Title: LIGHT COMMUNICATION
1LIGHT COMMUNICATION
2Fiber vs. Metallic Cables
- Advantages
- Larger bandwidth
- Immune to cross-talk
- Immune to static interference
- Do not radiate RF
- spark free
- No corrosion, more environment resistive
- Disadvantages
- Initial cost of installation high
- Brittle
- Maintenance and repair more difficult and more
expensive
3Typical Fiber Optical Communication System
4Elements of a Fiber Data Link
- Transmitter emits light pulses (LED or Laser)
- Connectors and Cables passively carry the pulses
- Receiver detects the light pulses
Cable
Transmitter
Receiver
5Repeaters
- For long links, repeaters are needed to
compensate for signal loss
6Optical Fiber
- Core
- Glass or plastic with a higher index of
refraction than the cladding - Carries the signal
- Cladding
- Glass or plastic with a lower index of refraction
than the core - Buffer
- Protects the fiber from damage and moisture
- Jacket
- Holds one or more fibers in a cable
7Singlemode Fiber
- Singlemode fiber has a core diameter of 8 to 9
microns, which only allows one light path or mode - Images from arcelect.com (Link Ch 2a)
8Multimode Step-Index Fiber
- Multimode fiber has a core diameter of 50 or 62.5
microns (sometimes even larger) - Allows several light paths or modes
- This causes modal dispersion some modes take
longer to pass through the fiber than others
because they travel a longer distance - See animation at link Ch 2f
Index of refraction
9Multimode Graded-Index Fiber
- The index of refraction gradually changes across
the core - Modes that travel further also move faster
- This reduces modal dispersion so the bandwidth is
greatly increased
10Attenuation
- Absorption
- interaction of light with electrons molecule
vibration - Rayleigh Scattering
- caused by compositional fluctuations in glass
material. Energy escapes not converted - Material Fabrication
- caused impurities (transition metal ions)
- Fiber Fabrication
- caused by fiber imperfections (defects/stresses)
Leads to Mie scattering which is ?
independent - Deployment/Environmental
- caused by bends and microbends
Leads to mode conversions
11Three Types of Dispersion
- Dispersion is the spreading out of a light pulse
as it travels through the fiber - Three types
- Modal Dispersion
- Chromatic Dispersion
- Polarization Mode Dispersion (PMD)
12Modal Dispersion
- Modal Dispersion
- Spreading of a pulse because different modes
(paths) through the fiber take different times - Only happens in multimode fiber
- Reduced, but not eliminated, with graded-index
fiber
13Chromatic Dispersion
- Different wavelengths travel at different speeds
through the fiber - This spreads a pulse in an effect named chromatic
dispersion - Chromatic dispersion occurs in both singlemode
and multimode fiber - Larger effect with LEDs than with lasers
- A far smaller effect than modal dispersion
14Polarization Mode Dispersion
- Light with different polarization can travel at
different speeds, if the fiber is not perfectly
symmetric at the atomic level - This could come from imperfect circular geometry
or stress on the cable, and there is no easy way
to correct it - It can affect both singlemode and multimode fiber.
15- Light Sources
- ?? Light Emitting Diode (LED)
- ?? simple construction and drive circuitry
- ?? best for short distances, modest bit rates,
and low channel capacity - ?? Semiconductor Laser Diode
- ?? high drive currents and complex circuitry
- ?? produce high power for higher bit rates and
long distances
16- Light Sources LED
- ?? Usually a P-N junction aluminium-gallium
arsenide (AlGaAs) or - Gallium-arsenide-phosphide (GaAsP)
- Spontaneous emission through recombination of
electrons and holes - Works in forward bias, energy released as a
photon -
- A photon a quantum of E/M wave energy
17- Light Sources Laser Diode
- Light Amplification by Stimulated Emission of
Radiation - ?? A laser diode Is an LED with two important
differences - ?? (1) The operating current is much higher in
order to produce OPTICAL GAIN - ?? (2) Two of the ends of the LD are cleaved
parallel to each other. These ends act as
perfectly aligned mirrors which reflect the light
back and forth through the "gain medium" in order
to get as much amplification as possible - ?? The typical response time of a laser diode Is
0.5 ns. The line width is around 2 nm with a
typical laser power of 10's of milliwatts. The
wavelength of a laser diode can be 850 nm, 1300
nm, or 1500 nm.
18Photo-Detectors ?? Must detect down to the order
of 10-14 W ?? Need high conversion efficiency
between light and electrical energy ?? Must
respond fast for high bandwidth ?? Must have
low-noise power and good light-collecting
properties ?? Ideally, they must operate at low
voltage, be easy to use, be robust and immune to
changes in ambient conditions, have a long life,
be reliable and inexpensive ?? Two devices stand
out ?? Positive-intrinsic-negative (PIN)
diodes ?? Avalanche photodiodes (APD)
19Detection Procedure
- ?? Photons collide with the electrons in the
- valence band
- ?? The electrons absorb photon energy, hv, and
cross the band gap into the conduction band with
charge q. - ?? Incident optical power, P, transfers to the
- device with efficiency ?.
- ?? The generated photocurrent is
- ?? We resort to mean values because the whole
- photo-detection process is stochastic.
20Detectors PIN Diode
21Detectors The APD Device
22Detectors Characteristics ?? Responsivity ??
Measure of conversion efficiency, a ratio of the
output current to the input optical
power (A/W) ?? Dark current ?? Leakage current
flowing with no light input ?? Transit time ??
Time it takes a photo-induced carrier to cross
the depletion Region ?? Spectral response ?? A
relative spectral response vs. wavelength or
frequency curve displays the range or system
length possible for a given wavelength.