Plastic optical fiber explained

Plastic optical fiber (POF) or polymer optical fiber is an optical fiber that is made out of polymer. Similar to glass optical fiber, POF transmits light (for illumination or data) through the core of the fiber. Its chief advantage over the glass product, other aspect being equal, is its robustness under bending and stretching.

History

Since 2014 a full family of PHY transceivers have been available in the market enabling the design and manufacturing of home networking equipment delivering Gigabit speeds into the home.

One of the most exciting developments in polymer fibers has been the development of microstructured polymer optical fibers (mPOF), a type of photonic crystal fiber.

Materials

Traditionally, PMMA (acrylic) comprises the core (96% of the cross section in a fiber 1mm in diameter), and fluorinated polymers are the cladding material. Since the late 1990s much higher performance graded-index (GI-POF) fiber based on amorphous fluoropolymer (poly(perfluoro-butenylvinyl ether), CYTOP[1]) has begun to appear in the marketplace.[2] [3] Whereas glass fibers are only manufactured by drawing, polymer optical fibers can also be manufactured by drawing.[4]

Characteristics of PMMA POF

Applications

Data networks

POF has been called the "consumer" optical fiber because the fiber and associated optical links, connectors, and installation are all inexpensive. Due to the attenuation and distortion characteristics of PMMA fibers, they are commonly used for low-speed, short-distance (up to 100 meters) applications in digital home appliances, home networks, industrial networks (PROFIBUS, PROFINET, Sercos, EtherCAT), and car networks (MOST). The perfluorinated polymer fibers are commonly used for much higher-speed applications such as data center wiring and building LAN wiring.

In relation to the future requirements of high-speed home networking, there has been an increasing interest in POF as a possible option for next-generation Gigabit/s links inside the home.http://www.pmmafiber.com/ To this end, several European Research projects are active, such as POF-ALL http://www.ist-pof-all.org and POF-PLUS http://www.ict-pof-plus.eu/.

Sensors

Polymer optical fibers can be used for remote sensing and multiplexing due to their low cost and high resistance.[6]

It is possible to write fiber Bragg gratings in single and multimode POF. There are advantages in doing this over using silica fiber since the POF can be stretched further without breaking, some applications are described in the PHOSFOS project page.

Standards

Optical fiber used in telecommunications is governed by European Standards EN 60793-2-40-2011.

Several standardization bodies at country, European, and worldwide levels are currently developing Gigabit communication standards for POF aimed towards home networking applications. It is expected the release at the beginning of 2012. http://www.vde.com/EN/DKE/STD/PROJECTS/POF/Pages/default.aspx

An IEEE study group and later task force has been meeting since then until the publication on 2017 of the IEEE802.3bv Amendment. IEEE 802.3bv defines a 1 Gigabit/s full duplex transmission over SI-POF using red LED. It is called 1000BASE-RH.

This Gigabit POF IEEE standard is based on multilevel PAM modulation a frame structure, Tomlinson-Harashima Precoding and Multilevel coset coding modulation. The combination of all these techniques has proven to be an efficient way of achieving low-cost implementations at the same time that the transmission theoretical maximum capacity of the POF is approached.

Other alternatives are schemes like DMT, PAM-2 NRZ, DFE equalization or PAM-4. VDE standard was published in 2013.[7] After the publication the IEEE asked VDE to withdraw the specification and bring all the effort to IEEE. VDE withdrew the specification and a CFI was presented to IEEE in March 2014.[8]

Literature

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: What's CYTOP? . 2015-09-07. agc.com.
  2. Web site: Graded-Index Polymer Optical Fiber (GI-POF) . 2015-09-07. thorlabs.com.
  3. Web site: Manufacture of Perfluorinated Plastic Optical Fibers . 2004. 2015-09-07. chromisfiber.com.
  4. Web site: Plastic optical fibers, explained by RP; polymer . RP Photonics Encyclopedia .
  5. Web site: The FOA Reference For Fiber Optics - Optical Fiber . 2011-02-12. 2013-08-24. thefoa.org.
  6. Fiber optic sensor modified by grafting of the molecularly imprinted polymer for the detection of ammonium in aqueous media.. Lopes N. . Sequeira F. . Gomes M.T.S.R. . Nogueira R. . Bilro L. . Zadorozhnaya O.A. . Rudnitskaya A.M. . Scientific and Technical Journal of Information Technologies, Mechanics and Optics. 15. 4. 568–577. 2015. 10.17586/2226-1494-2015-15-4-568-577. free.
  7. Web site: DIN VDE V 0885-763 VDE V 0885-763:2013-09 - Standards - VDE Publishing House . 2014-09-09 . https://archive.today/20140909204415/https://www.vde-verlag.de/standards/0800061/din-vde-v-0885-763-vde-v-0885-763-2013-09.html . 2014-09-09 . dead .
  8. Web site: Gigabit over Plastic Optical Fibre Call For Interest . 5 May 2024 . ieee802.org.