A modern alternative to sending (binary) digital
information via electric voltage signals is to use optical (light) signals.
Electrical signals from digital circuits (high/low voltages) may be
converted into discrete optical signals (light or no light) with LEDs or
solid-state lasers. Likewise, light signals can be translated back into
electrical form through the use of photodiodes or phototransistors for
introduction into the inputs of gate circuits.
Transmitting digital information in optical form may be done in open air,
simply by aiming a laser at a photodetector at a remote distance, but
interference with the beam in the form of temperature inversion layers,
dust, rain, fog, and other obstructions can present significant engineering
problems:
One way to avoid the problems of open-air optical data transmission is to
send the light pulses down an ultra-pure glass fiber. Glass fibers will
"conduct" a beam of light much as a copper wire will conduct electrons, with
the advantage of completely avoiding all the associated problems of
inductance, capacitance, and external interference plaguing electrical
signals. Optical fibers keep the light beam contained within the fiber core
by a phenomenon known as total internal reflectance.
An optical fiber is composed of two layers of ultra-pure glass, each
layer made of glass with a slightly different refractive index, or
capacity to "bend" light. With one type of glass concentrically layered
around a central glass core, light introduced into the central core cannot
escape outside the fiber, but is confined to travel within the core:
These layers of glass are very thin, the outer "cladding" typically 125
microns (1 micron = 1 millionth of a meter, or 10-6 meter) in
diameter. This thinness gives the fiber considerable flexibility. To protect
the fiber from physical damage, it is usually given a thin plastic coating,
placed inside of a plastic tube, wrapped with kevlar fibers for tensile
strength, and given an outer sheath of plastic similar to electrical wire
insulation. Like electrical wires, optical fibers are often bundled together
within the same sheath to form a single cable.
Optical fibers exceed the data-handling performance of copper wire in
almost every regard. They are totally immune to electromagnetic interference
and have very high bandwidths. However, they are not without certain
weaknesses.
One weakness of optical fiber is a phenomenon known as microbending.
This is where the fiber is bend around too small of a radius, causing light
to escape the inner core, through the cladding:
Not only does microbending lead to diminished signal strength due to the
lost light, but it also constitutes a security weakness in that a light
sensor intentionally placed on the outside of a sharp bend could intercept
digital data transmitted over the fiber.
Another problem unique to optical fiber is signal distortion due to
multiple light paths, or modes, having different distances over the
length of the fiber. When light is emitted by a source, the photons (light
particles) do not all travel the exact same path. This fact is patently
obvious in any source of light not conforming to a straight beam, but is
true even in devices such as lasers. If the optical fiber core is large
enough in diameter, it will support multiple pathways for photons to travel,
each of these pathways having a slightly different length from one end of
the fiber to the other. This type of optical fiber is called multimode
fiber:
A light pulse emitted by the LED taking a shorter path through the fiber
will arrive at the detector sooner than light pulses taking longer paths.
The result is distortion of the square-wave's rising and falling edges,
called pulse stretching. This problem becomes worse as the overall
fiber length is increased:
However, if the fiber core is made small enough (around 5 microns in
diameter), light modes are restricted to a single pathway with one length.
Fiber so designed to permit only a single mode of light is known as
single-mode fiber. Because single-mode fiber escapes the problem of
pulse stretching experienced in long cables, it is the fiber of choice for
long-distance (several miles or more) networks. The drawback, of course, is
that with only one mode of light, single-mode fibers do not conduct as as
much light as multimode fibers. Over long distances, this exacerbates the
need for "repeater" units to boost light power. |