Slide Module3
Slide Module3
Slide Module3
Optical Fiber
Outline of Talk
Acceptance angle
Numerical aperture
Phase velocity
Group velocity
l
Acceptance angle
Lost by
radiation
A
max
Acceptance B
cone c for total
internal reflection
Large
g diameter fiber Small diameter fiber
Numerical aperture (NA)
The NA defines a cone of acceptance for light that will be
guided by the fiber
B n2
Air n0
A 2 n1
1 C
=90-2
> c
NA = no sin θ
where no is the refractive index of the medium between the lens and the
image plane (e.g. a photodetector) and θ is the maximum acceptance angle.
17
• The definition of numerical aperture applies to all light-collecting
systems, including optical fibers.
e.g. Light rays incident at angles outside the collection cone for a fiber
will not propagate along the fiber (instead will attenuate rapidly).
NA = sin θ
αc θc
θa n1
A na n2
θ > θa αc θc
θa n1
na n2
• Any rays which are incident into the fiber core at an angle > θa
have an incident angle less than θc at the core-cladding interface.
These rays will NOT be totally internal reflected, thus eventually loss
to radiation (at the cladding-jacket interface).
20
• Light rays will be confined inside the fiber core if it is input-coupled
at the fiber core end-face within the acceptance angle θa.
21
Fiber numerical aperture
αc θc
θa n1
na n2
• We can relate the acceptance angle θa and the refractive indices of the
core n1, cladding n2 and air na. 22
• Assuming the end face at the fiber core is flat and normal to the
fiber axis (when the fiber has a “nice” cleave), we consider the
refraction at the air-core interface using Snell’s law:
= n1 (1 - n22/n12)1/2
= (n12 - n22)1/2
23
• Fiber NA therefore characterizes the fiber’s ability to gather light
from a source and guide the light.
Δ = (n1 - n2) / n1
collimated
laser beam θa
θa
θa
• By measuring the output couple ray cone angle, we can measure the fiber
acceptance angle. (This is like part of Lab 1 but without using lenses.) 25
Large-NA fibers?
• Developing ways for fiber to collect light efficiently was an
important early step in developing practical fiber optic
communications (particularly in the 1970s)
Skew ray
• Thus the fiber will only support a discrete number of guided modes.
• This becomes critical in small core diameter fibers which only support
one (singlemode) or a few modes (multimode). Electromagnetic theory
must be applied in this case. 28
Numerical
Aperture
Example
30
Ph
Phase V
Velocity
l it and
d Group
G Velocity
V l it
Phase Velocityy
Sinusoidal variation of electric field with time and distance
x
t=0
t=t1
z
A A
z1
At t=0 and z=0, the amplitude of the wave vector is zero at point A
At t=t1 the point A has moved z1, the amplitude of the wave is still
zero
sin( t1 z1 ) 0 t1 z1 0
z1
Phase velocity vp
t1
Group Velocity
+, + =m
Emax Emax
+ =
-,
-
Wave Packet