Fiber Optic Communication and Networks (ECE4005)
Fiber Optic Communication and Networks (ECE4005)
Fiber Optic Communication and Networks (ECE4005)
Networks (ECE4005)
Dr. Sangeetha R.G
Associate Professor
School of Electronics Engineering
(SENSE)
TDM Vs WDM
Wavelength Division Multiplexing
c
2
Principles of DWDM
• BW of a modulated laser: 10-50 MHz 0.001
nm
– Should be temperature controlled
• Typical Guard band: 0.4 – 1.6 nm
• 80 nm or 14 THz @1310 nm band
• 120 nm or 15 THz @ 1550 nm
• Discrete wavelengths form individual channels
that can be modulated, routed
c and switched
individually 2 Ex. 10.1
• These operations require variety of passive and
DWDM Limitations
Theoretically large number of channels can
be packed in a fiber
For physical realization of DWDM networks
we need precise wavelength selective
devices
Optical amplifiers are imperative to
provide long transmission distances
without repeaters
Click to add text
DWDM Standards
ITU-T G.694.1 DWDM grid for 100 and 50-GHz spacing in L & C bands
CWDM
ITU-T G 694.2
• G.652C and G 652D – low water content fibers
• Relatively inexpensive optical sources
• Low cost optical links in access networks
• G694.2 - 18 wavelengths – 1270 to 1610 nm – O
through L bands spaced 20 nm, wavelength drift
tolerance of 2nm.
Part II: WDM Devices
Key Components for WDM
Passive Optical Components
• Wavelength Selective Splitters
• Wavelength Selective Couplers
Active Optical Components
• Tunable Optical Filter
• Tunable Source
• Optical amplifier
• Add-drop Multiplexer and De-multiplexer
Passive Devices
• These operate completely in the optical domain (no O/E
conversion) and does not need electrical power
• Split/combine light stream Ex: N X N couplers, power splitters,
power taps and star couplers
• Technologies: - Fiber based or
– Optical waveguides based
23
Fused-Biconical coupler OR
Directional coupler
Optical power
coupling
25
Fused Biconical Tapered Coupler
• Fabricated by twisting together, melting and
pulling together two single mode fibers
• They get fused together over length W;
tapered section of length L; total draw length
= L+W
• Significant decrease in V-number in the
coupling region; energy in the core leak out
and gradually couples into the second fibre
Coupler Characteristics
• power ratio between both output can be
changed by adjusting the draw length of a simple
fused fiber coupler
28
Example Coupler Performance
29
Basic Star Coupler
May have N inputs and M outputs
31
N N Star Coupler
• Can construct star couplers by cascading 3-dB couplers
• The number of 3-dB couplers needed to construct an N N
star is
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Scattering matrix representation
• Scattering matrix – Propagation matrix
• b=Sa where
Optical Add/Drop
Multiplexers
OADM Requirements
In general an OADM should be able to:
Add/Drop wavelengths in any order
Be locally and remotely configurable
Pass-through wavelengths should not be demultiplexed
Provide a low loss and low noise path for pass-through wavelengths
Reducing disturbance to pass-through wavelengths reduces need for OEO
regeneration
Wavelengths 1 2 3 4 Wavelengths 1 2 3 4
OADM
1234 1234
Optical Add-Drop Multiplexer
An Optical Add-Drop Multiplexer allow access to individual DWDM signals without
conversion back to an electronic domain
In the example below visible colours are used to mimic DWDM wavelengths
Wavelengths 1,3 and 4 enter the OADM
Wavelengths 1 and 4 pass through
Wavelength 3 (blue) is dropped to a customer
Wavelengths 2 (green) and a new signal on 3 (blue) are added
Downstream signal has wavelengths 1,2,3 and 4
Wavelengths 1 2 3 4 Wavelengths 1 2 3 4
OADM
1234 1234
Dropped Wavelength(s) Added Wavelength(s)
First Generation
Optical Add-Drop Multiplexer
Simple OADM structure
ODU demultiplexes all wavelengths and drops off wavelengths as required
OMU multiplexes added wavelengths as well as those that pass through
Disadvantages:
Unnecessary demultiplexing and multiplexing of pass-through wavelengths
Typical number of drop channels is limited to 25-50% of total payload
Added Wavelengths
Pass-through
wavelengths
OMU
ODU
A B
123 123
4 4
N
o 123
N
d 4
o
e
OADM d
e
D OADM
C
Note wavelength reuse of "blue" wavelength (no. 3), links Node A and B as well as Node C and A
Mach-Zehnder Interferometer Multiplexers
• By splitting the input beam and introducing a phase shift in one of the
paths, the recombined signals will interfere constructively at one output
and destructively at the other.
• In the central region, when the signals in the two arms come from the
same light source, the outputs from these two guides have a phase
difference
39
Cascaded MZIs
• Using basic 2 2 MZIs, any size N N
multiplexer (with N = 2n) can be constructed.
• Each module i has a different ΔLi in order to
have all wavelengths exit at port C
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MZI- Demux Example
Optical Isolators
and Circulators
Optical Isolators
Optical isolators allow light to pass in only one direction.
• This prevents scattered or reflected light from traveling in the reverse direction.
• A polarization independent isolator consists of 45⁰ Faraday rotator placed between
birefringent wedges
• E.g., can keep backward-traveling light from entering a laser diode and possibly
causing instabilities in the optical output.
Polarization-
independent isolator
made of three
miniature optical
components
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Optical Circulators
• It directs light sequentially from port to port in
only one direction.
Circulators..
• Adv:
– Low insertion loss
– High isolation over a wide wavelength range
– Minimal polarization dependent loss (PDL)
– Low polarization mode dispersion (PMD)
Fiber Bragg Grating
• This is invented at Communication Research
Center, Ottawa, Canada
• The FBG has changed the way optical filtering
is done
• The FBG has so many applications
• The FBG changes a single mode fiber (all pass
filter) into a wavelength selective filter
Fiber Brag Grating (FBG)
• Basic FBG is an in-fiber passive optical band reject
filter
• FBG is created by imprinting a periodic
perturbation in the fiber core
• The spacing between two adjacent slits is called
the pitch
• Grating play an important role in:
– Wavelength filtering
– Dispersion compensation
– Optical sensing
– EDFA Gain flattening
– Single mode lasers and many more areas
Reflection grating
Fiber Bragg Grating (FBG)
Example formation:
Two ultraviolet beams will
create a permanent
interference pattern in a
GeO2-doped silica fiber to
form a periodic index
variation along the axis.
Incident l0
n2
Reflected l0 n1
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Fiber Bragg Grating Application
Demultiplexing (wavelength dropping) process:
• Consider 4 wavelengths entering a circulator at port 1.
• All wavelengths exit from port 2.
• The fiber Bragg grating is designed to reflect λ2 and pass all
other wavelengths.
• After reflection, λ2 enters port 2 and comes out of port 3.
50
Wavelength Selective DEMUX
Tunable Filters
• Tunable filters are made by at least one branch of an
interferometric filter has its
– Propagation length or
– Refractive index altered by a control mechanism
• When these parameters change, phase of the
propagating light wave changes (as a function of
wavelength)
• Hence, intensity of the added signal changes (as a
function of wavelength)
• As a result, wavelength selectivity is achieved
Tunable Optical Filters
Tuneable Filter Considerations
• Tuning Range (Δν): 25 THz (or 200nm) for the
whole 1330 nm to 1500 nm. With EDFA
normally Δλ = 35 nm centered at 1550 nm
• Channel Spacing (δν): the min. separation
between channels selected to minimize
crosstalk (30 dB or better)
• Maximum Number of Channels (N = Δν/ δν):
• Tuning speed: Depends on how fast switching
needs to be done (usually milliseconds)
Extended Add/Drop Mux
Arrayed Wave Guide Filters
Longer wavelengths
take more time
Where P is optical signal power, Aeff is the effective area of the fibre
core cross section, n0 is the linear refractive index, n2 is the “nonlinear
index coefficient”
Kerr effect
Self and Cross Phase Modulation (SPM & XPM )
The refractive index changes induced by the kerr effect cause phase
changes in different parts of the optical pulse to travel at different
speeds, resulting in new frequencies being introduced into the pulse
The kerr effect inducing phase changes of a signal due to its own
intensity variation is known as self phase modulation
FWM generated by
FWM generated by three signals
two signals f1 & f2