Introduction To Optical Fibers
Introduction To Optical Fibers
Department of ECE
Optical Communication
Unit-1
Introduction to Optical Fibers
Prepared by
Ms.S.Dhivya, AP/ECE
Unit- I
Introduction to Optical Fibers
Fiber Structure
Snell’s Law:
n1sin 1 = n2 sin 2
sin n
or 1
2
sin 2 n1
2 > 1
meridional ray
Any ray incident into fiber core at angle > a will be transmitted to
core-cladding interface at an angle < C and will not follow
TIR.
Lost (case B)
Acceptance Cone
For rays to be transmitted by TIR within the fiber core, they
must be incident on the fiber core within an acceptance cone
defined by the conical half angle “a” .
‘a’ is the maximum angle to the axis at which light may enter
the fiber in order to be propagated
Acceptance angle for the fiber
Numerical Aperture (NA)
A very useful parameter : measure of light collecting ability
of fiber.
Larger the magnitude of NA, greater the amount of light accepted by
the
fiber from the external source
Acceptance / Emission Cone
NA = sin a
n2core -
=
n2claddingand 0.20- 0.50 for MMFs
• NA varies from 0.12- 0.20 for SMFs
Classification of Optical Fibers
Classified on basis of :
SI
GI
Application Areas
Single mode fibers: Mostly Step index type
Ideally suited for high bandwidth, very long-haul applications
using single-mode ILD sources; Telecommunication, MANs
We get
Similarly
n1
Planar optical waveguide
• Wavelength = /n1 n2
• Propagation constant
= n1 k
• Components
of in z and x
directions
z = n1k cos
x = n1k sin
• Constructive interference
occurs and standing (a) Plane wave propagating in the guide (b) Interference of
wave obtained in x- plane waves in the guide (forming lowest order mode m=0)
direction
Components of plane wave in x-direction reflected at core-
cladding interface and interfere
Constructive: Total phase change after two reflection is equal to
2m radians; m an integer - Standing wave in x-direction
The optical wave is confined within the guide and the electric field
distribution in the x-direction does not change as the wave propagate
in the z-direction Sinusoidally varying in z-direction
c
Group velocity : vg c
N
dn1
g
n
1
d
Parameter Ng is known as the group index of the guide
Evanescent Field
Another phenomenon of interest under conditions of TIR is
the form of the electric field in the cladding of the guide.
The transmitted wave field in the cladding is of the form
LP01 HE11
LP11 HE21, TE01, TM01
HE31, EH11
LP21 HE12
HE41, EH21
LP02 HE22, TE02, TM02
HE2m, TE0m,
LP31 TM0m
Intensity Profiles
Electric field configuration for the
three lowest LP modes in terms of their
constituent exact modes:
• (a) LP mode designations;
• (b) exact mode designations;
• (c) electric field distribution of
the exact modes;
• (d) intensity distribution of Ex for
exact modes indicating the
electric field intensity profile for
the corresponding LP modes.
d 2 1 d 1 d 2 n 2 k 2 2
dr 2
r dr r 2 d2
0 1
is the field (E or H).
The propagation constant for the guided modes lie in the range
• n2k< <n1k
Solution of wave equation for cylindrical fiber have the form
cosl
E(r) e x p ( t z )
sin l
Here, Represents the dominant transverse electric field component.
The periodic dependence on gives a mode of radial order l.
Introducing the solution to wave equation results in a
differential equation
d 2 E 1 dE 2
2
E 0
1 2
dr 2
r r
dr
For a SI fiber with constant RI core, it is a Bessel differential
equation and the solutions are cylinder functions. In the core
region the solutions are Bessel functions denoted by Jl (Gradually
damped oscillatory functions w.r.t. r)
The field is finite at r =0 and is represented by the Zero
order Bessel function J0.
Refractivenindex
; profile
r<a (core)
1
n(r) =
n2 ; r a
(cladding)
• Multimode Step Index
• Single mode Step Index
nf
nc
Graded Index Fiber Parameters
The parameters defined for SI fibers ( NA, , V) may be applied to GI fibers
and give comparison between two. However, in GI fibers situation is more
complicated because of radial variation of RI of core from the axis, NA is also
function of radial distance.