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Fiber-Optic Communication Systems An Introduction: Pablo A. Costanzo Caso

Fiber optic communication systems have evolved over multiple generations to utilize different fiber and laser technologies. Early systems used multimode fiber and LEDs, with limitations in transmission distance due to fiber attenuation. Later systems employed single-mode fiber and lasers operating at 1.3 and 1.55 μm wavelengths, enabling longer transmission distances before signal regeneration. Modern networks extensively utilize dense wavelength division multiplexing (DWDM) and erbium-doped fiber amplifiers (EDFAs) to transmit tens to hundreds of optical signals simultaneously over single fiber strands. Fiber optics now provide the backbone for telecommunications networks worldwide.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
114 views36 pages

Fiber-Optic Communication Systems An Introduction: Pablo A. Costanzo Caso

Fiber optic communication systems have evolved over multiple generations to utilize different fiber and laser technologies. Early systems used multimode fiber and LEDs, with limitations in transmission distance due to fiber attenuation. Later systems employed single-mode fiber and lasers operating at 1.3 and 1.55 μm wavelengths, enabling longer transmission distances before signal regeneration. Modern networks extensively utilize dense wavelength division multiplexing (DWDM) and erbium-doped fiber amplifiers (EDFAs) to transmit tens to hundreds of optical signals simultaneously over single fiber strands. Fiber optics now provide the backbone for telecommunications networks worldwide.

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ovmlcabrera
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We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Fiber-Optic

Communication Systems
An Introduction

Pablo A. Costanzo Caso


Brief Intro on Telecom
Networks
Basics of Communication Networks

Bariloche Neuquén
Brief History of Networks

Copper Telecom Networks:


• 4 kHz analog voice local loop (between customers and central
office – access end)
• A voice signal digitized at a sampling rate of 8 kHz  8
bits/samples is DS-0 (64 kb/s)
• Carried on a single twisted copper-wire pair
• Required repeaters every 2 km to compensate for attenuation
• Digital interoffice trunks using DS-1 (Digital Signal Type 1)
• DSx refers to service type and Tx data rate at physical link
Digital Transmission Hierarchy
(DTH)

64-kb/s circuits are multiplexed into


higher-bit-rate formats

Called Telephony or T-Networks


This is Copper network

What is the overhead for T1?


Synchronous Optical Networks
• SONET is the TDM optical network standard for
North America (called SDH in the rest of the
world)
• De-facto standard for fiber backhaul networks
• OC-1 consists of 810 bytes over 125 us; OC-n
consists of 810n bytes over 125 us
• Linear multiplexing and de-multiplexing is
possible with Add-Drop-Multiplexers
SONET/SDH Bandwidths

SONET (synchronous SDH (synchronous digital


SONET Frame Payload bandwidth Line Rate (kbps) / Voice
optical network) Optical hierarchy) level and
Format (kbps) Channels
Carrier Level Frame Format

OC-1 STS-1 (synchronous STM-0 (synchronous 50,112 51,840 / 672


transport signal) transport module)

OC-3 STS-3 STM-1 150,336 155,520 / 2,016


OC-12 STS-12 STM-4 601,344 622,080 / 8,064

OC-24 STS-24 – 1,202,688 1,244,160

OC-48 STS-48 STM-16 2,405,376 2,488,320 / 32,256

OC-192 STS-192 STM-64 9,621,504 9,953,280 / 129,024

OC-768 STS-768 STM-256 38,486,016 39,813,120 / 516,096

OC-3072 STS-3072 STM-1024 153,944,064 159,252,480 / 2,064,384


First Generation Fiber Optic
Systems
Purpose:
• Eliminate repeaters in T-1 systems used in inter-office trunk
lines
Technology:
• 0.8 µm GaAs semiconductor lasers
• Multimode silica fibers
Limitations:
• Fiber attenuation
• Intermodal dispersion
Deployed since 1974
Second Generation Systems
Opportunity:
• Development of low-attenuation fiber (removal of H2O and
other impurities)
• Eliminate repeaters in long-distance lines
Technology:
• 1.3 µm multi-mode semiconductor lasers
• Single-mode, low-attenuation silica fibers
• DS-3 signal: 28 multiplexed DS-1 signals carried at 44.736
Mbits/s
Limitation:
• Fiber attenuation (repeater spacing ≈ 6 km)
Deployed since 1978
Third Generation Systems
Opportunity:
• Deregulation of long-distance market
Technology:
• 1.55 µm single-mode semiconductor lasers
• Single-mode, low-attenuation silica fibers
• OC-48 signal: 810 multiplexed 64-kb/s voice channels
carried at 2.488 Gbits/s
Limitations:
• Fiber attenuation (repeater spacing ≈ 40 km)
• Fiber dispersion
Deployed since 1982
Fourth Generation Systems
Opportunity:
• Development of erbium-doped fiber amplifiers (EDFA)
Technology (deployment began in 1994):
• 1.55 µm single-mode, narrow-band semiconductor lasers
• Single-mode, low-attenuation, dispersion-shifted silica fibers
• Wavelength-division multiplexing of 2.5 Gb/s or 10 Gb/s signals
Nonlinear effects limit the following system parameters:
• Signal launch power
• Propagation distance without regeneration/re-clocking
• WDM channel separation
• Maximum number of WDM channels per fiber
Polarization-mode dispersion limits the following parameters:
• Propagation distance without regeneration/re-clocking
Evolution of Optical Networks
History of
Attenuation
Three
Windows
based on
Wavelength
Fiber Network Topologies
Who Uses Span Bit Rate Multi- Fiber Laser Receiver
it? (km) (bps) plexing
Core/ Phone ~103 ~1011 DWDM/ SMF/ DCF EML/ APD
LongHaul Company, (100’s of TDM DFB
Gov’t(s) Gbps)
Metro/ Phone ~102 ~1010 DWDM/C SMF/ DFB APD/ PIN
Regional Company, Big (10’s of WDM/TD LWPF
Business Gbps) M
Access/ Small ~10 ~109 TDM/ SMF/ DFB/ FP PIN
LocalLoop Business, (56kbps- SCM/ MMF
Consumer 1Gbps)

Core - Combination of switching centers and transmission


systems connecting switching centers.
Access- that part of the network which connects subscribers
to their immediate service providers
LWPF : Low-Water-Peak Fiber, DCF : Dispersion Compensating Fiber, EML : Externally modulated (DFB) laser
Why Optical Communications?
• Optical Fiber is the backbone of the modern
communication networks
• The Optical Fiber Carries:
– Almost all long distance phone calls
– Most Internet traffic (Dial-up, DSL or Cable)
– Most Television channels (Cable or DSL)
– Most LAN, WAN and much more
• One fiber can carry > 8 Tb/s (1012 b/s) or 125 million
conversations simultaneously
Multimedia over Fiber
• Fiber carries various media
– Voice (SONET/Telephony) - The largest traffic
– Video (TV) over
• Hybrid Fiber Coaxial (HFC) or
• Fiber-Twisted Pair/Digital Subscriber Loops (DSL)
– Data – Internet traffic
– These three are called the ‘Triple Play’

Information revolution wouldn’t have


happened without the Optical Fiber
Why Optical Communications?
Lowest Attenuation: 0.2 dB/km at 1.55 µm band resulting in
100s of km fiber links without repeaters
Highest Bandwidth of any communication channel: Single
Mode Fiber (SMF) offers the lowest dispersion  highest
bit rate  rich content (broadband) up to 100 Gb/s or more
Enormous Capacity: Via WDM that also offer easy
upgradability,
The ‘Optical Layer’: Wavelength routing, switching and
processing all optically, which adds another layer of
flexibility
Elements of OPTICOM System
Elements of OPTICOM System
• The Fiber – that carries the light
– Single Mode Fiber (only one EM mode exists), offers the
highest bit rate, most widely used
– Multi Mode Fiber (multiple EM modes exist), hence
higher dispersion (due to multiple modes) cheaper than
SMF, used in local area networks
– Step Index Fiber – two distinct refractive indices
– Graded Index Fiber – gradual change in refractive index
Elements of OPTICOM System
• Optical Transmitter converts the electrical
information to optical format (E/O)
– Light Emitting Diode (LED): cheap, robust and used
with MMF in short range applications
• Surface emitting and edge emitting LED
– LASER Diode: high performance and more power, used
with SMF in high speed links
• Distributed Feedback (DFB) Laser – high performance single
mode laser
• Fabry-Perrot (FP) lasers – low performance multimode laser
Elements of OPTICOM System
• Optical Receiver converts the optical signal into
appropriate electrical format (E/O)
– PIN Photo Diode: Low performance, no internal gain,
low cost, widely used
– Avalanche Photo Diode (APD): High performance with
internal (avalanche) gain
• Repeater: receives weak light signal, cleans-up,
amplifies and retransmits (O/E/O)
• Optical Amplifier: Amplifies light in fiber without
O/E/O
Wavelength Division Multiplexing

• Fiber has the capability to transmit hundreds of wavelengths


• Cost effective only in long haul links in the past
• With low cost Coarse WDM (CWDM) equipment this is possible even in
the access front
• Once the fiber is in place, additional wavelength can be launched at both
ends by replacing transceivers
Optical Amplifier & EDFA

Continuous Wave
(Constant)

• An optical amplifier amplifies the light signal


without converting to electrical
• Very useful is WDM systems
• Erbium Doped Fiber Amplifier (EDFA) works in
1550 nm band
Last Mile Bottle Neck and
Access Networks

“Infinite” Bandwidth Backbone


Optical Fiber Networks  > Gb/s

Few Mb/s The Last Mile ?


Copper, wireless,
?
fiber optic?
Virtually infinite demand end user
Last Mile Bottle Neck and
Access Networks. Wired Solutions
Fiber in the
Access End
Passive Optical Networks (PON)
– No active elements or O/E
conversion

Fibre-Coaxial (analog) or DSL


(digital) fibre-copper systems

Radio over fibre (Fibre-Wireless)


Systems

Currently Drives the Market


PON Bit-Rates & Timeline
NG-PON2
[40Gb/s]

2013
PON Flavours
• APON/BPON: ATM/Broadband PON
– Uses ATM as bearer protocol
– 155 or 622 Mbps downstream, 155 upstream.

• EPON: Ethernet PON


– Uses Ethernet frames for data transfer
– 10G-EPON aims at reaching high data rates of 10 Gb/s

• GPON: Gigabit capable PON - successor of BPON


– Enables the transmission of both ATM cells and Ethernet packets in
the same transmission frame structure.

• WPON: WDM-PON
– Support multiple wavelengths
PON Comparison
Downstream Upstream Standard

APON 155 Mb/s 155 Mb/s ITU-T (FSAN)


622 Mb/s 155 MB/s
BPON 155 Mb/s 155 Mb/s IEEE 802.3ah
622 Mb/s 622 MB/s
EPON 10-1000 Mb/s 10-1000 Mb/s ITU-T G.983
(FSAN)
GPON 1.244 Gb/s 155 Mb/s ITU-T G.983
2.488 Gb/s 622 Mb/s (FSAN – Full
1.244 Gb/s Services Access
2.488 Gb/s Network)
10G EPON Vs 10G GPON
Hybrid/Fiber Coax (HFC) TV
Networks
Digital
Subscriber
Loop

• DSL consists of fiber-twisted pair


• This is a digital fiber-copper link
• Multimedia (video and data) supported over voice
• At least 3.7 Mb/s streaming is needed for quality video
• Bit rate heavily depend on the length of the twisted pair link
• New techniques like very high rate DSL (VDSL) are tried
Radio over Fiber (ROF)
• RF signals are transmitted over fiber to
provide broadband wireless access
• An emerging very hot area
• Many advantages
• Special areas
• Underground
– Olympics London
– Niagara Tunnel
ROF for Fiber-Wireless Networks
Y
Central Radio over Fiber (ROF)
Base RAP
Station (Simple)
Up/Down links

Y
RAP
802.11 voice
Y
RAP
(Radio Access Point)

Single ROF link can support voice and Micro


Cell
data simultaneously
End

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