Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Chapter 5 Laser-Fiber Connection Content • Launching optical power into a fiber • Fiber-to-Fiber coupling • Fiber Splicing and connectors Coupling Efficiency PF power coupled into the fiber power emitted from the sourse Ps Ps Source PF Optical Fiber [5-1] Radiance (Brightness) of the source • B= Optical power radiated from a unit area of the source into a unit solid angle [watts/(square centimeter per stradian)] Surface emitting LEDs have a Lambertian pattern: B( , ) B0 cos [5-2] Edge emitting LEDs and laser diodes radiation pattern 1 sin cos T L B( , ) B0 cos B0 cos 2 For edge emitting LEDs, L=1 2 [5-3] Power Coupled from source to the fiber As and s : area and solid emission angle of the source PF B( As , s )d s dAs [5-4] A f and f : area and Af f solid acceptance angle of fiber rm 2 2 0 max B( , ) sin dd d s rdr 0 0 0 0 Power coupled from LED to the Fiber 0 max 2B0 cos sin d d s rdr 0 0 2 rs P 0 rs 2 0 0 rs 2 B0 2 sin 0 max d s rdr B0 2 NA d rdr s 0 0 PLED,step rs B0 ( NA) 2 rs B0 n1 2 2 2 2 2 2 [5-5] Power coupling from LED to step-index fiber • Total optical power from LED: 2 / 2 Ps As 0 B( , ) sin dd 0 Ps rs 2B0 2 /2 2 cos sin d rs B0 2 [5-6] 0 PLED,step Ps ( NA) 2 a 2 2 P ( NA ) s rs if rs a if rs a [5-7] Equilibrium Numerical Aperture Examples of possible lensing schemes used to improve optical source-to-fiber coupling efficiency Laser diode to Fiber Coupling Fiber-to-Fiber Joint • Fiber-to-Fiber coupling loss: LF [dB] 10 log F • Low loss fiber-fiber joints are either: 1- Splice (permanent bond) 2- Connector (demountable connection) [5-8] Different modal distribution of the optical beam emerging from a fiber lead to different degrees of coupling loss. a) when all modes are equally excited, the output beam fills the entire output NA. b) for a steady state modal distribution, only the equilibrium NA is filled by the output beam. Mechanical misalignment losses Lateral (axial) misalignment loss is a dominant Mechanical loss. F ,step Acomm 2 d d d arccos 1 2 2a a 2a a 2 1/ 2 [5-9] Longitudinal offset effect Losses due to differences in the geometry and waveguide characteristics of the fibers aR LF (a) 10 log( ) aE for a R a E NA R LF (a) 20 log( ) NA E for NA R NA E [5-10] E & R subscripts refer to emitting and receiving fibers. Experimental comparison of Loss as a function of mechanical misalignment Fiber end face Fiber end defects Fiber splicing Fusion Splicing V-groove optical fiber splicing Optical Fiber Connectors • Some of the principal requirements of a good connector design are as follows: 1- low coupling losses 2- Interchangeability 3- Ease of assembly 4- Low environmental sensitivity 5- Low-cost and reliable construction 6- Ease of connection Connector Return Loss