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Optical Components

This document summarizes various optical components used in telecommunication systems. It describes both active and passive optical devices, including wavelength-selective components like tunable filters. It then discusses specific passive devices in more detail, such as couplers, half-wavelength plates, isolators, circulators, gratings, fiber Bragg gratings, Fabry-Perot filters, thin-film filters, and Mach-Zehnder interferometers. For each device, it outlines their basic structure, operating principles, key parameters, and applications.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
43 views34 pages

Optical Components

This document summarizes various optical components used in telecommunication systems. It describes both active and passive optical devices, including wavelength-selective components like tunable filters. It then discusses specific passive devices in more detail, such as couplers, half-wavelength plates, isolators, circulators, gratings, fiber Bragg gratings, Fabry-Perot filters, thin-film filters, and Mach-Zehnder interferometers. For each device, it outlines their basic structure, operating principles, key parameters, and applications.

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OPTICAL COMPONENTS

9/20/11
Applications
• See notes
Optical Devices
• Optical Devices
• Active
• Passive (reciprocal & non-reciprocal)
• Wavelength Selectivity
Impacting the system:
• Fixed - Error-free
• Tunable - Selectivity
- # of channels that can be supported
• Parameters - Interferences
• Temperature dependency
• Insertion loss (inputoutput loss)
• Inter-channel cross-talks
• Manufacturability
• Fast tunability
• Stability and polarization dependency
Spectral Width

Spectral content of a channel


Passive Devices
• Reciprocal (input/outputs act the same way)
• Couplers
• Half-wavelength plates
• Non-reciprocal
• Circulators
• Rotators
• Insulators
Couplers
• Structure
• NxN (e.g., 2x2)
• α is proportional to l (α is coupling ratio, l is coupling length)
• Parameters of interest
• Coupling ratio
• Coupling length
• Excess loss (beyond α)
• Type
• WL dependent (α has WL-dependency)
• WL independent
• Splitting ratio
• 3dB (splitting the power evenly) - α=0.5
• Taps (e.g., α ∼ 1 – thus, a very small portion is dropped)
Couplers
• They can combine or separate different wavelengths
• The lights (different wavelengths) are coupled together
• Example: 8x8 3-dB couplers

1310 (signal)
Amplified
Signal
1550 nm
(pump)
Half-Wavelength Plates
• Passive reciprocal devices
• They maintain the polarization but rotate the orientation of
polarization is rotated by by ΔΦ=2πR; (R=+/-0.25 for λ/4)
• Note d= Rλ/Δn; d is the thickness of the birefringent plate
– assuming mica or quartz plate
Passive Non-Reciprocal Devices
• Types
• Isolators
• Faraday Rotators
• Circulators
Isolators
• Transmit in one direction only
• Avoid reflection of laser – or any reflection
• One input, one output or multiple ports
• Key parameters are insertion loss and excess loss
• Example of circulators:
Operation of Isolators
Only Ex exists
State of polarization is fixed (SOP)
Rotator rotates by 45 degree
Operation of Isolators – more realistic
Polarization Independent Isolator
Half-wavelength plates are used to rotate 45 degree
The Spatial-walk-off polarizer splits the signal into two orthogonally polarized signals
Prism
Spectral-Shape Parameters
Cascaded filters  narrower passband
We desire broad passband at the end of the cascade
Thus, each filer must have a flat passband (accommodating for small changes in WL)
The flatness of the filer is measure by 1-dB bandwidth
Components
Gratings
• Describe a device involving interference among multiple
optical signals coming from the same source but having
difference phase shift
• There are a number of gratings
• Reflective
• Transmission
• Diffraction
• Stimax (same as reflection but integrate with concave mirrors
Gratings
--- Transmission
• The incident light is transmitted through the
slits
• Due to diffraction (narrow slits) the light is
transmitted in all direction
• Each Slit becomes a secondary source of
light
• A constructive interference will be created on
the image plane only for specific WLs that
are in phase  high light intensity
• Narrow slits are placed next to each other
• The spacing determines the pitch of the
gratings
• Angles are due to phase shift
Diffraction Gratings

• It is an arrayed slit device


• It reflects wavelengths in different directions
Bragg Grating Structure (notes)
• Arrangement of parallel semi-reflecting plates

Fiber Bragg Gratings
• Widely used in Fiber communication systems
• Bragg gratings are written in wavelengths
• As a result the index of refraction varies periodically along the length of
the fiber
• Variation of “n” constitutes discontinuities  Bragg structure
• Periodic variation of “n” is occurred by exposing the core to an intense
UV interference pattern
• The periodicity of the pattern depends on the periodicity of the pattern
Optical Add/Drop Using Fiber Bragg
Grating
FBG has very low loss (0.1 dB)
Temperature dependent  change of fiber length
The are very useful for WDM systems
They can be used with 3-port Circulators
Optical Add/Drop Using Fiber Bragg
Grating
Fiber Bragg Chirped Grading
• Fiber Bragg grating with linear variable pitch
compensates for chromatic dispersion
• Known as chirped FBG
• Due to chirps (pitches) wavelengths are reflected back
• Each WL reflection has a different phase (depth of grating)
•  compensating for time variation  compensating for chromatic
dispersion
Fabry-Perot Filters
• A cavity with highly reflective mirrors parallel to each other
(Bragg structure)
• Acts like a resonator
• Also called FP Interferometer
• Also called etalon
Fabry-Perot Filters (notes)
Power Transfer Function
• Periodic in terms of f
• Peaks are called the passbands of the transfer function
occurring at f (fτ=k/2)
• R is the coefficient of reflection or reflectivity
• A is the absorption loss
FSR and Finesse
• Free spectral range (FSR) is the spacing in optical frequency or wavelength between
two successive reflected or transmitted optical intensity maxima or minima
• An indication of how many wavelength (or frequency) channels can simultaneously
pass without severe interference among them is known as the finesse

Transfer function is half


Tunability of Fabry-Perot
• Changing the cavity length
• Changing the refractive index within the cavity
• Mechanical placement of mirrors
• Not very reliable
• Using piezoelectric material within the cavity
• Thermal instability
Multilayer Dielectric Thin Film
• Dielectric thin-film (DTF) interference filters consist of alternating
quarter-wavelength thick layers of high refractive index and low
refractive index
• each layer is a quarter-waveleng th thick.
• The primary considerations in DTF design are:

• Low-pass-band loss « 0.3 dB)


• Good channel spacing (> 10 nm)
• Low interchannel cross-talk (> -28 dB)
Thin-Film Resonant Multicavity Filter
• Two or more cavities separated by reflective dielectric thin-film layers
• Higher number of cavities leads to a flatter passband
• Lower number of cavities results in sharper stop band
Thin-Film Resonant Multicavity Filter
• A wavelength multiplexer/demultiplexer
Mach-Zehnder
Interferometer
• Uses two couplers
• The coupling ratio can be different
• A phase difference between two optical paths may be artificially induced
• Adjusting ΔL changes the phase of the received signal
• Because of the path difference, the two waves arrive at coupler 2 with
a phase difference
• At coupler 2, the two waves recombine and are directed to two output
ports
• each output port supports the one of the two wavelengths that satisfies a certain
phase condition

• Note:
• Δf=C/2nΔL
• ΔΦ=2πf.ΔL.(n/c)
Tunability
• Can be achieved by altering n or L
Absorption Filter
• Using the Mach-Zehnder Interferometer
• consist of a thin film made of a material (e.g., germanium) that
exhibits high absorption at a specific wavelength region

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