Fiber Optic Essentials

Chapter 6 - Pulse Dispersion in Multimode Optical Fibers

6.1   INTRODUCTION

As discussed in Chapter 3, in digital communication systems, information to be sent
is first coded in the form of pulses and then these pulses of light are transmitted
from the transmitter to the receiver, where the information is decoded (Fig. 6.1).
Further, the two most important characteristics of an optical fiber that determine its
information-carrying capacity are (1) loss or attenuation (discussed in Chapter 5)
and (2) pulse dispersion. As we discuss in this chapter, a pulse of light sent into an
optical fiber broadens in time as it propagates through the fiber; this phenomenon is
known as pulse dispersion (Fig. 6.2). The larger the number of pulses that can be
sent per unit time and still be resolvable at the receiver end, the larger will be the
transmission capacity of the system. If the pulse dispersion is large, then in order that
consecutive output pulses be resolvable by the receiver so that information can be
retrieved, the time interval between adjacent pulses has to be greater than a certain
minimum value. This would then limit the number of pulses that can be sent per unit
time and hence the information capacity of the system. Hence, the smaller the pulse
dispersion, the greater will be the information-carrying capacity of the system. Thus,
in communication applications one always tries to reduce pulse dispersion.

As a pulse propagates through the fiber, its temporal broadening occurs primarily
because of the following mechanisms:

  1. In multimode fibers, different rays take different times to propagate through
    a given length of the fiber; we discuss this for a step-index fiber and for a
    parabolic index fiber in this and the following sections. In the language of wave
    optics, this is known as intermodal dispersion because it arises due to different
    modes traveling with different velocities.
  2. Any given light source emits over a range of wavelengths, and because of the
    intrinsic property of thematerial of the fiber, different wavelengths take different
    amounts of time to propagate along the same path. This is known as material
    dispersion
    and obviously is present in both single-mode and multimode fibers.

 

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