Nothing has changed the world of communications as much as the development and implementation of optical fiber. This article provides the basic principles needed to work with this technology.

Optical fibers are made from either glass or plastic. Most are roughly the diameter of a human hair, and they may be many miles long. Light is transmitted along the center of the fiber from one end to the other and a signal may be imposed. Fiber optic systems are superior to metallic conductors in many applications. Their greatest advantage is bandwidth. Because of the wavelength of light, it is possible to transmit a signal which contains considerably more information than is possible with a metallic conductor — even a coaxial conductor. Other advantages include:

• Electrical Isolation — Fiber optics do not need a grounding connection. Both the transmitter and the receiver are isolated from each other and are therefore free of ground loop problems. Also, there is no danger of sparks or electrical shock.

• Freedom from EMI — Fiber optics are immune to electromagnetic interference (EMI), and they emit no radiation themselves to cause other interference.

• Low Power Loss — This permits longer cable runs and fewer repeater amplifiers.

• Lighter and Smaller — Fiber weighs less and needs less space than metallic conductors with equivalent signal-carrying capacity.

Copper wire is about 13 times heavier. Fiber also is easier to install and requires less duct space.

Applications 

Some of the major application areas of optical fibers are:

• Communications — Voice, data and video transmission are the most common uses of fiber optics, and these include:

– Telecommunications
– Local area networks (LANs)
– Industrial control systems
– Avionic systems
– Military command, control and communications systems

• Sensing — Fiber optics can be used to deliver light from a remote source to a detector to obtain pressure, temperature or spectral information. The fiber also can be used directly as a transducer to measure a number of environmental effects, such as strain, pressure, electrical resistance and pH. Environmental changes affect the light intensity, phase and/or polarization in ways that can be detected at the other end of the fiber.

• Power Delivery — Optical fibers can deliver remarkably high levels of power for such tasks as laser cutting, welding, marking and drilling.

• Illumination — A bundle of fibers gathered together with a light source at one end can illuminate areas that are difficult to reach — for example, inside the human body, in conjuction with an endoscope. Also, they can be used as a display sign or simply as decorative illumination.

Construction 

An optical fiber consists of three basic concentric elements: the core, the cladding and the outer coating (Figure 1).

Figure1.gif


Figure 1. An optical fiber consists of a core, cladding and coating.


The core is usually made of glass or plastic, although other materials are sometimes used depending on transmission spectrum desired.

The core is the light transmitting portion of the fiber. The cladding usually is made of the same material as the core, but with a slightly lower index of refraction (usually about one percent lower). This index difference causes total internal reflection to occur at the index boundary along the length of the fiber so that the light is transmitted down the fiber and does not escape through the side walls.

The coating usually comprises one or more coats of a plastic material to protect the fiber from the physical environment. Sometimes metallic sheaths are added to the coating for further physical protection.

Optical fibers usually are specified by their size, given as the outer diameter of the core, cladding and coating. For example, a 62.5/125/250 would refer to a fiber with a 62.5-µm diameter core, a 125-µm diameter cladding and a 0.25-mm outer coating diameter.

Principles

Optical materials are characterized by their index of refraction, referred to as n. A material’s index of refraction is the ratio of the speed of light in a vacuum to the speed of light in the material. When a beam of light passes from one material to another with a different index of refraction, the beam is bent (or refracted) at the interface (Figure 2).

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Figure 2. A beam of light passing from one material to another of a different index of refraction is bent or refracted at the interface.


Refraction is described by Snell’s law:

Equation1.gif

where nI and nR are the indices of refraction of the materials through which the beam is refracted and I andR are the angles of incidence and refraction of the beam. If the angle of incidence is greater than the critical angle for the interface (typically about 82° for optical fibers), the light is reflected back into the incident medium without loss by a process known as total internal reflection (Figure 3).

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Figure 3. Total internal reflection allows light to remain inside the core of the fiber.


Modes

When light is guided down a fiber (as microwaves are guided down a waveguide), phase shifts occur at every reflective boundary. There is a finite discrete number of paths down the optical fiber (known as modes) that produce constructive (inphase and therefore additive) phase shifts that reinforce the transmission. Because each of these modes occurs at a different angle to the fiber axis as the beam travels along the length, each one travels a different length through the fiber from the input to the output. Only one mode, the zero-order mode, travels the length of the fiber without reflections from the sidewalls. This is known as a single-mode fiber. The actual number of modes that can be propagated in a given optical fiber is determined by the wavelength of light and the diameter and index of refraction of the core of the fiber.