Optical Bit Error Rate

Chapter 2.14 - Fiber Polarization-Dependent Loss

2.14   FIBER POLARIZATION-DEPENDENT LOSS

Fiber, like most optically transparent materials, has a small degree of polarization
sensitivity. That is, optical power passes through it without reduction in certain selective
polarized states but with reduced power in others. This is known as fiber polarization-
dependent loss
(PDL) and it represents the peak-to-peak optical power
variation measured in decibels (dB). Linear polarizers have strong PDL (e.g., >30
dB) but very little SMF (<0.02 dB). Strong PDL adds to IL and cross talk.

PDL becomes critical when the bit rate is greater than 10 Gbit/s and the line
width very narrow—at or less than 0.05 nm at full width half-maximum (FWHM).
Very narrow linewidths become highly polarized. An issue with polarization dependence
is that a source may change its polarization state randomly and thus its PDL,
complicating power-budget calculations and degrading the quality of signal and
system performance.

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