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Bent Fibers Put Networks At Risk

opticsorg writes "The combination of moderate optical powers and tight bends can prove catastrophic for optical fibers, according to research carried out by BT Exact in the UK. Although the effect is unlikely to cause problems in current networks, it means that designers may need to think carefully before scaling up the power in their systems or deploying Raman amplifiers with pump powers of several hundred milliwatts or more. In the July 10th issue of Electronics Letters, Ed Sikora and his colleagues report that powers as low as 500 mW can induce permanent damage in singlemode fiber that is bent (13 mm bend diameter or less). 'These bends could be found in exchange racks or splice trays, for example, especially if a fiber is tugged or pulled,' Sikora told Optics.org. The BT researchers carried out tests on four types of fiber subjected to a range of bend diameters (5 to 15 mm) and optical powers of up to a few watts. In all cases the fibers fail within 53 hours. 'What was unexpected was that the catastrophic failure can occur in 90 bends at fairly low powers of less than 1 W or so,' said Sikora. 'It's important to understand that we're not saying that networks are going to fall over tomorrow, but as powers go up you have to aware this effect could occur under certain circumstances.'"

11 of 207 comments (clear)

  1. For everyone too lazy to read.... by Mathew+Lankard · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Don't bend your fiber. I could of swore not bending optial equipment was a given.....

  2. In related news... by djh101010 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    ...if you abuse copper conductors, they'll fail too.

    I'm having a hard time saying this is surprising; minimum bend radius for fiber is nothing that hasn't been obvious to anyone working with the stuff. As long as you're treating it well, you'll be fine. If you or your upstream is stupid about how to handle it, well, it's like any other poor infrastructure, it's gonna bite you. No surprises there.

  3. Huh? by stratjakt · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I always thought this was a given?

    Whats new here that everyone whos so much as read a magazine article about fibre optic tech doesnt know?

    You cant bend fibres, or light will just come shooting out.

    --
    I don't need no instructions to know how to rock!!!!
    1. Re:Huh? by Shane-24 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Uhm - I do beg to differ. There is going to be loss at ANY bend, however the minimum bend radius gives to the limit of the acceptable loss.

      Now if the light becomes too intense (and 500mW to 1W is a LOT of light in a single mode fibre), the fraction lost in the bend although in itself acceptable, becomes great enough to actually damage the structure of the fibre.

      I also wonder how the heating effects the refractive index of the core/cladding itself, and if this might lead to a feedback loss/heating effect.

  4. File this under "Duh!" by ivanmarsh · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Improper handeling and installation of fiber can effect performance and even the operation of the fiber? The hell you say?

    That must be in the book right after "An end-user that constantly runs over their cat5 cable with an office chair might eventually experience connectivity issues." and "Why does my server spontainiously re-boot when it's plugged in a power strip with five HP5000 laser printers?"

    This brought to you by the Ministry for the Preservation of Stating the Obvious.

  5. Re:As long as its just a patchcable.. by Lumpy · · Score: 4, Insightful

    You simply have to bend the fibers in order to keep a clean tidy rack which does not look like a spaghetti.

    Bull!

    if you buy the correct trays and storage equipment for your fiber rack you can easily stay within the minimum bend radius. It boggles my mind how many times I see network engineersthat are now having to deal with fiber treating it like cat-5 or coax. you have to treat fiber like fiber. Correct sotrage boxes, splice trays with the proper loops for that fiber count and yes downspouts and radius curves for the raceways.

    your fiber needs to droop down and then come back laying on the radius shelf entrance.

    if you do fiber right, you have nothing to worry about.

    It's the schmucks and management that are cutting corners that are going to get bitten.

    --
    Do not look at laser with remaining good eye.
  6. Worker Sabotage... by stefanlasiewski · · Score: 4, Insightful

    This is a good reason to keep your optical fiber cables hidden when it is outside the server room.

    I've been to more then one place where a major fiber is laying there in the open. I could easily see a disgruntled worker bending the cable a little bit. The fiber in these installations is usually for some mission-critical app, a bend fiber can cause a big financial loss.

    With cut copper cable, it's easy to spot the two broken strands of cable. With fiber, it's harder to spot. Someone could easily bend the cable, and then straighten it out. All that's left is a minor kink in the wire and the plastic sheathing that is discolored from being stretched.

    --
    "Can of worms? The can is open... the worms are everywhere."
  7. the 'new' thing by theMightyE · · Score: 5, Insightful
    There's been a lot of posts to the effect of 'everyone knows you don't bend a fiber - duh!', but I think they might be missing the point of the article. The article was trying to point out that as laser powers get higher, the bend radius becomes larger since phenomena that don't matter at low power come into effect when you try to cram more optical power into the same fiber.

    I design and build fiber-coupled semiconductor lasers as a day job, and some of the stuff in our R&D lab has a significantly higher power than what is currently used in most systems out there. A fiber bend radius that leaks/absobs x% of the power at 10mW with no difficulty becomes dangerous when you put a 5W laser in the system - the amount of leaked power becomes enough to fry fiber claddings (especially if the fiber was metalized for soldering to a package) and make a crunchy black line where a perfectly good bit of cable had been moments before.

    The take-home message of all of this is that as optical powers go up to increase bandwidth, some existing fiber installation methods may need to be re-thought. That said, I'd doubt that this will have much of an impact on many systems outside of long-haul lines since local systems don't need to have powers of this type to get the bits across town or around an office building.

  8. Where to bend by mobileskimo · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Aside from the obvious, DUH!, the biggest problem I've found is right at the equipment where the plug is. Most equipment have the plug hole perpendicular to the front face (insert sexual pun here). Consequently, the LEDs and labels and everything else is on the face as well, so most engineers/technicians try to keep it clean. Keeping it clean is why the bending happens. I've only seen a few equipment vendors make plug holes that were at an offset angle more lateral to the face. Smart design. More equipment vendors need to follow.

    Cisco are you listening? Ya dumb clod.

    --
    "Last one in is a rotten goblin!" - Kepp
  9. Recent network debug... by appleLaserWriter · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I was recently called in to investigate network trouble at an office. The network laser printer frequently went offline and lost jobs, and no one could figure out why. I traced the cable and found that it went through a door hinge before plugging into the ether switch. The door couldn't close completely due to the cat-5 cable, and there was about 6" of "bite marks" along the cable where it had been pinched between the door and the frame. Changing the cable and rerouting away from any doors (the office had a drop ceiling, so that was easy) fixed the problems.

    I was most surprised by this because the office was in support of an adjacent colocation facility which had beautifully structured fiber and copper running from rack to rack. But I've seen frat houses with better wiring than the office!

  10. Re:Can you get that tight a bend unintentionally? by swordgeek · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Um, have you payed with optical fibre at all? It's entirely unlike thicknet (coax) cable.

    It's quite possible to bend optical cable to that small of a diameter. On the other hand, they warn you about it endlessly. Only the chronically stupid should have to worry about this.

    --

    "People who do stupid things with hazardous materials often die." -- Jim Davidson on alt.folklore.urban