Attenuation Fiber Attenuation Types 1- Material Absorption losses 2- Intrinsic Absorption 3- Extrinsic Absorption 4- Scattering losses (Linear and nonlinear) 5- Bending Losses (Micro & Macro) Material Absorption losses Material absorption is a loss mechanism related to the material composition and the fabrication process for the fiber, which results in the dissipation of some of the transmitted optical power as heat in the waveguide. The absorption of the light may be intrinsic or extrinsic Intrinsic Absorption: Caused by interaction with one or more of the components of the glass. l Intrinsic absorption is a natural property of glass. It is strong in the ultraviolet (UV) region and in infrared (IR) region of the electromagnetic spectrum. l However both these considered insignificant since optical communication systems are normally operated outside this region
Extrinsic Absorption: Caused by impurities within the glass A- Extrinsic Absorption (OH ions): Caused by dissolved water in the glass, as the Hydroxy or (OH) ion. In this case absorption due the same fundamental processes between (2700 nm, and 4200 nm) gives rise to so called absorption overtones at 1380, 950, 720 nm. Typically a 1 part per million impurity level causes 1 db/ km of attenuation at 950 nm. Fundamental Fiber Attenuation Characteristics OH - absorption peak and spectral windows Scattering - Linear Scattering Losses Scattering is a process whereby all or some of the optical power in a mode id transferred into another mode. Frequently causes attenuation, since the transfer is often to a mode that does not propagate well. (also called a leaky or radiation mode). o Two major type: 1. Rayleigh 2. Mie scattering Rayleigh Scattering most common form of scattering caused by microscopic non-uniformities making light rays partially scatter nearly 90% of total attenuation is attributed to Raleigh Scattering
becomes important when wavelengths are short - comparable to size of the structures in the glass: long wavelengths are less affected than short wavelengths Raleigh scattering causes the sky to be blue, since only the short (blue) wavelengths are significantly scattered by the air molecules.) Mie Scattering caused in inhomogeneities which are comparable in size to the guided wavelength. These result from the non-perfect cylindrical structure of the waveguide and may be caused by fiber imperfections such as irregularities in the core-cladding interface, core-cladding refractive index differences along the fiber length, diameter fluctuations, strains and bubbles. Nonlinear Losses Non linear scattering causes the power from one mode to be transferred in either the forward or backward direction to the same or other modes, at the different frequency. The most important types are; 1. Stimulated Brillouin 2. Raman scattering Both are usually only observed at high optical power density in long single mode fibers
Stimulated Brillouin Scattering (SBS) another way to increase SBS threshold is to phase dither the output of the external modulator - see Graphs below. A high frequency (usually 2 x highest frequency) is imposed at the external modulator. Erbium-Doped Fiber Amplifiers (EDFAs) reduces the SBS threshold (in Watts) by the number of amplifiers. Stimulated Raman Scattering (SRS) much less of a problem than SBS threshold is close to 1 Watt, nearly a thousand times higher than SBS with an EDFA having an output power of 200mW, SRS threshold will be reached after 5 amplifiers. Recall that threshold drops with each amplifier. Shorter wavelengths are robbed of power and fed to longer wavelengths. (See Graphs below) Fiber Bending Loss and mode coupling to higher order modes
Mode number reduction caused by bending Dispersion - spreading of light pulses in a fiber --- limits bandwidth types 3 2/ 2 2 3 2 2 2 1 kr n R a N N straight bent
Intramodal or chromatic dispersion material dispersion waveguide dispersion profile dispersion Intermodal/multimode dispersion polarization mode dispersion (PMD) Dispersion in Fibers Waveguide, Material, modal dispersions Dispersion is the Primary cause of limitation on the optical signal transmission bandwidth through an optical fiber. Both Material and waveguide dispersion and waveguide dispersion are examples of chromatic dispersion because both are frequency dependent. The combined effects of material and waveguide dispersions for a particular mode alone are called intramodal dispersion. Chromatic Dispersion o caused by different wavelengths traveling at different speeds o is the result of material dispersion, waveguide dispersion or profile dispersion o for the fiber characteristics shown at right, chromatic dispersion goes to zero at 1550 nm (Dispersion-Shifted Fiber) o For a light-source with a narrow spectral emission, the bandwidth of the fiber will be very large. (FWHM = Full Width Half Maximum) Material Dispersion - caused by the fact that different wavelengths travel at different speeds through a fiber, even in the same mode. Amount of Material Dispersion Determined by: o range of light wavelengths injected into the fiber (spectral width of source) LEDs (35-170 nm) Lasers (< 5 nm) o center operating wavelength of the source around 850 nm: longer wavelengths (red) travel faster than shorter wavelengths (blue) around 1550 nm: the situation is reversed - zero dispersion occurs where the wavelengths travel the same speed, around 1310 nm Material dispersion greatly affects single-mode fibers. In multimode fibers, multimode dispersion usually dominates.
Waveguide Dispersion, D W occurs because optical energy travels in both the core and cladding at slightly different speeds. A greater concern for single-mode fibers than for multimode fibers Profile Dispersion the refractive indices of the core and cladding are described by a refractive index profile since the refractive index of a graded index fiber varies, it causes a variation in the propagation of different wavelengths profile dispersion is more significant in multimode fibers that in single-mode fibers Intermodal or Multimode Dispersion
Multimode Dispersion (also Modal Dispersion) caused by different modes traveling at different speeds characteristic of multimode fiber only can be minimized by: using a smaller core diameter using graded-index fiber use single-mode fiber L( NA) 2Cn - Single-mode fiber is only single-mode at wavelengths greater than the cutoff wavelength When multimode dispersion is present, it usually dominates to the point that other types of dispersion can be ignored. Multi mode Step Index fibers Multimode graded index fibers 1 2 Polarization Mode Dispersion (PMD) PMD is Statistical Process
RI Profiles Cut Off Wavelength Dispersion Calculations
Fiber-to-Fiber Joints Interconnecting fibers in a fiber optic system is another very important factor. These interconnects should be low-loss. These interconnects occur at Optical source Photodetector Within the cable where two fibers are connected Intermediate point in a link where two cables are connected The connection can be Permanent bond: known as SPLICE Easily demountable connection: Known as CONNECTOR Mechanical Misalignment Fiber Related Losses
Fiber End Face Preparation End face preparation is the first step before splicing or connecting the fibers through connectors. Fiber end must be Flat Perpendicular to the fiber axis Smooth Techniques used are Sawing Grinding Polishing Grinding and Polishing require a controlled environment like laboratory or factory
Three different types of splicing can be done Fusion splicing V-groove mechanical splicing Elastic tube splice