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16.711 Lecture 3 Optical Fibers

This document summarizes key topics from a lecture on optical fibers: 1) It discusses fiber modes in single mode and multi-mode fibers, calculating the number of allowed modes. 2) Sources of fiber loss are explained, including material absorption, Rayleigh scattering, and bending loss. 3) Types of dispersion in single mode fibers are described, including material dispersion, waveguide dispersion, and polarization mode dispersion. 4) Dispersion-induced limitations on bit rate and bandwidth length product are examined with an example calculation. 5) Finally, techniques for dispersion management, including pre-chirp compensation schemes, are outlined.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
69 views18 pages

16.711 Lecture 3 Optical Fibers

This document summarizes key topics from a lecture on optical fibers: 1) It discusses fiber modes in single mode and multi-mode fibers, calculating the number of allowed modes. 2) Sources of fiber loss are explained, including material absorption, Rayleigh scattering, and bending loss. 3) Types of dispersion in single mode fibers are described, including material dispersion, waveguide dispersion, and polarization mode dispersion. 4) Dispersion-induced limitations on bit rate and bandwidth length product are examined with an example calculation. 5) Finally, techniques for dispersion management, including pre-chirp compensation schemes, are outlined.

Uploaded by

Vijay Janyani
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PPT, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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16.

711 Lecture 3 Optical fibers

Last lecture
• Geometric optic view of waveguide, numeric aperture
• Symmetric planar dielectric Slab waveguide
• Modal and waveguide dispersion in palnar waveguide
• Rectangular waveguide, effective index method
16.711 Lecture 3 Optical fibers

Today
• Fiber modes
• Fiber Losses
• Dispersion in single-mode fibers
• Dispersion induced limitations
• Dispersion management
• The Graded index fibers
16.711 Lecture 3 Optical fibers

Fiber modes --- single mode and multi-mode fibers


V-number
2a 2 2a 2
V (n1  n22 )1/ 2 , Vcutoff  (n1  n22 )1/ 2  2.41,
 c
Number of modes when V>>2.41
V2
M ,
2
Normalized propagation constant
2
neff  n22
b , b  (1.1428  0.996 / V ) 2 , for V between 1.5 – 2.5.
n12  n22

Mode field diameter (MFD)


1
2 w  2a (1  ),
V
16.711 Lecture 3 Optical fibers

Examples --- single mode and multi-mode fibers


1. Calculate the number of allowed modes in a multimode step index fiber, a = 100 m, core
index of 1.468 and a cladding index of 1.447 at the wavelength of 850nm.

Solution:

2a 2 V2
V (n1  n22 )1/ 2  91.44, M  4181,
 2

2. What should be the core radius of a single mode fiber that has the core index of 1.468 and the
cladding index of 1.447 at the wavelength of 1.3m.
Solution:
2a 2
V (n1  n22 )1/ 2  2.4, a < 2.1m

3. Calculate the mode field diameter of a single mode fiber that has the core index of 1.458 and
the cladding index of 1.452 at the wavelength of 1.3m.
Solution:

2w0  2a(1  1 / V )  10.1m,


16.711 Lecture 3 Optical fibers

Fiber loss
• Material absorption
silica electron resonance <0.4m
OH vibrational resonance ~ 2.73 m
Harmonic and combination tones ~1.39 m
1.24 m, 0.95 m
• Rayleigh scattering
Local microscopic fluctuations in density
C
  C~, 0.8dB/km m4
4
0.14dB loss @ 1.55m

• Bending loss and Bending radius


a
 exp( R / Rc ), Rc  ,
n12  n23
16.711 Lecture 3 Optical fibers

Dispersions in single mode fiber


• Material dispersion
d L  g d  d 2n
vg  | 0 ,  g  ,  ( )  ( 2 ) ,
d vg L d c d

 d 2n
Dm  ( 2 ),  g  Dm L ,
c d

Example --- material dispersion


Calculate the material dispersion effect for LED with line width of 100nm and a laser with a line
width of 2nm for a fiber with dispersion coefficient of Dm = 22pskm-1nm-1 at 1310nm.

Solution:

  Dm L  2.2ns, for the LED

  Dm L  44 ps, for the Laser


16.711 Lecture 3 Optical fibers

Dispersions in single mode fiber


• Waveguide dispersion
d L  g d n2 (n1  n2 ) d 2 (Vb)
vg  | 0 ,  g  ,  ( )   V ,
d vg L d c dV 2

 g d 1.984 N g 2 n2 (n1  n2 ) d 2 (Vb)


 ( )  , Dw   V ,  g  Dm L ,
L d (2a) 2 2cn22 c dV 2

Example --- waveguide dispersion


n2 = 1.48, and delta n = 0.2 percent. Calculate Dw at 1310nm.

Solution:

b  (1.1428  0.996 / V ) 2 , for V between 1.5 – 2.5.

d 2 (Vb)
V  0.26,
dV 2

n2 (n1  n2 ) d 2 (Vb)
Dw   V  1.9 ps /( nm  km),
c dV 2
16.711 Lecture 3 Optical fibers

• chromatic dispersion (material plus waveduide dispersion)

 g
 ( Dm  Dw ) ,
L

• material dispersion is determined by


the material composition of a fiber.

• waveguide dispersion is determined


by the waveguide index profile of a
fiber
16.711 Lecture 3 Optical fibers

• Polarization mode dispersion


 g
 D p  ,
L
• fiber is not perfectly symmetric,
inhomogeneous.
• refractive index is not isotropic.

• dispersion flattened fibers:


Use waveguide geometry and
index profiles to compensate
the material dispersion
16.711 Lecture 3 Optical fibers

• Dispersion induced limitations

• For RZ bit With no intersymbol interference


1
B ,
2 1/ 2

• For NRZ bit With no intersymbol interference


1
B ,
 1/ 2
16.711 Lecture 3 Optical fibers

Dispersion induced limitations


• Optical and Electrical Bandwidth

1
B , f 3dB  0.7 B,
2 1/ 2
• Bandwidth length product
0.25
BL  ,
D
16.711 Lecture 3 Optical fibers

Dispersion induced limitations


Example --- bit rate and bandwidth
Calculate the bandwidth and length product for an optical fiber with chromatic dispersion
coefficient 8pskm-1nm-1 and optical bandwidth for 10km of this kind of fiber and linewidth of
2nm.
Solution:
0.25
 1/ 2 / L  D  16 pskm 1 , BL   36.9Gbs 1km,
D
f 3dB  0.7 B  2.8GHz,

• Fiber limiting factor absorption or dispersion?

Loss  0.25dB 10km  2.5dB,


16.711 Lecture 3 Optical fibers

Dispersion Management
• Pre compensation schemes
1. Prechirp
Gaussian Pulse:
1 t ~  2T02 1
A(0, t )  A0 exp[ ( ) 2 ], A(0,  )  A0 (2T0 ) exp(
2 1/ 2
),  0  ,
2 T0 2 T0
dk 1 d 2k
k ( )  k 0  | (   0 )  | ...,
d 0 2 d 2 0

k ( ) d d 2 1
 ( )   0  | 0 (   0 )  |
2 0
...   0   1    2 ( ) 2  ...,
c d d 2
~ ~ i
A( z ,  )  A(0,  ) exp(  2 z ),
2
1  ~ i A0 1
2 
A( z , t )  A ( 0,  0 ) exp(  2 z  ) d  exp[  2
],
2 Q( z ) 2T0 Q ( z )

i 2 z  2 z 2 1/ 2
Q( z )  1  , T ( z )  [1  ( ) ] T0 ,
T02 T02
16.711 Lecture 3 Optical fibers

Dispersion Management
• Pre compensation schemes
1. Prechirp
Prechirped Gaussian Pulse:
~ 2T02 1/ 2  2T02 (1  iC ) t 2
A(0,  )  A0 ( ) exp( ), A(0, t )  A0 exp[ ( ) ],
1  iC 2(1  iC ) 2 T0
~ ~ i 2T02 1/ 2  2T02 2 iCT0   2
2
A( z,  )  A(0,  ) exp(  2 z )  A0 (
2
) exp[   ],
2 1  iC 2(1  C 2 ) (1  C 2 )
1
 0  (1  C 2 )1/ 2 ,
T0

1  ~ i A0 1
A( z , t ) 
2  A ( 0,  0 ) exp(
2
 2 z  ) d  
Q( z )
exp[ 
2T0
2
Q ( z )
],

(C  i )  2 z C 2 z 2  2 z 2 1 / 2
Q( z )  1  2
, T ( z )  [(1  2
)  ( 2 ) ] T0 ,
T0 T0 T0
16.711 Lecture 3 Optical fibers

Dispersion Management
1. Prechirp

With T1/T0 = sqrt(2), the transmission distance is:


C  1  2C 2 LD  T02 /  2 ,
L LD ,
1 C 2
16.711 Lecture 3 Optical fibers

Dispersion Management
Examples:
1. What’s the dispersion limited transmission distance for a 1.55m light wave system making
use of direct modulation at 10Gb/s? D = 17ps(km-nm). Assume that frequency chirping
broadens the guassian-shape by a factor of 6 from its transform limited width.
Solution:

1
TFWHM   5  10 11 ( s ), T0  TFWHM / 1.66  3  10 11 s,
2B
1
 0  (1  C 2 )1/ 2 , C  5.9,
T0
2c
D   2  2 ,  2  24 ps / km,
2


C 2 z 2  2 z 2 1 / 2
T ( z )  [(1  2
)  ( 2 ) ] T0  T0 ,
T0 T0

z  12km,
16.711 Lecture 3 Optical fibers

Dispersion compensation fiber or dispersion shifted fiber

• Why dispersion compensation fiber:


• for long haul fiber optic communication.
• All–optical solution

D1 L1  D2 L2  0

• Approaches
 d 2n
Dm  ( 2 ),
c d
• longer wavelength has
a larger index.

make the waveguide


weakly guided so that
longer wavelength has a
lower index.
16.711 Lecture 3 Optical fibers

The Graded index fibers


n1[1  (  / a ) ];   a,
n(  )  
 n1(1   )  n2 ;   a,

d 2  1 dn
 ,
dz 2
n d
D1 L1  D2 L2  0
   0 cos( pz )   0 ' sin( pz ),
• Approaches
p  (2 / a 2 )1/ 2 , z  2 / p,
Only valid for paraxial approximation
General case Intermode dispersion
n1
 L 2 ,
20 3c
Calculate the BL product of a grade index filber of 50m core with refractive index of n1 =
1.480 and n2 = 1.460. At 1.3 m.
Solution:
n1 0.25 L
 L 2  0.026ns, BL   9.6Gbs 1km,
20 3c 

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