Real-time monitoring in passive optical networks using a superluminescent LED with uniform and phase-shifted fiber Bragg gratings

This paper presents a monitoring system for tree-structured passive optical access networks. The emitted light of a superluminescent LED is utilized as the monitoring source. The light signal that propagates along the fiber to the customer site is then reflected by a uniform or phase-shifted fiber B...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Published in:Journal of Optical Communications and Networking
Main Author: Naim N.F.; Ab-Rahman M.S.; Bakarman H.A.; Bakar A.A.A.
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: 2013
Online Access:https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-84891540809&doi=10.1364%2fJOCN.5.001425&partnerID=40&md5=09ace678af5e607f6ad7af2e21b1be0f
id 2-s2.0-84891540809
spelling 2-s2.0-84891540809
Naim N.F.; Ab-Rahman M.S.; Bakarman H.A.; Bakar A.A.A.
Real-time monitoring in passive optical networks using a superluminescent LED with uniform and phase-shifted fiber Bragg gratings
2013
Journal of Optical Communications and Networking
5
12
10.1364/JOCN.5.001425
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-84891540809&doi=10.1364%2fJOCN.5.001425&partnerID=40&md5=09ace678af5e607f6ad7af2e21b1be0f
This paper presents a monitoring system for tree-structured passive optical access networks. The emitted light of a superluminescent LED is utilized as the monitoring source. The light signal that propagates along the fiber to the customer site is then reflected by a uniform or phase-shifted fiber Bragg grating (FBG), which is employed near the end of the customer site. The wavelength optimization concept was demonstrated, where one center wavelength or Bragg wavelength is shared by two types of monitoring FBGs. Each FBG represents the distinct location of the optical network unit (ONU)to bemonitored. This technique improves the number of monitored ONUs twofold, since a single Bragg wavelength can be utilized to monitor two independent customers. The results were analyzed using a digital signal processing board that displays the reflection spectra of the FBGs. After identifying the faulty branch, an optical time domain reflectometer can be activated for fault localization. The system is capable of monitoring up to 128 customers while maintaining the bit error rate at 10¿9. This real-time, centralized monitoring system demonstrates a low-power and cost efficient monitoring system with low bandwidth requirements. © 2009-2012 OSA.

19430620
English
Article

author Naim N.F.; Ab-Rahman M.S.; Bakarman H.A.; Bakar A.A.A.
spellingShingle Naim N.F.; Ab-Rahman M.S.; Bakarman H.A.; Bakar A.A.A.
Real-time monitoring in passive optical networks using a superluminescent LED with uniform and phase-shifted fiber Bragg gratings
author_facet Naim N.F.; Ab-Rahman M.S.; Bakarman H.A.; Bakar A.A.A.
author_sort Naim N.F.; Ab-Rahman M.S.; Bakarman H.A.; Bakar A.A.A.
title Real-time monitoring in passive optical networks using a superluminescent LED with uniform and phase-shifted fiber Bragg gratings
title_short Real-time monitoring in passive optical networks using a superluminescent LED with uniform and phase-shifted fiber Bragg gratings
title_full Real-time monitoring in passive optical networks using a superluminescent LED with uniform and phase-shifted fiber Bragg gratings
title_fullStr Real-time monitoring in passive optical networks using a superluminescent LED with uniform and phase-shifted fiber Bragg gratings
title_full_unstemmed Real-time monitoring in passive optical networks using a superluminescent LED with uniform and phase-shifted fiber Bragg gratings
title_sort Real-time monitoring in passive optical networks using a superluminescent LED with uniform and phase-shifted fiber Bragg gratings
publishDate 2013
container_title Journal of Optical Communications and Networking
container_volume 5
container_issue 12
doi_str_mv 10.1364/JOCN.5.001425
url https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-84891540809&doi=10.1364%2fJOCN.5.001425&partnerID=40&md5=09ace678af5e607f6ad7af2e21b1be0f
description This paper presents a monitoring system for tree-structured passive optical access networks. The emitted light of a superluminescent LED is utilized as the monitoring source. The light signal that propagates along the fiber to the customer site is then reflected by a uniform or phase-shifted fiber Bragg grating (FBG), which is employed near the end of the customer site. The wavelength optimization concept was demonstrated, where one center wavelength or Bragg wavelength is shared by two types of monitoring FBGs. Each FBG represents the distinct location of the optical network unit (ONU)to bemonitored. This technique improves the number of monitored ONUs twofold, since a single Bragg wavelength can be utilized to monitor two independent customers. The results were analyzed using a digital signal processing board that displays the reflection spectra of the FBGs. After identifying the faulty branch, an optical time domain reflectometer can be activated for fault localization. The system is capable of monitoring up to 128 customers while maintaining the bit error rate at 10¿9. This real-time, centralized monitoring system demonstrates a low-power and cost efficient monitoring system with low bandwidth requirements. © 2009-2012 OSA.
publisher
issn 19430620
language English
format Article
accesstype
record_format scopus
collection Scopus
_version_ 1809678488376967168