Optical fiber and its Applications


                                                                                Fiber Optics
An optical fiber is a flexible, transparent fiber made of glass (silica) or plastic, slightly thicker than a human hair. It functions as a waveguide, or “light pipe”, to transmit light between the two ends of the fiber. The field of applied science and engineering concerned with the design and application of optical fibers is known as fiber optics.

Principle
The principles on which optical fibers work are
·         Index Of Refraction
·         Total Internal Reflection

Index of Refraction
The index of refraction is a way of measuring the speed of light in a material. Light travels fastest in a vacuum, such as outer space. The speed of light in a vacuum is about 300,000 kilometers (186,000 miles) per second. Index of refraction is calculated by dividing the speed of light in a vacuum by the speed of light in some other medium. The index of refraction of a vacuum is therefore 1, by definition. The typical value for the cladding of an optical fiber is 1.52. The core value is typically 1.62. The larger the index of refraction, the slower light travels in that medium. From this information, a good rule of thumb is that signal using optical fiber for communication will travel at around 200,000 kilometers per second. Or to put it another way, to travel 1000 kilometers in fiber, the signal will take 5 milliseconds to propagate.

Total Internal Reflection
When light traveling in an optically dense medium hits a boundary at a steep angle (larger than the critical angle for the boundary), the light will be completely reflected. This is called total internal reflection. This effect is used in optical fibers to confine light in the core. Light travels through the fiber core, bouncing back and forth off the boundary between the core and cladding. Because the light must strike the boundary with an angle greater than the critical angle, only light that enters the fiber within a certain range of angles can travel down the fiber without leaking out. This range of angles is called the acceptance cone of the fiber. The size of this acceptance cone is a function of the refractive index difference between the fiber's core and cladding.
In simpler terms, there is a maximum angle from the fiber axis at which light may enter the fiber so that it will propagate, or travel, in the core of the fiber. The sine of this maximum angle is the numerical aperture (NA) of the fiber. Fiber with a larger NA requires less precision to splice and work with than fiber with a smaller NA. Single-mode fiber has a small NA.

                                                                               
Construction
Modern optical fibers are formed by two layers of glass. As shown in fig, the fiber core (8 μ m) is surrounded by a concentric core of lower index glass known as cladding (125 μ m).

The cladding is surrounded by a protective layer. The total internal reflection occurs as the core-cladding interface. In fibers designed for high-speed telecommunication, the core is only a few microns in diameter, not much larger than the wavelength of the light used. In such cases, the full electromagnetic wave picture must be describing the propagation of the light. However, when the highest data transmission rate are not required, fibers with a "large" core of perhaps a hundred micron or more used such fibers are known as multimode fibers. For multimode fibers, ray, picture is adequate to describe the behavior of the light.
                                                                              
Types of Optical Fiber
There are following types of Optical Fibers

Multimode Fiber

Multimode fiber, the first to be manufactured and commercialized, simply refers to the fact that numerous modes or light rays are carried simultaneously through the waveguide. Modes result from the fact that light will only propagate in the fiber core at discrete angles within the cone of acceptance. This fiber type has a much larger core diameter, compared to single-mode fiber, allowing for the larger number of modes, and multimode fiber is easier to couple than single-mode optical fiber. Multimode fiber may be categorized as step-index or graded-index fiber.

Single-mode Fiber

Single-mode fiber allows for a higher capacity to transmit information because it can retain the fidelity of each light pulse over longer distances, and it exhibits no dispersion caused by multiple modes. Single-mode fiber also enjoys lower fiber attenuation than multimode fiber. Thus, more information can be transmitted per unit of time. Like multimode fiber, early single-mode fiber was generally characterized as step-index fiber meaning the refractive index of the fiber core is a step above that of the cladding rather than graduated as it is in graded-index fiber. Modern single-mode fibers have evolved into more complex designs such as matched clad, depressed clad and other exotic structures.

Photonic fibres
In photonic fibres the transmission of light is guided by a number of cavities around the core. The core may be made in glass or even an air cavity! These are new fibres on the market and for the moment (2008) their performances are still under the requirements for astronomical applications.



Applications of Optical Fibers
·         Telecommunications specialty fiber applications in building EDFAs, dispersion compensation, and amplification—long haul applications in standard transmission and connectivity are served by our sister division
·         Medical grade fibers, cable and assemblies used in sensing, surgical procedures, and communications between devices and control and analysis equipment within sensitive environments such as MRI and radiation suites
·         General Industry factory environments and secure installations
·         Commercial Laser encompassing fiber laser and amplifier components for micro
and macro applications 
·         Government, Aerospace and Defense also encompasses navigation systems, payout applications and in-flight entertainment
·         Mass Transit and Transportation Hubs terminal-based and en route transportation applications, navigation, and RoHS, REACH, and Low Smoke Zero Halogen compliance
·         Windpower connections within and between towers and the central operations center
·         Solar specific fiber optic needs in solar voltaic farms
·         Oil & Gas down-hole well applications, Distributed Temperature Sensing (DTS)
·         Fiber Sensing all forms of detection with optical fiber, Fiber Bragg Grating-based solutions

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