Optical Amplifiers: Presented BY Dr. Sudhir Kumar Sharma Associate Professor
Optical Amplifiers: Presented BY Dr. Sudhir Kumar Sharma Associate Professor
Optical Amplifiers: Presented BY Dr. Sudhir Kumar Sharma Associate Professor
PRESENTED BY
Dr. Sudhir Kumar Sharma Associate Professor
Introduction
An optical amplifier is a device which amplifies the optical signal directly without ever changing it to electricity. The light itself is amplified. One of the great ironies of the communication world is the move in optical systems from repeaters to amplifiers. In the 1970's carriers around the world adopted digital trunking systems for one overwhelming reason: In a digital system you can get rid of the amplifiers on long links and use repeaters. They wanted to use repeaters. Now in the optical communications world we are busy changing back from repeaters to amplifiers.
Wavelength Division Multiplexing (WDM): In a Wavelength Division Multiplexing system you have many different optical streams on the same fibre. To use repeaters you would have to demultiplex the optical stream and then repeat each individual signal. Amplifiers just amplify the lot regardless. Thus you don't have to demultiplex etc. Really, it is the development of the optical amplifier that has enabled practical WDM systems to be constructed for the first time. Cost :Optical amplifiers are much simpler than repeaters and should cost significantly less. There are many possible types of optical amplifiers. Amplifiers can be built in semiconductor technology (like lasers), in planar waveguide technology and in fibres.
Optical amplification Amplification gain: Up to a factor of 10,000 (+40 dB) In WDM: Several signals within the amplifiers gain (G) bandwidth are amplified, but not to the same extent It generates its own noise source known as Amplified Spontaneous Emission (ASE) noise.
amplifiers to boost power levels. The repeater detects the digital optical
signal, determines the presence of 0s and 1s and then regenerates the optical signal. System with repeaters:
Fiber
Fiber
Fiber
Transmitter
Repeater
Repeater
Receiver
Example: TAT - 8 Transatlantic fiber cable (1988) Link length ~ 5600 km Number of repeaters ~ 130 Maximum spacing ~ 50 km
Difficult to maintain
Digital only
Optical amplifiers solve most of these problems. How do we build an optical amplifier?
We know that all lasers contain optical amplifiers.
AR coating
Essentially, this would be a laser operating without the mirrors or one with mirrors but operating just below lasing 8 threshold. This SOAs shown above in the figure.
Problems:
1. Low gain 2. High noise
Fiber
Receiver
Digital signals are illustrated at the top and analog signals along the bottom of the figure. The EDFA is a practical amplifier.
EDFA Components
Material : Erbium-doped fiber. Erbium: A rare earth atom. It is the active material. Silica: The host material (fiber).
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The major points of the erbium absorption spectrum are shown on the next slide:
20 nm
980 Pump
1480 Pump
Non-radiative transitions
There is strong absorption at 980 nm and 1480 nm for pumping the erbium
atoms to the higher energy level.
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Energy
1.48 mm or 0.98 mm
1.55 mm
Ground state
stimulate transitions to the ground state. The stimulated transitions produce photons with the same wavelength and phase of the stimulating photons. This is amplification.
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7. Wide bandwidth (20 to 30 nm). 8. Amplifier works for digital and analog systems. 9. Multiple channels (WDM) can be amplified simultaneously. 10. Amplifier is insensitive to bit rate.
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WM
1.55 mm 1.48 mm
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Input 1.55 mm
WM Isolator
Output 1.55 mm
Isolator LD 1.48 mm
LD
1.48 mm
Erbium-Doped Waveguide Amplifier (EDWA): This is an erbium-doped amplifier built in integrated optic form. An erbium-doped waveguide replaces the erbium-doped fiber in an EDFA as the amplifying medium.
OUTPUT SIGNAL
INPUT SIGNAL
WDM
EDW
LD
The pump light can be combined with the signal beam by an external wavelength as shown above in the fig. and the combined beams can be coupled to the waveguide.
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Alternatively, the multiplexer can be integrated onto the same substrate as the amplifier as shown in figure. Integration is simpler, more economical, reduces size, reduces insertion loss, and increases flexibility in design.
EDWA INPUT SIGNAL OUTPUT SIGNAL
WDM
EDW
LD
As an example, multiple amplifiers together with a shared pump source can be integrated onto a single chip as shown 17 on next slide.
Such a multiple amplifier arrangement is an EDWA array. Integrated amplifier arrays often include 4,8, or more amplifiers.
EDWA ARRAY INPUT SIGNAL 1 OUTPUT SIGNAL 1
WDM
EDW
PUMP
PS
INPUT SIGNAL 2
WDM
EDW
OUTPUT SIGNAL 2
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6.7.4 Raman Amplifier 1. The EDFA provides significant amplification in the C-Band (1530-1565 nm) where fiber attenuation is at a minimum. The can also designed for amplification well into the L level (1565-1625 nm). Amplifiers using stimulated Raman scattering have been developed for applications in other bands. 2. This amplifier is based on Raman Scattering. This is the scattering of a photon by an optical phonon. A phonon is a vibration of a crystal or molecule. The scattering in inelastic, the photon loses energy and emerges at a lower frequency. This downshift is called the Stokes shift. The amount of downshift in silica fibers is 13.2 THz. 3. An energy diagram describing the effect appears on the next slide. 19
Raman Scattering
VIRTUAL STATE W3
hf32
hf13
hf13 is the input photon energy hf32 is the output photon energy
Raman Scattering
Example: The input wavelength (lin) is 1450 nm. What is
hf13-hf32 = hfphonon
hfin-hfout = hfphonon fout = fin - fphonon
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Raman Scattering
lout
lin
13.2 10
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Setting lin to 1450 nm results in an output wavelength of lout = 1549 nm The wavelength shift is 99 nm. The shift is not only 13.2 THz, but occupies a range of about
Raman Scattering
VIRTUAL STATE
W3
hf13 hf32
Raman scattering can be stimulated when there are two optical beams present. One beam is the pump and the other is the signal. As in our previous discussions of optical amplifiers, the pump provides the power for amplification of the signal. This is shown schematically on the energy level diagram on the next slide.
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W2
OPTICAL PHONON
W1
GROUND STATE
The pump photons raise the molecules to the upper virtual state W3. The signal photon stimulates the molecule to drop to level W2, emitting a photon of the same frequency and phase as itself. Thus, we have amplification as we have seen before. There are two major differences, however.
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Raman Amplifier
1. In this amplifier, population inversion is not required. 2. The wavelength of amplification is determined by the
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Raman Amplifier
Raman amplifiers are available in the S-, C-, and L- bands.
Recall:
Band S Wavelength 1460-1530 nm
C L
1530-1565 nm 1565-1625 nm
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PUMP LASER
The Raman scattering, and thus the amplifier, has a bandwidth of 6 THz.
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f l f
Then, we get
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f f l l l f c/l
l l f / c
2
Using 6 THz for f and 1549 nm for l yields a bandwidth of 48 nm. The gain extends over a range from 1525 to 1573 nm. Note that this covers the entire C band.
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6.7.5 Noise Figure Any amplifier not only increases the signal, it also increases the noise. In an ideal amplifier, both are increased by the same factor. In this case, the signal-tonoise ratio at the amplifier output is the same as at its
input.
Real amplifiers add noise, so that the SNR is less at the output than at the input. The signal is degraded by the amplifier. The noise figure F is a measure of this degradation.
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S / N in F S / N out
Thus
(6-12)
FdB 10log10 F
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Noise Figure We will develop the relationship between the SNRs at input and output and the noise figure all expressed in decibels. From (6.12), we can form
6.7.6 Optical Amplifier Applications Amplifier placement in a fiber link. Launch Amplifier
Inline Amplifier
Preamplifier
FIBER FIBER TxT A LAUNCH POWER LEVEL A INLINE A PREAMP Rx
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