Optical Networking Best Practices Handbook

Section 4.3 - Optical Fiber Types

There are many types of optical fibers, and we will consider a few of them here.

 

4.3.1 Fiber Optics Glass

Glass fiber optics is a type of fiber-optic strand (discussed earlier) that has a core of high-purity silica glass. It is the most popular type [1].

 

4.3.2 Plastic Optical Fiber

Plastic optical fiber is also known by the acronym POF. POF is composed of transparent plastic fibers that allow light to be guided from one end to the other with minimal loss. POF has been called the consumer optical fiber due to the fact that the costs of POF, associated optical links, connectors, and installation are low. According to industry analysts, POF faces the biggest challenge in transmission rate. Current transmission rates for POF are much lower than glass, averaging at about 100 Mb/s. Thus, compared with glass, POF has low installation costs, lower transmission rate, greater dispersion, a limited distance of transmission, and is more flexible [1].

 

4.3.3 Fiber Optics: Fluid-Filled

A relatively new fiber-optic method is the fluid-filled fiber-optic cable. This cable reduces the errors in transmission (such as distortion when a wavelength gets too loud), since current optical fibers do not amplify wavelengths of light equally well [1].

The upgraded fiber has a ring of holes surrounding a solid core. A small amount of liquid is placed in the holes, and used to seal the ends. Heating the liquid alters which wavelengths will dissipate as they travel through the core, making it possible to tune the fiber to correct for any signals that fall out of balance. And, simply pushing a fluid to a new position within the fiber adjusts the strength of the signals or switches them off entirely [1].

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