Intro
Intro
Wide bandwidth
2*1012 Hz to 37*1012 Hz
Low losses
1dB/km
Immune to cross talk
non conductors,no magnetic field
Intereference immune
no conductive or radiative interference
Light weight
Material used is glass and plastic,lesser than copper and aluminium
Small size
Diameter of OFC is smaller than copper
More strength
Stronger and rugged
Security
Impossible to tap
Long distance transmission
Less attenuation ,long distance transmission
Enviornment immune
Not affected by corrosive liquids or gases
Safe and easy installation
No shock hazard
Long term
Quantum Theory:
Light consists of
small particles (photons)
Wave Theory:
Light travels as a
transverse electromagnetic wave
Types of Fiber
Modes :
Signal Degradation in
Optical Fibers
Attenuation
Attenuation means loss of light energy as the
light pulse travels from one end of the cable to
the other.
It is also called as signal loss or fiber loss.
It also decides the the number of repeaters
required between transmitter and receiver.
Attenuation is directly proportional to the length
of the cable.
Z= l
Z=0
P(0) mW
P (l ) P (0)e
P( z ) P(0)e
p l
mw
p z
P (0)
10
[dB/km]
log
4.343 p [1 / km]
l
P (l )
Attenuation:
Intrinsic Absorption:
Caused by the interaction with one or more
components of the glass
Occurs when photon interacts with an electron in the
valence band & excites it to a higher energy level
near the UV region.
Extrinsic Absorption:
Also called impurity absorption.
Results from the presence of transition metal ions like
iron, chromium, cobalt, copper & from OH ions i.e.
from water.
Scattering Losses
It occurs due to microscopic variations in the material density,
compositional fluctuations, structural in homogeneities and
manufacturing defects.
Linear Scattering
i) Linear Scattering
a)
Unequal distribution of
molecular densities or
atomic densities leads to
Rayleigh Scattering losses
b) SRS Scattering:
Stimulated Raman Scattering is similar to SBS except
that high frequency optical phonon rather than
acoustic phonon is generated in scattering processes.
Pb =5.9x10-2d2 dB watts
Phonon:
Collective excitation in a periodic arrangement of atoms
or molecules in solid.
Microbending Loss
Microbending Loss:
microscopic bends of the fiber
axis that can arise when the fibers
are incorporated into cables.
The power is dissipated through
the microbended fiber, because of
the repetitive coupling of energy
between guided modes & the
leaky or radiation modes in the
fiber.
Dispersion
Dispersion in fiber optics results from the fact that in multimode
propagation, the signal travels faster in some modes than it would in
others
Single-mode fibers are relatively free from dispersion except for
intramodal dispersion
Graded-index fibers reduce dispersion by taking advantage of
higher-order modes
One form of intramodal dispersion is called material dispersion
because it depends upon the material of the core
Another form of dispersion is called waveguide dispersion
Dispersion increases with the bandwidth of the light source
Examples of Dispersion