
Questions: (Please click on a question to link to the answer)
1. Why use fiber optics?
2. How do fibers work?
3. What is the difference between multimode and singlemode?
4. What transmission loss can be expected when using optical fiber cable?
5. What is the maximum distance that a fiber optic modem can go?
6. How do I calculate link budgets?
7. What are the comparative advantages of AM, FM and Digital video transmission technologies?
Answers:
1. Why use fiber optics?
- Immunity to electrical interference, ground loops and short circuits
- Does not cause electrical interference
- Practically inexhaustible transmission capacity
- Much lower loss and higher bandwidth than copper
- Very secure transmission
- Cost effective for longer distances
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2. How do fibers work?
The
fibers used in communications consist of a hair thin strand of glass
coated with a plastic coating for mechanical protection. The actual
glass strand is actually made up of two components: a core of between 9
and 62.5um in diameter surrounded by a cladding of lower refractive
index glass with an outside diameter of 125um. There are other types of
fiber both in terms of materials used and dimensions but the ones
mentioned are by far the most common. Light travels in the core region
by "Total Internal Reflection" which means that light rays bounce off
the core cladding interface and make their way from the input of the
fiber to the other end. A fiber with a 62.5 um core and 1 125um clading
diameter is referred to as a 62.5/125um fiber.
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3. What is the difference between multimode and singlemode?
Almost
all multimode fiber is 50/125m or 62.5/125m in size and typically has a
bandwidth (the fiber's information carrying capacity) of from 200MHz to
2GHz. Multimode modems usually operate up to about 5km on a multimode
fiber. Singlemode fiber is 9-10/125m and has practically unlimited
bandwidth and lower loss than multimode. Singlemode modems are usually
used for longer distances, sometimes to as much as 150 to 200km.
Singlemode fiber is cheaper to buy, but singlemode equipment is more
expensive than the multimode equivalent. Singlemode equipment will
often operate on multimode fiber as well as singlemode, whereas
multimode equipment operates only on multimode fiber.
4. What transmission loss can be expected when using optical fiber cable?
This depends on the wavelength used to transmit the information as well as the type of fiber used.
- Multimode Optical Fiber @ 850nm : Typically 3.0dB/km
- Multimode Optical Fiber @ 1310nm : Typically 1.0dB/km
- Singlemode Optical Fiber @ 1310nm : Typically 0.4dB/km
- Singlemode Optical Fiber @ 1550nm : Typically 0.2 dB/km
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5. What is the maximum distance that a fiber optic modem can go?
The maximum distance a modem can go is the difference between receiver
sensitivity and transmit power of the fiber optic modems (which can
both be found on OSD data sheets) divided by the transmission loss of
the fiber used. For example, a basic singlemode OSD815 digital video
system's transmitter power is greater than -10dBm and its receiver
sensitivity is better than -29dBm so the difference of 19dB at 1310nm
allows operation over at least 45km. Note this would be very poor
design because there is no allowance for a link margin.
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6. How do I calculate link budgets?
The difference between transmitter power and receiver sensitivity is eaten up by:
- Fiber losses
- Connector losses (eg, at patch panels)
- Splice losses
- Link margin
The
link margin can be as low as 2 or 3dB in very well engineered and
controlled environments and as much as 10dB in some situations. It is
intended to allow for:
- Component aging (eg, some light sources' lifetimes are specified for when their power drops by half, ie 3dB)
- Temperature
effects on both transmitters and receivers (it may be necessary to
allow 3dB or so for transmitter power variations with at temperature
range extremes)
- Possible
damage to cables and consequent extra losses due to repairs (this is
usually negligible but in some industrial situations it may be possible
for cable damage to occasionally occur)
- Always
design your system on a "worst case" basis but also make sure it will
operate in a "best case" situation: sometimes optical receivers
misbehave if they get too much power!
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7. What are the comparative advantages of AM, FM and Digital video transmission technologies?
There is some confusion in the marketplace as which technology is most
appropriate for different applications. While there is a lot of
marketing hype about digital technology the fact remains that for many
applications AM offers very adequate performance at extremely
competitive pricing. The following attempts to give a flavour of the
trade offs between the main technologies available today. Please
contact us if you need any technical advice.
AM
is very simple technology which can provide extremely good performance
for many situations. It is easy to get wide bandwidths (at least 15MHz
for our OSD381/383 pair, much more for some specialty products) without
excessive circuit complexity. Also, over low optical loss budgets
typical of most security type CCTV which only occasionally operates
over more than 2 to 3km, the signal-to-noise ratio attainable with AM
can be very good. This does degrade from some maximum value (typically
55 to 70dB measured over a short fiber length) with increasing fiber
length (and loss), so some care is required to ensure that your optical
loss budget is under control. However, linearity as measured by
parameters such as differential gain and phase, while perfectly
adequate for single hop CCTV links is not usually good enough for
systems where 3 or 4 links may have to be put in for the series. It can
be difficult to achieve the linearity obtained with multimode AM
systems on singlemode AM links because the optical devices required for
the latter are usually not as linear as those for multimode.
FM has two key advantages over AM.
1.Performance
is not so strongly dependent on optical loss: the signal to noise ratio
will degrade slowly with increasing loss to a threshold point after
which it degrades very quickly.
2.Performance
is not dependant on the linearity of the optical components since it is
almost completely dominated by the FM modulator and demodulator.
This
improvement comes at a small cost of an increase in circuit complexity
and cost and a large increase in fiber bandwidth required. Generally
the latter is not too critical but must be factored in if you are
considering long runs on multimode fiber (eg greater than 10 to 20km)
due to modal bandwidth limitations or even longer runs on singlemode
fiber (eg greater than 30 to 100km) due to material dispersion effects.
OSD's application engineers can advise on the best design choices in
these cases.
Typically FM
systems offer good SNR (60 to 65dB) which is maintained over
substantial optical losses and good linearity which is typically 2 to 3
times better than AM. Consequently, multiple loops become more
practical.
Digital
system video performance is dominated by the analog to digital
conversion at the transmit end and the digital to analog conversion at
the receive end. The actual transmission path will have virtually no
visual effect on the picture if the Bit Error Rate is better than 1
error in 1 billion bits (ie a BER of 1 X 10-9). In fact, BERs down to
as low as 1 X 10-4 still allow quite useable signals to be received and
monitored on screens.
These excellent characteristics come at the cost of:
1.Increased circuit complexity and cost.
2.Greatly increased transmission bandwidth requirements.
The
basic SNR is determined by the number of quantization levels, which are
in turn fixed by the number of bits per digital word. Typically systems
use between 8 and 12 bits leading to weighted SNR values of between
about 56dB for 8bits and >70dB for 12 bits.
Be
careful about the headroom allowed in digital systems: typically if you
exceed the nominal level of AM and FM systems some distortion takes
place but it may not be obvious. Exceeding the limit in a digital
system results in fairly obvious limiting effects. Unlike its
competitors, OSD includes an extra 3dB headroom in its input circuits
to allow for out-of-specification cameras, matrix switches and
distribution amplifiers which are often exist in the real world. We
achieve this by using AD converters which are specified at a very high
level: for example our 10 bit products all use 12 bit AD convertors,
even though we only transmit 10 bits over the fiber, to ensure true 10
bit performance.
As
noted earlier, digital systems require far more bandwidth than FM or AM
systems. For example, OSD's 4 channel OSD870, 880 and 890 systems offer
studio quality 10MHz video performance and operate on the fiber at
1.35Gbps. This significantly reduces the distances achievable in
multimode fiber: contact OSD Application Engineering for advice when
using multimode or when transmitting more than 50km on singlemode fiber.
For
many simple applications consider AM for its good performance at cost
effective pricing. Also consider AM where long lengths of multimode
cable must be covered.
Most
commercial and professional applications are well served by FM based
systems which offer excellent video, audio and data performance.
Finally,
where extremely high performance is essential all digital systems are
the preferred choice but do be careful about their operation over
multimode fiber.
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