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Lecture 4b Fiber Optics Communication Link 1. Introduction 2. Optical Fiber, Physical Background 3. The Light Transmitters and the Receivers as a Components – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Lecture 4b


1

Lecture 4b  Fiber Optics
Communication Link 1. Introduction  2.
Optical Fiber, Physical Background 3.  The
Light Transmitters and the Receivers as a
Components of the Fiber Optic
Communication Links 4. Light Emitting
Diodes 5. Transmitters 6. Driving
Circuits 7. Receivers 8. p-i-n
Photodiode 9. Transceivers and Repeaters
10. Fiber Optic Communication Link Rise Time
and Bandwidth Bandwidth 11.
Communication Link Power Budget 12.
Connectors 13. Conclusion
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  • 1. Wide bandwidth Fiber optic system uses light
    as a carrier with
  • 1013 to 1014 Hz. Radio waves are 106 to
    1010 Hz. Electrical signals have frequencies up
    to 108 Hz. The maximum bandwidth of the
    transmitted signals is 10 of the carrier.
  • 2. Low loss The typical attenuation of a 1 GHz
    bandwidth digital signal in an optical fiber is
    0.1 dB per km. A 100 MHz bandwidth signal in
    RG-58/U coaxial cable has attenuation of 130 dB
    per km.
  • 3. Electromagnetic immunity Electrical fields do
    not affect light signals.  
  • 4. Light weight and small size 1 km of optical
    fiber cable weighs about 10 kilograms. A 1 km
    copper wire with the same signal carrying
    capacity would weigh 700 kg.
  • 5. Safety There is no possibility of a short
    circuit in a fiber optic system, eliminating the
    hazard of sparks in an electrical cable.
  • 6. Security Optical fiber is harder to tap than
    electrical wire. Unwanted tapping over the
    length of the fiber can usually be detected.

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  • A. Index of Refraction
  • C 3108 meters per second, but it is reduced
    when it passes through matter. The index of
    refraction n

c
speed of light in a vacuum, 3108 m/s
speed of light in the given material
wavelength
of light in a vacuum
wavelength of light in the given material
X ray,
6
Index of refraction and speed of light for
various materials.
Index of Refraction Speed of Light
Free space (vacuum) 1.0 3108 m/s
Air at sea level 1.003 2.99108 m/s
Ice 1.31 2.29108 m/s
Water 1.33 2.26108 m/s
Glass (minimum) 1.45 2.07108 m/s
Glass (maximum) 1.80 1.67108 m/s
Diamond 2.42 1.24108 m/s
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?1 The incident angle (from the
surface normal)?2 The angle of refracted light
(from the surface normal)n1 index of
refraction in the incident mediumn2 index of
refraction in the refracting medium Light that
is not absorbed or refracted will be reflected.
The incident ray, the reflected ray, the
refracted ray, and the normal to the surface will
all lie in the same plane.
B. Refraction with Snell's Law
8
D. Multimode Step Index Fiber
We want to find the critical case of total
internal reflection at the core-cladding
boundary. Using Snells Law with ?2 90º, we
can find the critical angle ?CR
9
  C. Total internal reflection
Total internal reflection when ?1 gt ?CR .
10
Critical angle refraction90
0
11
  • Since we can relate ?r, CR to angle ?CR by
    simple geometry, and we can make the approximate
    n0   1, this equation can be simplified
  • The negated and shifted sine function is
    identical to the cosine, and we can relate this
    cosine to the sine by the trigonometric identity
  • In equation (3.4), this sine was found above in
    terms of n1  and n2 

For n1  ? n2 , we can simplify the numerical
aperture calculation
12
E. Modal Dispersion
  • Dispersion means the difference in arrival time
    of the light rays at the output end of an optical
    fiber.
  • Modal dispersion is caused by the difference in
    rays path (with equal wave length) due to
    variation in light incidence angles at the input
    end. It occurs only in multimode fibers
  • Material dispersion is related to the variation
    of light velocity in a given fiber material due
    to the difference in propagated light wave.

Number of modes
13
A
Input pulse
Output pulse
LMax
t
Critical angle
LMin
For instance, if n1   1.5 and ?  0.01, then
the numerical aperture is 0.212 and the critical
angle ? r,cr,  is about 12.5 degrees.
14
  • ?i   0 and path lengthL (fiber length).
  • The longest path occurs for ? i ?i, CR and can
    be estimated as

For ?  0.002 in a small-step index optical
fiber
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B Mbps
150
1
L km
1
150
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F. Bandwidth of a Multimode Optical Fiber
  • To estimate the bandwidth of an optical fiber, we
    can convert from a bit transfer rate to a
    bandwidth. In one signal period, two bits can be
    transferred, so the maximum signal frequency is
    simply one-half the bit transfer rate.
  • Light frequencies used in fiber optic systems
    use a carrier frequency between 1014 and 1015 Hz
    (105 to 106 GHz). The theoretical bandwidth of a
    fiber optic system is about 10 of the carrier
    frequency, or up to 10,000-100,000 GHz!

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G. Attenuation
  • Attenuation ranges from 0.1 dB/km (single-mode
    silica fibers) to over 300 dB/km (plastic fiber).
  • There are two reasons for attenuation
    Scattering Absorption

Attenuation (dB)

18
3. Classification of optical fibers and their
characteristics
19
? multimode step inde ? multimode graded
index? single-mode step index
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4. Light Emitting Diodes
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Sources of losses of light power due to
mismatches
A source, with an output diameter of 100?m and an
NA of 0.30 is connected to a fiber with a core
diameter of 62.5?m and NA of 0.275. The  and
the are as follows
23
LED driver circuits
24
p-n Photodiode, (p-i-n)
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The important characteristics of receivers are
  • Signal-to-noise ratio (S/N) is expressing the
    quality of signal in a system. In decibels, S/N
    is equal to the signal power in decibels minus
    the noise power in decibels.
  • S/N (dB) 10 log10( S/N )
    10 log10( S ) - 10 log10( N ).
  • If the signal power is 50 ?W (-13 dBm) and
    the noise power is 50 nW (-43 dBm), the S/N is
    1000, or 30 dB.
  • Bit-error rate (BER) is related to S/N. The BER
    is the ratio of the incorrectly received bits to
    correctly transmitted bits. A ratio of 10-9
    means that one wrong bit is received for every 1
    billion transmitted bits.
  • Responsivity (R) is the ratio of the photodiode's
    output current to the input optical power it is
    expressed in Amperes /Watt (A/W). A p-i-n
    photodiode typically has a responsivity of around
    0.4 to 0.6 A/W. A responsivity of 0.6 A/W means
    that incident light having 50 ?W of power results
    in 30 ?A of current.
  • Rise time For most components, rise time and fall
    time are assumed to be equal. The response time
    of the receiver characterizes its bandwidth.
  • Sensitivity specifies the weakest optical signal
    that can be detected. Sensitivity can be
    expressed in microwatts or dBm. A sensitivity of
    1 ?W is the same as a sensitivity of -30 dBm.

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Receivers
27
Transceivers and Repeaters
28
System Rise Time and Bandwidth
29
Communication Link Power Budget
30
Connectors
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