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S-72.227 Digital Communication Systems

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S-72.227 Digital Communication Systems ... (SOA) Optical amplifiers versus opto-electrical ... happens in fiber Isolators and couplers prevent resonance ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: S-72.227 Digital Communication Systems


1
S-72.227 Digital Communication Systems
  • Overview into Fiber Optic Communications

2
Overview into Fiber Optic Communications
  • Capacity of telecommunication networks
  • Advantages of optical systems
  • Optical fibers
  • single mode
  • multimode
  • Modules of fiber optic link
  • Optical repeaters - EDFA
  • Dispersion in fibers
  • inter-modal and intra-modal dispersion
  • Fiber bandwidth and bitrate
  • Optical sources LEDs and lasers
  • Optical sinks PIN and APD photodiodes
  • Design of optical links

3
Capacity of telecommunication networks
MESSAGEBANDWIDTH
  • Telecommunications systems
  • tend to increase in capacity
  • have increasingly higher rates
  • Increase in capacity and raterequires higher
    carriers
  • Optical system offers
  • very high bandwidths
  • repeater spacing up tohundreds of km
  • versatile modulationmethods
  • Optical communications is especially applicable
    in
  • ATM links
  • Local area networks (high rates/demanding
    environments)

1 GHz-gt
10 MHz
100 kHz
4 kHz
4
Summarizing advantages of optical systems
  • Enormous capacity 1.3 mm ... 1.55 mm allocates
    bandwidth of 37 THz!!
  • Low transmission loss
  • Optical fiber loss 0.2 dB/km, Coaxial cable loss
    10 300 dB/km !
  • Cables and equipment have small size and weight
  • aircrafts, satellites, ships
  • Immunity to interference
  • nuclear power plants, hospitals, EMP
    (Electromagnetic pulse) resistive systems
    (installations for defense)
  • Electrical isolation
  • electrical hazardous environments
  • negligible crosstalk
  • Signal security
  • banking, computer networks, military systems
  • Fibers have abundant raw material

5
Optical fibers
  • Two windows available, namely at
  • 1.3 mm and 1.55 mm
  • The lower window is usedwith Si and GaAlAs and
    the upper window with InGaAsP compounds
  • There are single and monomodefibers that have
    step or graded refraction index profile
  • Propagation in optical fibersis influenced by
  • attenuation
  • scattering
  • absorption
  • dispersion

Link to a fiber manufacturer's page!
6
Characterizing optical fibers
  • Optical fiber consist of (a) core, (b) cladding,
    (c) mechanical protection layer
  • Refraction index of core n1 is slightly larger
    causing total internal refraction at the
    interface of core and cladding
  • Fibers can be divided into four classes

core
7
Single mode and multimode fibers
8
Fiber modes
  • Electromagnetic field propagating in fiber can be
    described by Maxwells equations whose solution
    yields number of modes M for step index profile
    aswhere a is the core radius and V is the mode
    parameter, or normalized frequency of the fiber
  • Depending on fiberparameters, number
    ofdifferent propagating modes appear
  • For single mode fibers
  • Single mode fibers do nothave mode dispersion

9
Inter-modal (mode) dispersion
  • Multimode fibers exhibit modal dispersion that is
    caused by different propagation modes taking
    different paths

cladding
Path 1
core
Path 2
cladding
10
Chromatic dispersion
  • Chromatic dispersion (or material dispersion) is
    produced when different frequencies of light
    propagate using different velocities in fiber
  • Therefore chromatic dispersion is larger the
    wider source bandwidth is. Thus it is largest for
    LEDs (Light Emitting Diode) and smallest for
    LASERs (Light Amplification by Stimulated
    Emission of Radiation) diodes
  • LED BW about 5 of l0 , Laser BW about 0.1 of
    l0
  • Optical fibers have dispersion minimum at 1.3 mm
    but their attenuation minimum is at 1.55 mm.
    Therefore dispersion shifted fibers were
    developed.

Example GaAlAs LED is used at l01 mm. This
source has spectral width of 40 nm and its
material dispersion is Dmat(1 mm)40 ps/(nm x
km). How much is its pulse spreading in 25 km
distance?
11
Chromatic and waveguide dispersion
  • In addition to chromatic dispersion, there exist
    also waveguide dispersion that is significant for
    single mode fibers in long wavelengths
  • Chromatic and waveguide dispersion are denoted
    as intra- modal dispersion and their effects
    cancel each other at a certain wavelength
  • This cancellationis used in dispersion shifted
    fibers
  • Fiber total dispersion is determined as the
    geometric sum effect of intra-modal and
    inter-modal (or mode) dispersion with net pulse
    spreading

Chromatic and waveguide dispersion cancel each
other
Chromatic
waveguidechromatic dispersion
Dispersion due to different mode velocities
12
Fiber dispersion, bit rate and bandwidth
  • Usually fiber systems apply amplitude modulation
    by pulses whose width is determined by
  • linewidth of the optical source
  • rise time of the optical source
  • dispersion properties of the fiber
  • rise time of the detector unit
  • Assume optical power emerging from the fiber has
    Gaussian shape
  • From time-domain expression the time required for
    pulse to reach its half-maximum, e.g the time to
    have g(t 1/2)g(0)/2 iswhere tFWHM is the
    full-width-half-maximum-value
  • Relationship between fiber risetime and its
    bandwidth is (next slide)

13
Using MathCad to derive connection between fiber
bandwidth and rise time
14
System rise-time
  • Total system rise time can be expressed
    aswhere L is the fiber length km and q
    is the exponent characterizing bandwidth. Fiber
    bandwidth is therefore also
  • Bandwidths are expressed here in MHz and
    wavelengths in nm
  • Here the receiver rise time (10-to-90- BW) is
    derived based 1. order lowpass filter amplitude
    from gLP(t)0.1 to gLP(t) 0.9 where

15
Example
  • Calculate the total rise time for a system using
    LED and a driver causing transmitter rise time of
    15 ns. Assume that the led bandwidth is 40 nm.
    The receiver has 25 MHz bandwidth. The fiber has
    bandwidth distance product
    with q0.7. Therefore
  • Note that this means that the electrical signal
    bandwidth is
  • For raised cosine shaped pulses thus over
    20Mb/signaling rate can beachieved

16
Optical amplifiers
  • Direct amplification without conversion to
    electrical signals
  • Three major types
  • Erbium-doped fiber amplifier at 1.55 mm (EDFA and
    EDFFA)
  • Praseodymium-doped fiber amplifier at 1.3 mm
    (PDFA)
  • semiconductor optical amplifier - switches and
    wavelength converters (SOA)
  • Optical amplifiers versus opto-electrical
    regenerators
  • large bandwidth and gain
  • easy usage with wavelength division multiplexing
    (WDM)
  • easy upgrading
  • insensitivity to bitrate and signal formats
  • All based on stimulated emission of radiation -
    as lasers (in contrast to spontaneous emission)
  • Stimulated emission yields coherent radiation -
    emitted photons are perfect clones

17
Erbium-doped fiber amplifier (EDFA)
Erbium fiber
Signal in (1550 nm)
Signal out
Isolator
Isolator
Pump
Residual pump
980 or 1480 nm
  • Amplification (stimulated emission) happens in
    fiber
  • Isolators and couplers prevent resonance in fiber
    (prevents device to become a laser)
  • Popularity due to
  • availability of compact high-power pump lasers
  • all-fiber device polarization independent
  • amplifies all WDM signals simultaneusly

18
EDFA - energy level diagram
Fluoride class level(EDFFA)
E4
980 nm
excited state absorption
E3
Er3 levels
E2
1530 nm
980 nm
1480 nm
E1
  • Pump power injected at 980 nm causes spontaneous
    emission from E1 to E3 and there back to E2
  • Due to the indicated spontaneous emission
    lifetimes population inversion (PI) obtained
    between E1 and E2
  • The higher the PI to lower the amplified
    spontaneous emission (ASE)
  • Thermalization (distribution of Er3 atoms) and
    Stark splitting cause each level to be splitted
    in class (not a crystal substance) -gt a wide band
    of amplified wavelengths
  • Practical amplification range 1525 nm - 1570 nm,
    peak around 1530 nm

19
LEDs and LASER-diodes
  • Light Emitting Diode (LED) is a simple
    pn-structure where recombining electron-hole
    pairs convert current into light
  • In fiber-optic communications light source should
    meet the following requirements
  • Physical compatibility with fiber
  • Sufficient power output
  • Capability of various types of modulation
  • Fast rise-time
  • High efficiency
  • Long life-time
  • Reasonably low cost

20
Modern GaAlAs light emitter
21
Light generating structures
  • In LEDs light is generated by spontaneous
    emission
  • In LDs light is generated by stimulated emission
  • Efficient LD and LED structures
  • guide the light in recombination area
  • guide the electrons and holes in recombination
    area
  • guide the generated light out of the structure

22
LED types
  • Surface emitting LEDs (SLED)
  • light collected from the other surface, other
    attached to a heat sink
  • no waveguiding
  • easy connection into multimode fibers
  • Edge emitting LEDs (ELED)
  • like stripe geometry lasers but no optical
    feedback
  • easy coupling into multimode and single mode
    fibers
  • Superluminescent LEDs (SLD)
  • spectra formed partially by stimulated emission
  • higher optical output than with ELEDs or SLEDs
  • For modulation ELEDs provides the best linearity
    but SLD provides the highest light output

23
Lasers
  • Lasing effect means that stimulated emission is
    the major for of producing light in the
    structure. This requires
  • intense charge density
  • direct band-gap material-gtenough light produced
  • stimulated emission

24
Connecting optical power
  • Numerical aperture (NA)
  • Minimum (critical) angle supporting internal
    reflection
  • Connection efficiency is defined by
  • Additional factors of connection efficiency
    fiber refraction index profile and core radius,
    source intensity, radiation pattern, how
    precisely fiber is aligned to the source, surface
    quality

25
Modulating lasers
26
Example LD distortion coefficients
  • Let us assume that an LD transfer curve
    distortion can be described bywhere x(t) is
    the modulation current and y(t) is the optical
    power
  • nthe order harmonic distortion is described by
    the distortion coefficientandFor the applied
    signal we assume and
    therefore

27
Optical photodetectors (PDs)
  • PDs work vice versato LEDs and LDs
  • Two photodiode types
  • PIN
  • APD
  • For a photodiodeit is required that itis
  • sensitive at the used l
  • small noise
  • long life span
  • small rise-time (large BW, small capacitance)
  • low temperature sensitivity
  • quality/price ratio

28
Optical communication link
29
Link calculations
  • In order to determine repeater spacing on should
    calculate
  • power budget
  • rise-time budget
  • Optical power loss due to junctions, connectors
    and fiber
  • One should also estimate required margins with
    respect of temperature, aging and stability
  • For rise-time budget one should take into account
    all the rise times in the link (tx, fiber, rx)
  • If the link does not fit into specifications
  • more repeaters
  • change components
  • change specifications
  • Often several design iteration turns are required

30
Link calculations (cont.)
  • Specifications transmission distance, data rate
    (BW), BER
  • Objectives is then to select
  • Multimode or single mode fiber core size,
    refractive index profile, bandwidth or
    dispersion, attenuation, numerical aperture or
    mode-field diameter
  • LED or laser diode optical source emission
    wavelength, spectral line width, output power,
    effective radiating area, emission pattern,
    number of emitting modes
  • PIN or avalanche photodiode responsivity,
    operating wavelength, rise time, sensitivity

FIBER
SOURCE
DETECTOR/RECEIVER
31
The bitrate-transmission length grid
SI step index, GI graded index, MMF multimode
fiber, SMF single mode fiber
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