Photonics and Lasers

Chapter 6 - Dispersion in Optical Fibers

Chapter 6

 

Dispersion in Optical Fibers

As a pulse of light propagates down a long fiber, it will generally broaden in time, a phenomenon known as dispersion. In multimode fibers, the dispersion is largely due to the different propagation speeds for the various modes, which is known as intermodal dispersion. Typical values of intermodal dispersion are ~ 50 ns/km (see Chapter 3), which limits the useful propagation range for a 100 Mb/s signal to ~ 100 m.

There are two basic approaches to reducing dispersion. The first is to design the fiber core so that different modes have a more nearly equal transit time down the fiber. This can be accomplished with a graded-index fiber, as discussed in the next section. The second approach is to eliminate all modes but one, that is, use a single-mode fiber. Although single-mode fibers have no intermodal dispersion, they have other sources of dispersion, which are the subject of much of this chapter. The dispersion that occurs for propagation in a single mode is termed intramodal dispersion.

 

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