How Do Fiber Optic Couplers Work and How are They Made?
By Colin Yao
The need for fiber optic couplers
We use electronic couplers all the time: such as a telephone coupler which lets you
connect both a telephone and a fax machine to the same telephone line. Or a CATV coupler
which lets you connect several TV sets to a single cable from Comcast. Basically you can
buy these couplers from Home Depot or other electronic retailers.
Optical couplers have the same functionality as electronic couplers: They split the
signal to multiple points (devices). Fiber optic couplers are needed for tapping (monitoring
the signal quality) or more complex telecommunication systems which require more than
simple point-to-point connections, such as ring architectures, bus architectures and star
architectures.
Passive couplers and active couplers
Fiber optic couplers can be either active or passive devices. The difference between
active and passive couplers is that a passive coupler redistributes the optical signal
without optical-to-electrical conversion. Active couplers are electronic devices that
split or combine the signal electrically and use fiber optic detectors and sources for
input and output.
The difference between electronic couplers and fiber optic couplers
Electronic couplers are easy to make because electric current flows as long as you have
physical contact between conductors. But optical signal is in a completely different
domain. You have to align the tiny optical fiber cores precisely (9um for single mode and
50um or 62.5um for multimode fibers), so there won't be a huge power loss when you split
the signal.
Understanding fiber optic coupler types
Fiber optic coupler types are often defined by their input and output port numbers.
They are designed to fulfill different applications.
1. T couplers
T couplers are also called Y couplers which is based on their look. T couplers are
three port device with one input and two output ports. One major application is
tapping(power monitoring): the input power is split to 5% and 95% respectively on the two
outputs. The 5% port is connected to system monitoring hardware to monitor the line
quality. Another major application is to split the input to two equal outputs.
2. Tree couplers
Tree couplers usually take one input and split it into multiple (more than two)
outputs. Tree couplers can also be used backward (bidirectional) as a combiner. Multiple
output signals (now function as the input actually) are combined to a single input (now as
the output actually).
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