Fiber Optic Coupler
Fiber Optic Coupler
Fiber Optic Coupler
Fiber optic couplers either split optical signals into multiple paths or combine multiple signals on one path. A Fiber
Coupler is an Optical Fiber device with one or more input fibers and one or several output fibers. Light from an
input fiber can appear at one or more outputs, with the power distribution potentially depending on the Wavelength
and polarization. Such couplers can be fabricated in different ways, for example by thermally fusing fibers so that
their cores get into intimate contact. If all involved fibers are single-mode (i.e., support only a single mode per
Polarization direction for a given wavelength), there are certain physical restrictions on the performance of the
coupler. In particular, it is not possible to combine two or more inputs of the same optical Frequency into one singlepolarization output without significant excess losses. However, such a restriction does not occur for different input
wavelengths: there are couplers which can combine two inputs at different wavelengths into one output without
exhibiting significant losses. Such couplers are used e.g. in fiber amplifiers to combine the signal input and the pump
wave. Other wavelength-sensitive couplers are used as multiplexers in wavelength division Multiplexing (WDM)
telecom systems to combine several input channels with different wavelengths, or to separate channels.
PIN Photodiode
A p-n diode's deficiencies are related to the fact that the depletion area
(active detection area) is small; many electron-hole pairs recombine
before they can create a current in the external circuit. In the PIN
photodiode, the depleted region is made as large as possible. A lightly
doped intrinsic layer separates the more heavily doped p-types and ntypes. The diode's name comes from the layering of these materials
positive, intrinsic, negative PIN. Figure 3 shows the cross-section
and operation of a PIN photodiode.
Repeaters
A repeater connects two segments of your network cable. It re times and regenerates the signals to proper amplitudes
and sends them to the other segments. When talking about, ethernet topology, you are probably talking about using a
hub as a repeater. Repeaters require a small amount of time to regenerate the signal. This can cause a propagation
delay which can affect network communication when there are several repeaters in a row. Many network
architectures limit the number of repeaters that can be used in a row. Repeaters work only at the physical layer of the
OSI network model.