Chapter-1 Optical Fiber Communication
Chapter-1 Optical Fiber Communication
1.1 INTRODUCTION
Today’s communication has very important role in life. For better communication we
need transmission medium offering large capacity with low communication losses.
The optical fiber is the only transmission medium offering such large bandwidth upto
GHz. To amplify an optical signal with a conventional repeater, one performs optical
to electrical conversion, electrical amplification, pulse shaping, and then electrical to
again optical conversion. Another way is that to amplify optical signal by using the
optical amplifiers which operates completely in the optical domain to boost(amplify)
the power levels of multiple light wave signals over spectral bands of 30 nm. Optical
amplifiers can amplify signals at different wavelength simultaneously. Optical fiber
communications typically operate in a wavelength region corresponding to one of the
following “telecom windows. The first window at 800–900 nm was originally used
GaAs/AlGaAs-based laser diodes and light emitting diodes (LEDs) served as
transmitters, and silicon photodiodes were suitable for the receivers . However, the
fiber losses are relatively high in this fiber amplifiers are not well developed for this
spectral region.
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1.3 Advantages of optical fiber communications over electrical cables
The capacity of fibers for data transmission is huge: a single silica fiber can carry
hundreds of thousands of telephone channels, utilizing only a small part of the
theoretical capacity . In the last 30 years, the progress concerning transmission
capacities of fiber links has been significantly faster than e.g. the progress in the
speed or storage capacity of computers.
The losses for light propagating in fibers are amazingly small: ∼ 0.2 dB/km for
modern singlemode silica fibers, so that many tens of kilometres can be bridged
without amplifying the signals.
A large number of channels can be re-amplified in a single fiber amplifier, if
required for very large transmission distances .
Due to the huge transmission rate achievable, the cost per transported bit can be
extremely low.
Compared with electrical cables, fiber-optic cables are very lightweight, so that
the cost of laying a fiber-optic cable can be lower.
Fiber-optic cables are immune to problems that arise with electrical cables, such
as ground loops or electromagnetic interference (EMI).
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from an external source called the pump. The pump supplies the energy to electrons in
an active medium, which raises them to higher energy levels to produce a population
inversion. An incoming signal photon will trigger these excited electrons to drop to
lower levels through a stimulated emission process. Since one in coming trigger
photon stimulates many excited electrons to emit photons of equal energy as they
drop to the ground state, the result is an amplified optical signal.
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Figure1.2: Types Of Optical Amplifiers
In-line Optical Amplifiers
In a single-mode link, the effects of fiber dispersion may be small so that the main
limitation to repeater spacing is fibre attenuation. Since such a link does not
necessarily require a complete regeneration of the signal, simple amplification of the
optical signal is sufficient. Thus, an in-line optical amplifier can be used to
compensate for transmission loss and increase the distance between regenerative
repeaters.
Preamplifier
Figure shows an optical amplifier being used as a front-end preamplifier for an optical
receiver. Thereby weak optical signal is amplified before photo detection so that the
Signal-to-noise ratio degradation caused by thermal noise in the receiver electronics
can be suppressed. Compared with other frontend devices such as avalanche
photodiodes or optical heterodyne detectors, an optical preamplifier provides a larger
gain factor and a broader bandwidth.
Figure1.4:- Preamplifier
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Power Amplifier
Power or booster amplifier applications include placing the device immediately after
an optical transmitter to boost the transmitted power, as figure shows [11, 12]. This
serves to increase the transmission distance by 10-100 km depending on the amplifier
gain and fiber loss. As an example, using the boosting technique together with an
optical pre-amplifier at the receiving end can enable repeater less undersea
transmission distances of 200-250 km. One can also employ an optical amplifier in a
local area network as a booster amplifier to compensate for coupler-insertion loss and
power-splitting loss.
Figure1.5:-booster amplifier
1.5.1 Semiconductor Optical Amplifiers
Semiconductor Optical Amplifiers (SOAs) uses the principle of stimulated emission
to amplify an optical information signal. Optical input signal carrying original data
enters to semiconductor’s active region through coupling. The coupling is required
because the mode field diameter of single mode beam is 9.3Mm, while size of active
region is less. Injection current delivers the external energy to pump elements at
conduction band. The input signal stimulated the transition of electrons down to
valence band & emission of photon with same energy & same wavelength as the input
signal, so amplified optical signal is obtained. SOA is of two types - Fabry –Perot
Amplifier (FPA) & Travelling Wave Amplifier (TWA). Fabry-Perot Amplifier (FPA)
is same as SOA. In this, light entering the active region is reflected several times from
cleaved face & amplified as it leaves the cavity. Travelling Wave Amplifier (TWA) is
the SOA form.
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Figure1.6: Device Structure Of SOA
Simple SOA are almost the same as regular index-guided FP lasers. The back facet is
pigtailed to allow the input of signal light. The main problem is that it has been
difficult to make SOAs longer than about 450 μm. In this short distance there is not
sufficient gain available on a single pass through the device for useful amplification to
be obtained. One solution to this is to retain the reflective facets (mirrors)
characteristic of laser operation. Typical SOAs have a mirror reflectivity of around
30%. Thus the signal has a chance to reflect a few times within the cavity and obtain
useful amplification. In TWA, there is an active medium without reflective facets, so
that input signal is amplified by a single passage through active region. Practical
active region without reflective facets was made by covering the facets of
semiconductor material by antireflection coating, tilting the active region with respect
to facet and using buffer material between active region & facet to also reduce
reflectance R as small as 10-4.
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wavelength is shorter than the signal wavelength. To get a phenomenological
understanding of how an EDFA works, we need to look at the energy level structure
of erbium. The erbium atoms in silica are Er 3+ ions, which are erbium atoms that have
lost three of their outer electrons.fig shows a simplified energy-level diagram and
various energy-level transition process of these Er 3+ ions in silica glass. The two
principal levels for telecommunication applications are a metastable level (the so
called 4I13/2 level) and the 4I11/2 pump level .the term “metastable” means that the
lifetimes for transitions from this state to the ground state are very long compared
with the lifetimes of the states that led to this level. The metastable, the pump and the
ground state levels are actually bands of closely spaced energy levels that form a
manifold due to the effect known as Starks splitting. Furthermost, each stark level is
broadened by thermal effects into an almost continuous band.
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Figure1.8:- (a) Co-directional pumping (b) Counter-directional pumping
(c) Dual pumping
.
Counter-directional pumping allows higher gains but co-directional pumping gives
better noise performance. In addition, pumping at 980 nm is preferred, since it
produces less noise and achieves larger population inversion than pumping at 1480
nm.
1.6 APPLICATIONS
Erbium-doped Amplifiers in Telecom Systems
The power of a data transmitter may be boosted with a high-power EDFA before
entering a long fiber span, or a device with large losses, such as a fiber-optic
splitter. Such splitters are widely used e.g. in cable-TV systems, where a single
transmitter is used to deliver signals into many fibers.
A fiber amplifier may also be used in front of a data receiver, if the arriving signal
is weak. Despite the introduction of amplifier noise, this can improve the signal-
to-noise ratio and thus the possible data transmission rate, since the amplifier
noise may be weaker than the input noise of the receiver. It is more common,
however, to use avalanche photodiodes, which have some built-in signal
amplification.
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In-line EDFAs are used between long spans of passive transmission fiber. Using
multiple amplifiers in a long fiber-optic link has the advantage that large
transmission losses can be compensated without (a) letting the optical power drop
to too low levels, which would spoil the signal-to-noise ratio, and (b) without
transmitting excessive optical powers at other locations, which would cause
detrimental nonlinear effects due to the unavoidable fiber nonlinearities. Many of
these in-line EDFAs are operated even under difficult conditions, e.g. on the
ocean floor, where maintenance would be hardly possible.
Although data transmitters are normally not based on erbium-doped devices,
EDFAs are often part of equipment for testing transmission hardware. They are
also used in the context of optical signal processing.
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CHAPTER-2
SIMULATION SOFTWARE:- OPTISYSTEM
2.1 OVERVIEW
In an industry where cost effectiveness and productivity are imperative for success,
the award winning OptiSystem can minimize time requirements and decrease cost
related to the design of optical systems, links, and components. OptiSystem is an
innovative, rapidly evolving, and powerful software design tool that enables users to
plan, test, and simulate almost every type of optical link in the transmission layer of a
broad spectrum of optical networks from LAN, SAN, MAN to ultra-long-haul. It
offers transmission layer optical communication system design and planning from
component to system level, and visually presents analysis and scenarios. Its
integration with other Optiwave products and design tools of industry leading
electronic design automation software all contribute to OptiSystem speeding your
product to market and reducing the payback period.
2.3 Applications
Created to address the needs of research scientists, optical telecom engineers, system
integrators, students and a wide variety of other users, OptiSystem satisfies the
demand of the evolving photonics market for a powerful yet easy to use optical
system design tool.
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2.4.5 Advanced visualization tools
Advanced visualization tools produce OSA Spectra, signal chirp, eye diagrams,
polarization state, constellation diagrams and much more. Also included are WDM
analysis tools listing signal power, gain, noise figure, and OSNR per channel.
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2.4.10 Report page
A fully customizable report page allows you to display any set of parameters and
results available in the design. The produced reports are organized into resizable and
moveable spreadsheets, text, 2D and 3D graphs. It also includes HTML export and
templates with pre-formatted report layouts.
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Fabry-Perot Laser
A new model of a wavelength-locked Fabry-Perot laser diode (F-P LD) based on the
rate equations for the semiconductor laser diode. Fabry-Perot laser is a cost- effective
source for the wavelength-division multiplexed passive optical networks.
OFDM Modulator/Demodulator
OFDM can be applied in optical long haul transmission systems and have many
advantages over conventional single-carrier modulation format. The new components
allow for the simulation of OFDM transmitters and receivers, supporting different
types of modulation schemes such as BPSK, QPSK, QAM, etc.
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Optical Fibers and Amplifiers
A new discretization parameter for broadband sampled signals offers improved
performance, accuracy, and convergence for doped amplifier gain and Brillouin
calculations. Four-Wave Mixing, Stimulated Brillouin Scattering, Self-Phase
Modulation, Cross-Phase Modulation, and Stimulated Raman Scattering are all
included with the optical fiber models of OptiSystem.
S-Parameter Extractor
The signal characteristics from an optical transmitter input and receiver output can be
extracted and exported into an industry standard touchstone format for s-parameters,
benefiting EDA tools that offer integrated S-Parameter support which effectively
reduces the design cycle time.
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CHAPTER-3
IMPLEMENTATION AND SIMULATION
3.1 INTRODUCTION
The main performance characteristics of EDFAs such as high gain, low noise figure,
high output power and gain flatness can be achieved in dual or more stage amplifiers.
The dual stage design provides capabilities to suppress ASE noise by the mid-stage
optical isolator which reduces amplifier saturation and positively contributes to the
gain, power and noise characteristics. In such devices, the first stage can be viewed as
a low-noise preamplifier, and the second stage as a power amplifier. High gain
flatness of the amplifier is achieved by using a mid-stage Gain Equalization Filter
(GEF).
3.2 OBJECTIVE
As the light travels along the fiber, signal intensity reduces due to various factors
such as coupling with isolator and due to properties of fiber itself. Thus, to
overcome this problem we will provide amplifiers in the mid stage Gain flattened
fiber (GFF).
At the 2nd stage when EDFA will be used, high gain, low noise figure, high output
power and gain flatness can be achieved.
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pump is used as optical null. A filter separates any remnant of light power from the
information signal.
Figure3.1:- Simulation setup for two stage EDFA with mid stage GEF
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3.4 Calculation of the whole project
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Figure3.2:- Calculation Of Whole Project
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Figure3.3:-output of optical spectrum
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Figure3.4 output gain and noise figure
REFERENCES
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1. Aggrawal G.P., Fiber optic communication systems, John Wiley & Sons, Newyork,
1997.
2001.
1990.
8. http://www.vpiphotonics.com/
9. http://www.optiwave.com/products/system_overview.html
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