Unit1 Evolution of Optical Communication
Unit1 Evolution of Optical Communication
Unit1 Evolution of Optical Communication
Module-1
Overview of Optical Fiber
Communication and Networks
Dr. K. Chitra
Professor – SENSE
Vellore Institute of Technology,
Chennai
Text Book
• Gerd Keiser, “Optical Fiber Communications”
McGraw-Hill, 5th Edition, 2013
Evolution of Fiber Optic Communication
• Inception 1974
(iii)photo detectors
(iv)optical amplifiers
Motivation
• 1990s-Burgeoning demand on communication network
– Database queries, home shopping, HD interactive videos, remote
education, telemedicine, e-health, e-editing of home videos, blogging, grid
computing, e-science
• PCs met the need of increased storage capacity and processing
capabilities
• Internet availability and its continuous expansion led to increasing
demand for high bandwidth services from home based PC to large
scale business and research organizations, telecommunication
companies..
• Led to more independent signal carrying wavelengths on individual
fibers and increasing transmission speed in each of the wavelength
ADVANTAGES OF OPTICAL FIBERS
1. VERY HIGH INFORMATION CARRYING CAPACITY.
2. LESS ATTENUATION (order of 0.2 db/km)
3. SMALL IN DIAMETER AND SIZE & LIGHT WEIGHT
4. LOW COST AS COMPARED TO COPPER (as glass is made from sand..the
raw material used to make OF is free….)
5. GREATER SAFETY AND IMMUNE TO EMI & RFI, MOISTURE &
COROSSION
6. FLEXIBLE AND EASY TO INSTALL IN TIGHT CONDUITS
7. ZERO RESALE VALUE (so theft is less)
8. IS DILECTRIC IN NATURE SO CAN BE LAID IN ELECTICALLY
SENSITIVE SURROUNDINGS
9. DIFFICULT TO TAP FIBERS, SO SECURE
10. NO CROSS TALK AND DISTURBANCES
11. Long distance Transmission
Disadvantages
– Economical only when the bandwidth is fully
utilised
– High cost of installation
– A lot of hardware at the moment is not compatible
with fibre optic cables, they need to be adapted in
order to make use of them.
Optical Spectral Bands
Designations of spectral bands in OFC
Spectral bands
First Generation
• First generation links operated around 850 nm
• 45 – 140 Mbps 10 Km
• Bit rates: 155 & 622 Mbps (in some cases 2.5 Gbps)
• Repeaterless distance:
24000Km -35000Km
Consistent
High
Data Rate
Everywhere
Y
RAP 802.11 voice
Y
RAP
O- original
E- Extended
S- Short
C- Conventional
L- Long
U- Ultra-long
Standards for Optical Fiber Communications
• Primary Standards
– Fundamental Physical parameters
• Attenuation, bandwidth, operational characteristics of fibers,
Optical power levels and spectral widths
– NIST (National Institute of Standards and Technology,
USA)
– NPL (national Physical Laboratory, UK
– PTB (Physikalisch-Technische Bundesanstalt, Germany)
• Component testing standards
• System standards
Component testing standards
• Tests for fiber optic component performance
• Establish equipment calibration procedures
• Organizations involved
– TIA with EIA
– ITU-T
– IEC
• FOTP standards
– FOTP-60
– TIA/EIA-455-60-1997..
System standards
• Measurement methods for links and networks
• Organizations
– ANSI
– IEEE
– ITU-T
• G-series G.650 includes
– Fiber cables, optical amplifiers, wavelength multilexing, OTN,
PON
• L series includes
– Construction, installation, maintenance, supportt, monitoring
and testing of cable.
Performance Characteristics
• Channel Capacity
– The maximum rate at which data can be sent
across a channel from message source to the user
destination.
– From Shannon capacity theorem
• If a channel has a bandwidth, B, then the maximum
information-transmission capacity, C, of that channel in
bps is C=Blog2(1+S/N) where S and N are the average
signal and noise powers
– Find C for 1MHz noisy channel with S/N = 1