Discuss The Operational Principle of WDM.: Figure 1.1: Typical WDM Network
Discuss The Operational Principle of WDM.: Figure 1.1: Typical WDM Network
Discuss The Operational Principle of WDM.: Figure 1.1: Typical WDM Network
• Figure 1.1 represents a typical WDM network with various passive/active components and various
types of amplifiers.
• The implementation of WDM networks requires a variety of passive and active devices to combine,
distribute, isolate and amplify optical power at different wavelengths.
• Passive devices require no external control for their operation, so they are limited in their
applications. They are mainly used to split, combine or tap off optical signals.
• Active devices can be controlled electronically, providing a large degree of network flexibility.
• At the transmitting end there are several independently modulated light sources, each emitting
signals at a unique wavelength.
• A multiplexer is needed to combine the optical outputs into a continuous spectrum of signals and
couple them onto a single fiber.
• At the receiving end a demultiplexer is required to separate the optical signals into appropriate
detection channels for signal processing.
• There are 3 types of amplifiers: Postamplifier, In-line amplifier and Preamplifier.
2. Explain the operational concept of optical isolators.
Left Input
Fiber Fiber
Figure 2.1: O
Fiber
• Optical isolators are devices that allow light to pass through them in only one direction which is
important to prevent scattered or reflected light from travelling in the reverse direction.
• A common application of optical isolator is to keep backward travelling light from entering the
optical source and prevent instabilities in optical output.
• Figure 2.1 shows an optical isolator made of three miniature optical components. The core of the
device consists of 45o Farady rotator that is placed between two wedge shaped birefringent plates
or walk-off polarizers made up of TiO2 or YVO4.
• Light travelling in the forward direction (left to right) is separated into ordinary and extra ordinary
rays by the first birefringent plate. The Faraday rotator rotates the polarization plane of each ray by
45o. After exiting the Faraday rotator the two rays pass through the second birefringent plate.
• The axis of this plate is oriented in a way to maintain the relationship between the two types of
rays. Thus when they exit the polarizer they are both refracted in an identical parallel direction.
• Going in the reverse direction (right to left), the relationship of the two rays is reversed when exiting
the Faraday rotator due to non-reciprocity of Faraday rotation. The rays diverge when they exit the
left-hand birefringent plate and are not coupled to the fiber anymore.
3. Explain the operational concept of optical circulators.
A A
Port 1 Port 2
C B
C B
Port 3
Reflecting facets
Reflections in the
Fabry-Perot cavity
• A dielectric thin film filter (TFF) used as an optical BPF is as shown in Figure 4.1 which allows a
narrow wavelength band to pass straight through it and reflects others.
• The device is based on a Fabry-Perot filter structure, which is a cavity formed by two parallel highly
reflective mirror surfaces and this is called as a Fabry-Perot interferometer or an etalon. It is also
known as a thin-film resonant cavity filter.
• Consider a light signal that is incident on the left surface of the etalon. After the light passes
through the cavity and hits the inside surface on the right, some of the light leaves the cavity and
some is reflected.
• The amount of light reflected depends on the reflectivity R of the surface. If the round trip distance
between the two mirrors is an integral multiple of a wavelength λ, then all light at those wavelength
which pass through the right facet add in phase.
• This means that these wavelengths interfere constructively in the device output beam so they add
in intensity. These wavelengths are called as resonant wavelengths of the cavity. All other
wavelengths are rejected by the etalon. Hence etalon functions as BPF.
5. Explain the working of MZI.
• Precise active signal level control is essential for proper operation of DWDM networks. In order to
have the same gain level certain channels need to be blanked out or span balancing needs to be
done to ensure same signal strengths at a user location.
• A VOA offers such dynamic signal level control as it attenuates optical power by various means to
control signal levels precisely without disturbing other properties of a light signal.
• The control methods include mechanical, thermo-optic, MEMS, electro-optic techniques. Mechanical
control methods are reliable but have a low dynamic range and a slow response time. Thermo-optic
methods have a high dynamic range, but are slow and require use of thermo-electric cooler.
• The two most popular control methods are MEMS based and electro-optic based techniques. When
wavelengths are added, dropped or routed in a WDM system, VOA can manage the arising optical
fluctuations.
8. Explain the operation of tunable optical filters.
9. Explain how a dynamic gain equalizer (DGE) equalizes a non-linear gain profile.
12. Explain how a chromatic dispersion compensator compensates dispersion in optical fibers.
Figure 15.1: Simplified energy-level diagram and transition processes of Er3+ ions in silica
• Optical amplifiers use optical pumping where one uses photons to directly raise electrons into excited
states. This process requires use of 3 energy levels. The top level to which electron is elevated must
lie energetically above the desired lasing level. After reaching its excited state electron must release
some of its energy and drop to the desired lasing level.
• From this level, a signal photon can then trigger the excited electron into stimulated emission
whereby the electron releases its remaining energy in the form of a new photon with a wavelength
identical to that of signal photon. Since the pump photon must have a higher energy than the signal
photon, pump wavelength is shorter than the signal wavelength.
• To understand working of EDFA, we need to look at energy level structure of erbium. The erbium
atoms in silica are Er3+ ions, which are erbium atoms that have lost three of their outer electrons.
• Figure 15.1 shows a simplified energy level diagram and various energy level transitions of Er3+ ions
in silica glass. The 2 principal levels are metastable level and pump level.
• In normal operation a pump laser emitting 980 nm photons is used to excite ions from the ground
state to the pump level as shown by transition process 1. These excited ions decay very quickly from
the pump band to metastable band as shown in transition process 2.
• During this decay, the excess energy is released as phonons or equivalently mechanical vibrations in
the fiber. Within the metastable band, the electrons of the excited ions tend to populate the lower end
of the band with long fluorescence times of 10ms.
• Another possible pump wavelength is 1480 nm. The energy of these pump photons is very similar to
the signal photon energy, but slightly higher. The absorption of a 1480 nm pump photon excites an
electron from the ground state directly to the lightly populated top of the metastable level, as shown
in transition process 3.
• These electrons then tend to move down to the more populated lower end of the metastable level as
shown in transition process 4. Some of the ions sitting at the metastable level can decay back to the
ground state in the absence of an externally stimulating photon flux, as shown by transition process
5. This is known as spontaneous emission and adds to amplifier noise.
• Apart from all the above, a small portion of the external photons will be absorbed by the ions in the
ground state, which raises these ions to metastable level, as shown by transition process 6. In the
stimulated emission process shown by transition process 7 a signal photon triggers an excited ion to
drop to the ground state, thereby emitting a new photon of the same energy, phase of incoming
signal photon.
16. Discuss the EDFA architecture.
• The three main optical amplifier types can be classified as semiconductor optical amplifiers (SOAs),
active fiber or doped fiber amplifiers (DFAs) and Raman amplifiers. All optical amplifiers increase the
power level of incident light through a stimulated emission or an optical power transfer process.
• In SOAs and DFAs the mechanism for creating population inversion is that which is needed for
stimulated emission in laser diodes. The structure of an optical amplifier is similar to that of a laser; it
does not have an optical feedback mechanism necessary for lasing to take place.
• An optical amplifier can thus boost incoming signal levels, but cannot generate an optical output by
itself. The basic operation is shown in figure 17.1 above. Here the device absorbs energy from an
external source called the pump which supplies energy to the electrons in an active medium and
raises them to higher energy levels to produce population inversion.
• An incoming signal photon will trigger these excited electrons to drop to lower levels through a
stimulated emission process. Since one incoming trigger photon stimulates many excited electrons to
emit photons of equal energy as they drop to the ground state, the result is an amplified optical
signal. In contrast to the amplification mechanisms used in an SOA or DFA, Raman amplifiers use a
optical power transfer process without population inversion.