Title: OPTICAL FIBERS
1OPTICAL FIBERS
- www.final-yearprojects.co.cc
2What are Fiber Optics
- Long thin strands of very pure glass about the
size of human hair - Arranged in bundles called optical cables
- Used to transmit light signals over long
distances - Hundreds of thousands arranged in bundles to form
optical cables
3What is an Optical Fiber?
An optical fiber is a waveguide for light
consists of core inner part where wave
propagates cladding outer part used to keep
wave in core buffer protective
coating jacket outer protective shield
4- Passage of light from a material with a high
index of refraction(n1) to a material with a
lower index of refraction(n2) - At the critical angle light will not go into n2
but instead travel along the surface between the
two media
5What are Optical Fibres ?
- Optical Fibres are fibres of glass, usually about
120 micrometres in diameter, which are used to
carry signals in the form of pulses of light over
distances up to 50 km without the need for
repeaters. These signals may be coded voice
communications or computer data
6 7- The optical fiber can be used as a medium for
telecommunication and networking because it is
flexible and can be bundled as cables. - The light transmitted through the fiber is
confined due to total internal reflection within
the material. - In telecommunications applications, the light
used is typically infrared light - Fibers are generally used in pairs, with one
fiber of the pair carrying a signal in each
direction - Fibers, like waveguides, can have various
transmission modes. The fibers used for
long-distance communication are known as single
mode fibers, as they have only one strong
propagation mode.
8- Multi-mode fibers, where light transmitted in the
different modes arrives at different times,
resulting in dispersion of the transmitted
signal. - single mode equipment is generally more expensive
than multi-mode equipment. - single-mode optical fiber, data rates of up to 40
Gbit/s are possible in real-world use on a single
wavelength. Wavelength division multiplexing can
then be used to allow many wavelengths to be used
at once on a single fiber
9Types of optical fibers
- Single mode
- only one signal can be transmitted
- use of single frequency
- Multi mode
- Several signals can be transmitted
- Several frequencies used to modulate the signal
10Types of Fibres
Multi-mode step index
nc
nf
nc
Single-mode step index
nc
nc
multi-mode graded index
nc
GRIN
nf
nc
11Typical core and cladding diameters
- Type Core (mm) Cladding (mm)
- Single mode 8 125
- Multimode 50 125
- 62.5 125
- 100 140
12Launching the Light
- Factors that effect the Launching of Light
- Intensity
- Area
- Acceptance Angle
- Fresnell Loss
13Signal Production
- Convert electrical input to modulated light
On/Off Linear Variation
Light Emitting Diode (LED) Laser Diode (LD)
14Through the Wire
- Light Propagates through the wire due to total
internal reflection
15Fibre can be bent!!
Illustration of total internal reflection
16Total internal reflection
- Trapping light in the fiber
17Total Internal Reflection
18Types of fiber ends
beam patterns can be spherical cylindrical
19Fibers carry modes of light
- a mode is
- a solution to the wave equation
- a given path/distribution of light
higher modes gives more light, which is not
always desirable
20Controlling the of Modes
- From the V parameter, we see that we can reduce
the number of modes in a fiber by reducing - (1) NA (2) diameter (wrt ??)
- This is exactly the case in single mode
fibers.
21The V Parameter
a fiber radius?o incident wavelength
- known as the V-parameter or the fiber parameter
- an important parameter that governs the number of
modes - parameters that relates yucky EM wave solutions
for both core and cladding
22How Fibers Work
- The classical understanding of fiber optics comes
once again from out longtime friend, Snells Law!
- Step index fibers Total Internal Reflection
23Optical Fiber Bandwidth
- Bandwidth Limitation
- Light entering at different angles reach the end
of the cable at different times - Smearing is produced uncertainty of beginning
and end of signal
- less smearing higher the bandwidth
- smearing can be reduced by reducing the size of
the fiber core
24Areas of Application
- Telecommunication's
- Optical fibres are now the standard point to
point cable link between telephone substations. - Local Area Networks (LAN's)
- Multimode fibre is commonly used as the
"backbone" to carry signals between the hubs of
LAN's from where copper coaxial cable takes the
data to the desktop. Fibre links to the desktop,
however, are also common.
25- Cable TV
- As mentioned above domestic cable TV networks use
optical fibre because of its very low power
consumption. - CCTV
- Closed circuit television security systems use
optical fibre because of its inherent security,
as well as the other advantages mentioned above. - Optical Fibre Sensors
26- Long-haul trunks
- common in telephone networks
- Metropolitan trunks
- to join phone exchanges in metro areas
- Rural exchange trunks
- connect exchanges of different phone
companies
27- Subscriber loops
- central exchange to subscriber
- LANs
- Can support hundreds of stations on a campus
28Other Applications
- Endoscope
- X-ray Imaging
- Night Vision
29Advantages of optical Fibres
- Can carry much more information
- Much higher data rates
- Much longer distances than co-axial cables
- Immune to electromagnetic noise
- Light in weight
- Unaffected by atmospheric agents
30Disadvantages of optical Fibres
- expensive
- need to convert electrical signal into optical
signal when transmitting and convert it back to
electrical signal when receiving
31The Optical Transmitter
32- The source of the optical signal can be either a
light emitting diode, or a solid state laser
diode. - The transmitter converts an electrical analog or
digital signal into a corresponding optical
signal. - The most popular wavelengths of operation for
optical transmitters are 850, 1300, or 1550
nanometers.
33Optical Receivers
- Converts modulated light from the cable into the
original signal - Photodiode Pin or Avalanche type
- High gain internal amplifiers
- Large sensitive detecting area several microns
thick
34The Optical Receiver
- The receiver converts the optical signal back
into a replica of the original electrical signal.
The detector of the optical signal is either a
PIN-type photodiode or avalanche-type photodiode.
35Degradation of the Signal
- Glass must be extremely pure
- Most general purpose optical fiber
- Signal losses per km traveled
- 850nm 60-75
- 1300nm 50-60
- 1550nm 40
- Excessive bending
36Signal Regeneration
- Optical regenerators spliced along the cable to
boost weakened signals - Optical Regenerator
- Optical fibers with specially doped coating
- Doped portion is pumped with a laser
- When signals enters energy from the laser allows
doped material to imitate lasers - Doped molecules now emit a stronger signal with
the same initial characteristics
37Optical Fiber - Transmission Characteristics
- Act as wave guide for 1014 to 1015 Hz
- Portions of infrared and visible spectrum
- Light Emitting Diode (LED)
- Cheaper
- Wider operating temp range
- Last longer
- Injection Laser Diode (ILD)
- More efficient
- Greater data rate
- Wavelength Division Multiplexing
- - Multiple beams of light at different
frequencies can be transmitted simultaneously
38Global crossing fibre networks
39Atlantic crossing networks
40