximum entrance angle:
n1
sin θ 0 , max = sin θ c
n0
Numerical aperture:
2 2
NA ≡ n0 sinθ0,max = n1 sinθc = n1 1− cos2 θc = n1 − n2
if n1 ≈ n2 = n :
2 2
n1 − n2 n1 − n2 ∆n NA = n12 − n2 2 ≈ 2n1 ⋅ ∆n ≈ n1 2∆
∆≡ 2
≈ =
2n1 n1 n1
where n1 + n 2 ≅ 2 n1
NA = 0.1 ⇒ θ 0,max ≈ 6°
n1 2 − n 2 2 n − n2 ∆n
∆ ≡ ≈ 1 =
2 n1 2 n1 n1
Mode intensity profiles
• Optical modes:
d
0 1 2
a 2πa 2 2
Fiber: V= n1 − n2
λ
Single-mode if V ≤ 2.405
• Excitation of modes: πd 2 2
V = n1 − n 2
λ
Number of modes
• Number of modes in step-index fiber
2
1 2πa 2 2
M≈
2 λ
( 2
n1 − n2 = )
V
2
V2 α
M≈
2 α + 2
Dispersion in Fiber Optics
L Ln
⋅ ⋅ ≈≈ ≈ ≈ [ns / km ]
2 n 2 cc cn 2 c 2 nc
2n2c
t
L n2c 2n2c
B⋅L = L = =
2 2 nc
[( Mb / s ) km ]
B⋅L = ∆ T =1 ∆ NA 2
n
2
∆T
B = bit rate NA
Fiber materials
• Silica glass fiber
– starting material: pure silica (SiO2) in the form of
fused quartz (amorphous)
– modification of refractive index by addition of
impurities
• lowering refractive index : B2O3, F
• raising refractive index : P2O5, GeO2
• Polymer optical fiber (POF)
– large core (multimode)
– large refractive index difference between core
and cladding
– easy handling
– relatively high losses
Attenuation
When light travels along the fibre, there is a loss of optical
power, which is called attenuation.
Signal attenuation is defined as the ratio of optical input
power (Pi) to the optical output power (Po)
Pulse Dispersion: spreading of pulses during propagation
Dispersive effects in a single mode fibre are much
smaller than a multimode fibre.
Because, in multimode fibres, different axial speeds of
different transverse modes cause intermodal dispersion
that limits the performance of the fibre.
Due to dispersion, signals degrade over long distances
In single mode, chromatic dispersion occurs because of the
slight variation in the index of the glass with the
wavelength of the light.
Fiber performance
z=0 z=L
Attenuation
z=0 z=L
Dispersion
Optical attenuation in glass
1000
Attenuation (dB/km)
10
20 dB/km (Corning)
1
0.16 dB/km
0.1
1960 1970 1980 1990 2000
Causes of Fiber loss
• Dispersion losses
• Impurity absorptions
• Interface inhomogeneities
PR = (23.6)x10-2 a2λα
Interface Inhomogeneties
• Macrobending and Microbending
• Cabling loss and spooling loss
• Micro bend 1 - 2 dB/km
Bend Losses
Po/Pi = exp(-αbz)
αb is the attenuation coefficient due to bend
and
αb =C1exp(-C2r)
where ‘r’ is the radius of curvature of bend
C1 and C2 are constants
The losses are negligible till r → rcritical (rCT)
rCT ≈ {(2n2λ)/4π(NA)3}
Radiation from Bends
• Optical fibre radiates power to the surrounding
medium on bending.
1. radius of curvature