Home / Papers / Introduction to fiber optics: Sources for optical fiber communication

Introduction to fiber optics: Sources for optical fiber communication

88 Citations1998
A. Ghatak, K. Thyagarajan
journal unavailable

No TL;DR found

Abstract

Introduction The most important and widely exploited application of optical fiber is its use as the transmission medium in an optical communication link. The basic optical fiber communication system consists of a transmitter, an optical fiber, and a receiver. The transmitter has a light source, such as a laser diode, which is modulated by a suitable drive circuit in accordance with the signal to be transmitted. Similarly, the receiver consists of a photodetector, which generates electrical signals in accordance with the incident optical energy. The photodetector is followed by an electronic amplifier and a signal recovery unit. Among the variety of optical sources, optical fiber communication systems almost always use semiconductor-based light sources such as light-emitting diodes (LEDs) and laser diodes because of the several advantages such sources have over the others. These advantages include compact size, high efficiency, required wavelength of emission, and, above all, the possibility of direct modulation at high speeds. In this chapter, we discuss the mechanism of light generation, basic device configurations, and relevant output characteristics of the light source. In Section 11.2 we discuss the basic requirements that the source should meet to be suitable for use in an optical fiber communication system. In Section 11.3 we briefly present an elementary account of the principle of operation of a laser. In Section 11.4 we discuss basic semiconductor physics relevant to the operation of a semiconductor laser followed by the device structure and characteristics in Section 11.5. Finally, in Section 11.6 we briefly discuss the characteristics of LEDs that are relevant to a fiber optic communication link.