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Fibre Basics
Optical fiber is information-carrying
medium made with silica-based glass.
3
Fiber Basics contd..,
When light is transmitted on a fibre, the most
important consideration is “what kind of light?”
The electromagnetic radiation that we call light
exists at many wavelengths.
These wavelengths go from invisible infrared
through all the colors of the visible spectrum to
invisible ultraviolet.
Because of the attenuation characteristics of
fibre, we are only interested in infrared “light”
for communication applications.
This light is usually invisible, since the
wavelengths used are usually longer than the
visible limit of around 700 nanometers (nm).
4
Fiber Basics contd..,
Only some portion of the electromagnetic spectrum is
visible to (can be detected by) the human eye.
Electromagnetic radiation in this range of
wavelengths is called visible light or simply light.
A typical human eye will respond to wavelengths in
air from 400 to 700 nm
In fiber-optic communications, dark fiber or unlit
fiber (or fibre) is the name given to individual fibers
that have yet to be used within cables that have been
already laid.
They are hence not yet connected to any device, and
are only there for future usage.
5
Fiber Basics contd..,
Fiber size is generally mentioned as
diameter of core followed by diameter of
cladding
Multimode fiber
8
Refractive Index
Refractive index is the speed of light in a
vacuum (abbreviated c,
c=299,792.458km/second) divided by the
speed of light in a material (abbreviated v).
9
Snell’s Law
In 1621, a Dutch physicist named Snell derived the relationship
between the different angles of light as it passes from one
transparent medium to another. When light passes from one
transparent material to another, it bends according to Snell's law
which is defined as:
n1sin(θ1) = n2sin(θ2)
where:
n1 is the refractive index of the medium the light is leaving
θ1 is the incident angle between the light beam and the normal
(normal is 90° to the interface between two materials)
n2 is the refractive index of the material the light is entering
θ2 is the refractive angle between the light ray and the normal
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Snell’s Law
11
Total Internal Reflection
When a light ray crosses an interface from lower RI
into a medium with a higher refractive index, it bends
towards the normal.
Conversely, light traveling cross an interface from a
higher refractive index medium to a lower refractive
index medium will bend away from the normal.
12
Critical Angle
This has an interesting implication: at some angle,
known as the critical angle θc, light traveling
from a higher refractive index medium to a lower
refractive index medium will be refracted at 90°;
in other words, refracted along the interface.
If the light hits the interface at any angle larger
than this critical angle, it will not pass through to
the second medium at all. Instead, all of it will be
reflected back into the first medium, a process
known as total internal reflection.
13
Critical Angle
The critical angle can be calculated from
Snell's law, putting in an angle of 90° for the
angle of the refracted ray θ2. This gives θ1:
Since
θ2 = 90°
So
sin(θ2) = 1
Then
θc = θ1 = arcsin(n2/n1)
14
Principle of Operation
An optical fiber is a cylindrical dielectric
waveguide that transmits light along its axis,
by the process of total internal reflection.
The fiber consists of a core surrounded by a
cladding layer.
To confine the optical signal in the core, the
refractive index of the core must be greater
than that of the cladding.
The boundary between the core and cladding
may either be abrupt, in step-index fiber, or
gradual, in graded-index fiber. 15
Total internal reflection
Optical fibers are based entirely on the principle of total
internal reflection. This is explained in the following
picture.
19
What is Fiber Mode?
An optical fiber guides light waves in
distinct patterns called modes.
Mode describes the distribution of light
energy across the fiber.
Fibers that carry more than one mode at a
specific light wavelength are called
multimode fibers.
Some fibers have very small diameter core
that they can carry only one mode which
travels as a straight line at the center of the
core. These fibers are single mode fibers.
20
This is illustrated in the following
picture.
21
Multimode Fiber
Fiber with larger core diameter is called
multimode fiber.
In a step-index multimode fiber, rays of light
are guided along the fiber core by total
internal reflection.
22
When a light is injected in to a fiber there will
be only a finite number of possible paths for
the light to take.
These paths are called “modes”
The problem with multimode operation is
that some of the paths taken by particular
modes are longer than other paths.
This means that light will arrive at different
times according to the path taken. Therefore
the pulse tends to disperse (spread out) as it
travels through the fibre.
This effect is called as Modal Dispersion. 23
Dispersion
24
In multimode step index fiber there is abrupt change
in refractive index between core and cladding as a
result wave changes its direction inside the fiber
abruptly.
This type of fiber costs less to the manufacturer but
has highest dispersion.,
This type is generally used for short distances and
low cost applications
25
Rays that meet the core-cladding boundary
at a high angle (measured relative to a line
normal to the boundary), greater than the
critical angle for this boundary, are
completely reflected.
The critical angle (minimum angle for total
internal reflection) is determined by the
difference in index of refraction between the
core and cladding materials.
Rays that meet the boundary at a low angle
are refracted from the core into the cladding,
and do not convey light and hence
information along the fiber. 26
Multimode Graded Index
fiber
Here layers of glass with smoothly varying refractive indices
comprises the core.
This causes light rays to bend smoothly as they approach
the cladding, rather than reflecting abruptly from the core-
cladding boundary.
The resulting curved paths reduce multi-path dispersion
because high angle rays pass more through the lower-index
periphery of the core, rather than the high-index center.
The index profile is chosen to minimize the difference in
axial propagation speeds of the various rays in the fiber.
27
As the core is in centre and has highest
refractive index, axial mode slows down and
higher order mode travels faster. So all
modes arrive at the end of the fiber closer
together.
This reduces modal dispersion allowing
longer fiber runs or higher rate
transmissions.
28
Optical Fiber Types
29
Single mode fibre
If the fibre core is very narrow compared
to the wavelength of the light in use then
the light cannot travel in different mode
This kind of fiber is called single mode
fibre.
There is no longer any reflection from the
core-cladding boundary but rather the
electromagnetic wave is tightly held to
travel down the axis of the fiber.
30
Fibre Refractive Index
Profiles
Following figure shows the refractive index
profiles of some different types of fiber.
31
Refractive Index Profile
RI Profile of Multimode Step-Index Fibre
Here the RI of core and cladding changes abruptly.
RI Profile of Multimode Graded Index Fibre
Graded index fibre has the same dimensions as step
index fibre.
The refractive index of the core changes slowly
between the fibre axis and the cladding.
RI Profile of Single-Mode Fibre
Single-mode fibre is characterized by its narrow core
size.
This is done to ensure that only one mode can
propagate. 32
evanescent wave
The waveguide analysis shows that the light
energy in the fiber is not completely confined
in the core.
33
The most common type
of single-mode fiber has
a core diameter of 8 μm
to 10 μm.
Core diameter is a
compromise.
We can't make the core
too narrow because of
losses at bends in the
fiber.
34
Cutoff Wavelength
It's not strictly correct to talk about “single-mode
fibre” and “multimode fibre” without qualifying it –
although this generally done all the time.
A fibre is single-mode or multi-mode at a particular
wavelength.
This single-mode fibre characteristic called the
“cutoff wavelength”.
The cutoff wavelength is the shortest wavelength at
which the fibre remains single-mode.
At wavelengths shorter than the cutoff the fibre is
multimode
35
Cutoff Wavelength
36
Transmitting Light on a
Fibre
An optical fibre is a very thin strand of silica glass in
geometry quite like a human hair.
In reality it is a very narrow, very long glass
cylinder with special characteristics.
When light enters one end of the fibre it travels
(confined within the fibre) until it leaves the fibre at
the other end. Two critical factors stand out:
1. Very little light is lost in its journey along the
fibre.
2. Fibre can bend around corners and the light will
stay within it and be guided around the corners.
37
Light Propagation in
Multimode Fibre
The key feature of light propagation in a fibre is that
the fibre may bend around corners.
Provided the bend radius is not too tight (2 cm is about
the minimum for most multimode fibers) the light will
follow the fibre and will propagate without loss due to
the bends.
This phenomena is called “total internal reflection”.
A ray of light entering the fibre is guided along the fibre
because it bounces off the interface between the core
and the (lower refractive index) cladding.
Light is said to be “bound” within the fiber.
38
39
Numerical Aperture
Multimode optical fiber will only propagate light that
enters the fiber within a certain cone, known as the
acceptance cone or cone of acceptance of the fiber.
The half-angle of this cone is called the acceptance angle,
θmax.
For step-index multimode fiber, the acceptance angle is
determined only by the indices of refraction:
40
Where
n is the refractive index of the medium light is
traveling before entering the fiber
nf is the refractive index of the fiber core
nc is the refractive index of the cladding
41
42
Properties of Fibers
There are some important properties of
fibers as explained below.
1. Loss:
The losses occur in fiber because of the
impurities present in the glass.
More accurately, impurities in the glass can
absorb light but the glass itself does not
absorb light at the wavelengths of interest.
43
Properties of Fibers
In addition, variations in the uniformity of the glass
cause scattering of the light.
Both the rate of light absorption and the amount of
scattering are dependent on the wavelength of the
light and the characteristics of the particular glass.
2. Attenuation:
Attenuation in Optical fiber is pulse weakening,
45
Properties of Fibers
46
Material Dispersion
Material dispersion is also called as
chromatic dispersion.
Both lasers and LEDs produce a range of
optical wavelengths (a band of light) rather
than a single narrow wavelength.
The fibre has different refractive index
characteristics at different wavelengths and
therefore each wavelength will travel at a
different speed in the fibre.
Thus, some wavelengths arrive before
others and a signal pulse disperses (or
smears out).
47
Modal dispersion
When using multimode fibre, the light is
able to take many different paths or
“modes” as it travels within the fibre.
The distance traveled by light in each mode
is different from the distance traveled in
other modes.
Therefore, some components of the pulse
will arrive before others.
The difference between the arrival time of
light taking the fastest mode versus the
slowest obviously gets greater as the
distance gets greater.
48
Dispersion
49
Properties of Fibers
Waveguide dispersion
Waveguide dispersion is a very complex
design
4. Numerical Aperture
5. Cone of Acceptance
50
Core/Clad Concentricity:
Tighter core/clad concentricity tolerances
help ensure that the fiber core is centered in
relation to the cladding.
This reduces the chance of ending up with
cores that do not match up precisely when
two fibers are spliced together.
A core that is precisely centered in the fiber
yields lower-loss splices more often.
51
Fiber Curl
Fiber curl is the inherent curvature along a
specific length of optical fiber that is exhibited
to some degree by all fibers.
It is a result of thermal stresses that occur
during the manufacturing process.
Therefore, these factors must be rigorously
monitored and controlled during fiber
manufacture.
Tighter fiber-curl tolerances reduce the
possibility that fiber cores will be misaligned
during splicing, thereby impacting splice loss
52
53
Losses in Fiber
Losses in a fiber can be of two types
Intrinsic Losses
Extrinsic Losses
54
Intrinsic Losses contd..,
As precise as manufacturing is, there is no
way to eliminate all impurities, though
technological advances have caused
attenuation to decrease dramatically
since the first optical fiber in 1970.
57
Extrinsic Losses
The second category of losses are extrinsic
losses.
micro bending.
60
Extrinsic Losses contd..,
Micro bending
The second extrinsic cause of attenuation is
a micro bend.
This is a small-scale distortion, generally
indicative of pressure on the fiber.
Micro bending may be related to
temperature, tensile stress, or crushing
force.
Like macro bending, micro bending will
cause a reduction of optical power in the
glass. 61
Extrinsic Losses contd..,
Micro bending is very localized, and the bend
may not be clearly visible upon inspection
62