telecom fibers (original) (raw)

Definition: optical fibers for use in optical fiber communications

Alternative term: telecommunication fibers

Categories: article belongs to category fiber optics and waveguides fiber optics and waveguides, article belongs to category lightwave communications lightwave communications

Related: Dispersion Engineering for Telecom FibersTelecom Fiber With Parabolic Index Profilefibersspun fibersfiber cablessingle-mode fibersmultimode fibersfew-mode fibersgraded-index fibersfiber patch cablessilica fibersoptical fiber communicationsmodal bandwidthbandwidth–distance product

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Contents

Telecom fibers are optical fibers which are used in optical fiber communications. This is a huge application field for fibers; several hundred millions of kilometers of telecom fibers are currently fabricated per year.

Mainly the following types of telecom fibers are used:

A standard single-mode telecom fiber for the 1.3- or 1.5-μm wavelength region is the SMF-28 of Corning, and there is the enhanced version SMF-28e. The mode field diameter is ≈ 9.2 μm at 1310 nm (effective mode area = 67 μm2), or 10.4 μm at 1550 nm (85 μm2). The single-mode cut-off is at 1260 nm. The Lucent AllWave and the Alcatel ColorLock fibers have quite similar properties.

Other telecom fibers have somewhat modified properties, making them more suitable in certain areas:

As glass fibers are not sufficient robust for directly laying them down in a building or even in the ground, they are incorporated into optical fiber cables, where various polymer layers and sometimes even metallic armors provide additional protection. For flexible indoor use, fiber patch cables with standardized fiber connectors are suitable.

The International Telecommunications Union (ITU) has developed a number of standards for various types of fibers as used for optical fiber communications. Some of the most important of those standards are listed in Table 1.

Name Title
G.650.1 (06/04) Definitions and test methods for linear, deterministic attributes of single-mode fibre and cable
G.651 (02/98) Characteristics of a 50/125 μm multimode graded index optical fibre cable
G.651.1 (07/07) Characteristics of a 50/125 μm multimode graded index optical fibre cable for the optical access network (pre-published)
G.652 (06/05) Characteristics of a single-mode optical fibre and cable
G.653 (12/06) Characteristics of a dispersion-shifted single-mode optical fibre and cable
G.654 (12/06) Characteristics of a cut-off shifted single-mode optical fibre and cable
G.655 (03/06) Characteristics of a non-zero dispersion-shifted single-mode optical fibre and cable
G.656 (12/06) Characteristics of a fibre and cable with non-zero dispersion for wideband optical transport
G.657 (08/24) Characteristics of a bending-loss insensitive single-mode optical fibre and cable

Table 1: Important ITU standards concerning telecom fibers.

There are various other standards for telecom fibers, e.g. from ISO and IEC.

Many different properties of a telecom fiber can be relevant for the achievable performance (partly depending on details of the fiber-optic links) or concerning other aspects of use:

Case study: Dispersion Engineering for Telecom Fibers

Case Studies

Dispersion Engineering for Telecom Fibers

We explore different ways of optimizing refractive index profile for specific chromatic dispersion properties of telecom fibers, resulting in dispersion-shifted or dispersion-flattened fibers. This also involves automatic optimizations.

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Bibliography

[1] W. A. Gambling, “The rise and rise of optical fibers”, J. Sel. Top. Quantum Electron. 6 (6), 1084 (2000); doi:10.1109/2944.902157
[2] Standards of the International Telecommunication Union (ITU), see http://www.itu.int/

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