Encyclopedia > Zero-dispersion wavelength

  Article Content

Zero-dispersion wavelength

In telecommunication, the term zero-dispersion wavelength has the following meanings:

1. In a single-mode optical fiber, the wavelength or wavelengths at which material dispersion and waveguide dispersion cancel one another.

Note: In all silica-based optical fibers, minimum material dispersion occurs naturally at a wavelength of approximately 1.3 μm. Single-mode fibers may be made of silica-based glasses containing dopants that shift the material-dispersion wavelength, and thus, the zero-dispersion wavelength, toward the minimum-loss window[?] at approximately 1.55 μm. The engineering tradeoff is a slight increase in the minimum attenuation coefficient[?].

2. Loosely, in a multimode optical fiber, the wavelength at which material dispersion is minimum, i.e. , essentially zero. Synonym minimum-dispersion wavelength.

Source: from Federal Standard 1037C



All Wikipedia text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License

 
  Search Encyclopedia

Search over one million articles, find something about almost anything!
 
 
  
  Featured Article
French resistance

... the occupation. Group also had espionage and escape network and produced false ID papers for resistance members. In the end it had close contacts with the maquis. ...

 
 
 
This page was created in 39.4 ms