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Optical Fiber Signal Attenuation & Distortion

The document discusses the transmission characteristics of optical fibers, focusing on signal attenuation and distortion mechanisms. It details the causes of signal loss, including absorption, scattering, and bending losses, as well as the impact of dispersion on signal integrity. Additionally, it provides mathematical formulations and examples for calculating attenuation and dispersion in optical fiber systems.
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
28 views46 pages

Optical Fiber Signal Attenuation & Distortion

The document discusses the transmission characteristics of optical fibers, focusing on signal attenuation and distortion mechanisms. It details the causes of signal loss, including absorption, scattering, and bending losses, as well as the impact of dispersion on signal integrity. Additionally, it provides mathematical formulations and examples for calculating attenuation and dispersion in optical fiber systems.
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd

EC 1702 Optical Communication

Unit - II
Transmission characteristic of Optical Fiber

Dr. J. Martin Leo Manickam


Professor
St. Joseph's college of Engineering
Chennai
Signal Attenuation & Distortion in Optical Fibers

• What are the loss or signal attenuation mechanism in a fiber?


• Why & to what degree do optical signals get distorted as they
propagate down a fiber?
• Signal attenuation (fiber loss) largely determines the maximum
repeaterless separation between optical transmitter & receiver.
• Signal distortion cause that optical pulses to broaden as they travel
along a fiber, the overlap between neighboring pulses, creating
errors in the receiver output, resulting in the limitation of
information-carrying capacity of a fiber.
Attenuation (fiber loss)
• Power loss along a fiber:

Z=0 Z= l
P(0) mW mw

[3-1]
The parameter is called fiber attenuation coefficient in a units of for
example [1/km] or [nepers/km]. A more common unit is [dB/km] that is
defined by:
[3-2]
Fiber loss in dB/km

z=0
Z=l

[3-3]

Where [dBm] or dB milliwat is 10log(P [mW]).


Problem

5
A fiber has an attenuation of 0.5 dB/Km at 1500 nm. If 0.5 mW
of optical power is initially launched into the fiber, estimate the
power level after 25 km. (Apr 19) (Nov 19)
When the mean optical power launched into a 8 Km fiber is 120 μw.
The mean optical power at the fiber output is 3 μw. Calculate the
overall attenuation in dB assuming there are no splices. (Apr 19)
When the mean optical power launched into an 8km length of fiber is 120μW, the mean optical power
at the fiber output is 3 μW. Determine (a) Overall signal attenuation in dB/km (b) The overall signal
attenuation for a 10 km optical link using the same fiber with splices at 1Km intervals, each giving an
attenuation of 1dB. (c) Numerical input/output power ratio.(Apr 18)

Overall Signal attenuation for a 10 KM optical link = 10 x 2 = 20 dB/km

The overall signal attenuation for a 10 km optical link using the same fiber with
splices at 1Km intervals, each giving an attenuation of 1dB = 20 + 9 = 29 dB /
Km

Numerical input/output power ratio =


A continuous 40km long optical fiber link has a loss of 0.4dB/km i)What is the
minimum optical power level that must be launched into the fiber to maintain
an optical power level of 2 µw at the receiving end? ii)What is the required input
power if the fiber has a loss of 0.6 dB/km? (Nov 18)

A Continuous 12 km long optical fiber link has a loss of 1.5dB/km. Propose a


proper solution to find the minimum optical power that must be launched into
the fiber to maintain an optical power level of 0.3 µw at the receiving end (Apr 19)
Absorption
Absorption is caused by three different mechanisms:
1- Absorbtion by atomic defects (ionic radiation)
2- Extrinsic absorbtion:Impurities in fiber material from
transition metal ions (must be in order of ppb) & particularly
from OH ions with absorption peaks at wavelengths 2700
nm, 400 nm, 950 nm & 725nm.
3- Intrinsic absorption (fundamental lower limit): electronic
absorption band (UV region) & atomic bond vibration band
(IR region) in basic SiO2.
Absorbtion by atomic defects
Imperfactions in the atomic structure of the fiber material
Example: Missing molecules, high density clusters of atom groups or oxygen defects
Negligible but significant when exposed to ionizing radiations
Absorption Losses of Impurities

12
Optical Fiber Attenuation
Attenuation peak

P(x) = P0e-ax

α = (10/x) log P0/P(x)

Nominal attenuations:
0.5 dB/km (1310 nm)

0.3 dB/km (1550 nm)

Optical fibers operated in E


band (near 1440 nm) is
called Low water peak or
Full spectrum fibers

OFS AllWave fiber: example of a “low-water-peak” or “full spectrum” fiber. Prior to 2000 the fiber transmission bands were
referred to as “windows.” 13
Intrinisic absorbtion by the basic constitutent
atoms of the fiber material
Electronic absorbtion bands (band gaps) in the ultra violet region and from
atomic vibration bands in the near infrared region

UV edge of the electron absorbtion bands follow Urbach's rule


UV absorbtion decreases exponentially with
increasing wavelength

Near IR absorbtion is determined by the


C and E0 are Empirical constants presence of OH- ions and the inherent IR
aborbtion of the constituent
E is the photon Energy
Absorption & scattering losses in fibers

UV absorbtion in db/km

x - mole fraction of GeO2

Infrared absorbtion in db/km

Loss is low at 0.148 dB/Km at 1.57 μm in a single mode fiber


Optical Fiber communications, 3rd ed.,[Link],McGrawHill, 2000
Scattering Loss
• Microscopic variations in the material density
• Compositional fluctuations
• structural inhomogenities or defects during fiber manufacture

Refractive index variation leads to Rayleigh type scattering

Scattering loss in dB/Km is given by

n-refractive index
kB-Boltzmann's constant
βT-isothermal compressibility of the material
Tf- temperature at which density fluctuations are frozen in the material
Typical spectral absorption & scattering attenuations for a single
mode-fiber

For wavelengths below 1 μm,


Rayleigh scattering dominates.
As a result, attenuation decreases
with increasing wavelength.
At longer wavelengths, IR
absorbtion dominates

Optical Fiber communications, 3rd ed.,[Link],McGrawHill, 2000


Bending Loss
Bending Losses in Fibers
• Optical power escapes from tightly bent fibers
• Bending loss increases at longer wavelengths
– Typical losses in 3 loops of standard 9-μm single-mode fiber (from: R
Lightwave; Feb 2001; p. 156):
– 2.6 dB at 1310 nm and 23.6 dB at 1550 nm for R = 1.15 cm
– 0.1 dB at 1310 nm and 2.60 dB at 1550 nm for R = 1.80 cm
• Progressively tighter bends produce higher losses
• Bend-loss insensitive fibers have been developed and now are Test setup for
recommended checking bend loss:
• Improper routing of fibers and incorrect storage of slack fiber N fiber loops on a
rod of radius R
can result in violations of bend radius rules

19
Bending Losses in Fibers (2)
The total number of modes that can be supported by
a curved fiber is less than in a straight fiber.

20
Core and cladding loss
Core and cladding have different indices of refraction leading to
different attenuation coefficients

Let α1 and α2 be attenuation coefficients of core and cladding,


then the loss for a mode of order (v,m) is given by
Dispersion and Attenuation
Effects
Detection threshold

Attenuation

22
Intermodal delay or dispersion
occurs in multimode fibers
modal delay is a result of each mode having a different value of the goup
velocity at a single frequency
Consider an axial ray making an angle 0 degrees with the axis and extreme
meridional ray makes an angle θ with the axis
Let L be the fiber length

The time taken by the axial ray to travel a distance of L is given by

------------(1)

where n1 be refractive index of core and C be the velocity of light


The time taken by the extreme meridional ray which makes an angle θ
to travel a distance of L is given by

------------(2)

From the figure,

------------(3)

Sub (3) in (2), we get

------------(4)
Time delay between the axial ray and extreme meridional
ray

------------(5)

As , then equation (5) becomes


Bit rate distance product

rms impulse response σs due to intermodal dispersion SI MM fiber

rms impulse response σs due to intermodal dispersion GI fiber (α=2)


Consider a 1 - Km long MM SI fiber in which n1=1.480 and ∆=0.01.
What is the modal delay per length in this fiber?

This means that a pulse broadens by 50 ns after


travelling a distance of 1 Km ithis type of fiber
Consider the following two MM fibers: (a) a step index fiber with a core index
n1=1.458 and a core cladding index difference ∆=0.01 (b) a parabolic profile GI
fiber with the same values of n1 and ∆. Compare the rms pulse broadening per km
for these two fibers
Factors Contributing to Dispersion
• The wave propagation constant β is a slowly varying function of the angular
frequency ω.
• One can see where various dispersion effects arise by expanding β in a Taylor
series about a central frequency ω0.

1. The 1st term β0z describes a phase shift of the optical wave.
2. The factor β1(ω0)z produces a group delay τg = z/Vg, where Vg is the group velocity
Propagation constants in x and y directions are β1x and β1y for a particular mode.
Corresponding group delays are τgx = zβ1x and τgy = zβ1y at a distance z
The difference in the propagation times of thjse two modes is called POLARIZATION
MODE DISPERSION.
∆τPMD = z|β1x - β1y|
30
Factors Contributing to Dispersion
3. The factor β2 shows that the group velocity ([Link] of a
monochromatic wave depends on the wave frequency.
• Thus the different group velocities of the frequency components of a pulse cause
it to broaden with distance.
• The group velocity spreading is the GVD
• The dispersion D is related to β2 by
Unit: [ps/([Link])]
D is the sum of material and waveguide dispersion
4. The factor β3 is the third-order dispersion.
– The third-order dispersion can be related to the dispersion D and the dispersion slope S 0 = ∂D/∂λ
(the variation in the dispersion D with wavelength)

31
Chromatic Dispersion (CD)
• It also is known as intramodal dispersion
([Link]
• This pulse spreading is known as the group velocity dispersion (GVD)
– It is pulse spreading that occurs within a single mode, because the GVD is a
function of wavelength
– Since CD depends on wavelength, its effect on signal distortion increases with
source spectral width
• The dispersion is given in units of ps/(nm × km)
LED Laser

32
Material Dispersion
Material dispersion occurs because the index of
refraction varies as a function of λ
•Because the group velocity of a mode is a function
of the refractive index, the various spectral
components of a given mode will travel at different
speeds, depending on λ.
•The pulse spread σmat for a source of spectral width
σλ is

where Dmat is the material


dispersion
33
Problem: A manufacturer's data sheet lists the material dispersion Dmat of
Ge02 doped fiber to be 110 ps/([Link]) at a wavelength of 860 nm. Find
the rms pulse broadening per km due to material dispersion if the optical
source is GaAlAs LED that has aspectral width σλ of 40 nm at an output
wavelength of 860 nm
Waveguide dispersion
Material Dispersion Comparison
LED source

Laser diode source

36
Cut Off Wavelength

37
Polarization-Mode Dispersion
• A varying birefringence along its length will cause each polarization mode to
travel at a slightly different velocity. ([Link]
• The difference in propagation times ΔτPMD between the two orthogonal
polarization modes will result in pulse spreading.
• This is the polarization-mode dispersion (PMD)
• PMD is a random, time-varying function in a fiber, so it needs to be measured
statistically.
• If DPMD, which is measured in ps/(km)0.5, is the average PMD parameter, then

Typical values of DPMD


range from 0.05 to 1.0 ps
/(km)0.5.
38
Dispersion Calculation
• The broadening σ of an optical pulse over a fiber of length L
is given by σ = D(λ)σλ , where σλ is the half-power spectral
width of the optical source.
• For a non-dispersion shifted fiber

For a dispersion shifted fiber: D(λ) = (λ – λ0)S0.

S0 is the dispersion slope S(λ) = dD/dλ at λ0, given in ps/(nm2•km).


39
Characteristics of Single Mode Fibers
RI profile for 1310 nm optimized fibers
RI profile for dispersion shifted fibers

large negative waveguide dispersion fibers


RI profile for dispersion flattened fibers
RI profile for large effective core area fibers
Waveguide dispersion and materail dispersion
for three different SM fibers
Dispersion Comparisons for NZDS Fiber

46

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