The present invention relates generally to optical fiber communication, and particularly to fiber fault detection in optical fiber communication.
Optical fiber communication networks use optical fibers to carry data in the form of optical signals at high data rates with very good signal quality. Signal quality can be degraded by naturally-occurring loss events such as aging and other component failures, for example. In a network, optical signals are generated by transmitters and sent over optical fibers to receivers.
Network security has become increasingly important. Unfortunately, optical fibers can be vulnerable to intrusion. For example, an intruder can bend a single-mode or multi-mode optical fiber to tap a portion of light traveling through a fiber. The intruder can then intercept data traveling in the optical signals carried by an optical fiber without causing a significant signal loss at a receiver. In this way, the security of a network can be compromised at a fiber link without anyone realizing it.
Current commercial, in-field optical monitoring uses a single optical supervisory channel (OSC) at a wavelength of 1510 nm (typically for the C-band of erbium amplification) or 1625 nm (typically for the L-band of erbium amplification). An inexpensive, broad wavelength spectrum Fabry-Perot laser at one of these wavelengths transmits information on the health of the transmission link between amplifier huts or nodes at a low data rate. At each set of pre and post amplifiers, the OSC signal is extracted with an optical filter at the input to the pre-amplifier, electronically detected and re-injected onto the fiber by an OSC filter at the amplifier output of the post amplifier thereby propagating in a feedforward direction. The functions of this supervisory channel are to check for optical continuity, to monitor power loss of the amplifiers and to transmit alarms of various kinds from previous network elements. An alarm would be triggered when the input OSC signal in the amplifier drops below a certain value, typically 1 dB, such that the receiver signal-to-noise ratio decreases and errors in the detected bits occur. Smaller changes in the channel power would not necessarily be alarmed since they do not impact the bit error rate or quality of the fiber.
Another commercially available network monitor gives the power spectrum of each channel. As optical transparency becomes introduced into systems via optical cross-connects, dynamic gain flattening filters, spectral power equalizers and fixed or variable wavelength add/drop nodes, full optical spectrum information becomes important. Knowledge of the spectrum insures reliable operation of any wavelength-dependent device or is used within a feedback control loop to control the power spectrum. There are various bulk optic or fiber-based commercial devices on the market to perform this function using Fabry-Perot cavities or diffraction gratings.
A third form of optical monitoring is optical time domain reflectometry (OTDR). OTDR uses the Rayleigh backscattering of a pulsed or temporally gated Fabry-Perot laser diode as a probe of distributed or discrete optical attenuation of the optical fiber. However, OTDRs are usually stand-alone instruments used by skilled technicians either during initial installation or fault location upon repair. Continuous, in-field OTDR monitoring is not typically done. One reason is that optical transmission links are usually uni-directional due to input and output isolators of the in-line optical amplifiers.
What is needed is an improved method and system for monitoring and managing optical fiber links. In particular, the integrity and quality of a fiber link needs to be monitored and managed cost-effectively.
One aspect of the invention is a method and system for detecting a small loss in an optical fiber which includes a first channel having a first wavelength coupled to the fiber. A second channel having a second wavelength different than the first wavelength is also coupled to the fiber. At least one photodetector circuitry is coupled to the fiber at a monitor point for detecting a change in the power ratio between the first and second channels for detecting the small fiber communication loss at any location along the fiber.
In another aspect, the present invention includes an OSC filter for the first or second channel.
Additional features and advantages of the invention will be set forth in the detailed description which follows, and in part will be readily apparent to those skilled in the art from that description or recognized by practicing the invention as described herein, including the detailed description which follows, the claims, as well as the appended drawings.
It is to be understood that both the foregoing general description and the following detailed description present examples, taught in accordance with the present invention, and are intended to provide an overview or framework for understanding the nature and character of the invention as it is claimed. The accompanying drawings are included to provide a further understanding of the invention, and are incorporated into and constitute a part of this specification. The drawings illustrate various examples, taught in accordance with the invention, and together with the description serve to explain the principles and operations of the invention.
Bending fiber is one mechanism for output coupling light for the purpose of intercepting information by an unauthorized user. Other naturally-occurring fiber loss events can also be wavelength dependent.
Referring to
Reference will now be made in detail to the present preferred embodiments of the invention, examples of which are illustrated in the accompanying drawings. Whenever possible, the same reference numerals will be used throughout the drawings to refer to the same or like parts. One illustrative example of the system of the present invention is shown in
Referring to
Hence, in this system 10 having at least two nodes 112 and 114 connected by a fiber path 104, a method for detecting at one of the nodes 112 or 114 a small fiber loss condition in various configurations can be accomplished. The method includes the steps of generating a first marker wavelength and a second marker wavelength. At either node selected, the change in power ratio between the generated first marker wavelength and the second marker wavelength can be continuously monitored by the controller 120.
Any suitable optical fiber can be used as part of the fiber segment or link 104. There is a simple use of the system 10 to maintain the integrity of just a simple span of fiber 104 with a transmitter 101 upstream at one end and a receiver (not shown in
If the system 10 of
The marker wavelength can be an OSC wavelength, an OTDR signal, or another guaranteed wavelength. At any suitable wavelength, the marker wavelength need only to be always present regardless of whether the data signals carrying the data on the fiber 104 are present or not, or whether the fiber link 104 in a multichannel optical system is operating at its minimum capacity, its maximum capacity, or an intermediate capacity between the minimum and maximum capacities. Such a marker or guaranteed channel is preferably selected from outside the normal data signal band while still being at a wavelength or wavelengths that experience gain (such as one or more OSC and other telemetry channel wavelengths), or may be located at any other suitable wavelength or wavelengths. However, the use of in-band wavelengths, as the guaranteed or marker channels, for computing the power ratio by the controller 120 can also be done.
Referring to
For providing these first and second wavelengths λ1 and λ2, preferably supervisory channels are coupled to the fiber. There are several ways in which such channels can be coupled, using either 3 or 4-port filtering devices, such as WDM or OSC filters to achieve the same overall functionality as in
Instead of the nodes being transmitting or receiving terminals, as in
Referring to
As shown in
Referring to
For generating the first and second monitored wavelength or channels, preferably at least two inexpensive, broad wavelength spectrum Fabry-Perot lasers 116 and 118, each at one of the guaranteed, marker or others wavelengths, such as a supervisory channel (OSC) at a wavelength of 1510 nm (typically for the C-band of erbium amplification) and 1625 nm (typically for the L-band of erbium amplification), respectively transmits information on the health of the transmission link 104 between amplifier huts or nodes at a low data rate. At each set of pre and post amplifiers, the OSC signal is extracted with an optical filter 401 and 402 at the input to the pre-amplifier 304 of
For a preferred case of using the optical supervisory channels to measure power at the OSC wavelengths to obtain 1625 to 1510 nm power, their loss ratio is 0.62 dB for SMF28 fiber for the mandrel radius of curve 206 in
When monitoring a power ratio, unwanted rogue power 610 in
An optional, fast optical switch 330 can turn off the data flow faster than it takes to send an alarm 340 back to the head end protection switch (not shown) at the transmitter 101 of
Referring back to
D=B*(L−z)/v (Eq. 1)
where B is the data rate and v is the velocity of light in the fiber and L is the length of the fiber link segment 104.
The present invention teaches a way to minimize the length of the optical buffer. First consider that the strength of the optical signal near the upstream amplifier 506 makes it the most likely location for tapping, i.e, z<<L. So according to Equation 1, downstream monitoring loses roughly BL/v worth of data even before the tap is detected. However, upstream monitoring can be achieved by counter-propagating in a backwards path 704 the monitoring signals with respect to the data signals as shown in
In the counter-propagating or backwards path 704 of
In the case of counter-propagation, the lost data is only Bz/v. More preferred is bi-directional monitoring. This bi-directional monitoring could be implemented by a combination of
Referring to
The detection is not only possible between the pre-amp and post-amp of a two-stage amplifier but with any other fiber path desired, with none, one, two, or more amplifiers included in the selected fiber span because the detection circuitry is separate to the path taken by the data through the amplifier. For example, the OSC wavelengths for monitoring the integrity of the network can be present even with no amplifiers in the system 10. The hashed block represent a system with only the transmitter 101 and receiver 103 present with their interleaving OSC filters, detectors, and lasers.
As another example, the arrangement of lasers 116, 118 and 116′, 118′ and photodiodes 322, 324, and 322′, 324′ would provide bidirectional monitoring to the span of fiber located between the two 2-stage amplifiers 304, 506 and 304′, 506′.
On the other hand, the detection path can be within a single two-stage amplifier site. Preferably, the detection path would be coupled at the input of the pre-amplifier 304″ of each network node or amplifier site.
In the more general detection path, a pair of photodiodes 322″″ and 324″″ receive the OSC wavelengths λ4 and λ3 sent by the previous node and a pair of OSC filters 312′ couple these wavelengths out of the fiber before the pre-amplifier 304 in a feedforward direction. A pair of lasers 118″ and 116″ inject the OSC wavelengths λ4 and λ3 through two OSC filters 106′ and 108′ into the fiber and toward the next amplifier 304.
In a feedbackward path, a pair of lasers 116″″ and 118″″ inject the OSC wavelengths λ1 and λ2 through two OSC filters 502 into the fiber back towards the previous node which is on the post-amplifier side of the previous 2-stage amplifier. A pair of photodiodes 322′″ and 324′″ detect the OSC wavelengths λ1 and λ2 sent by the downstream node and a pair of OSC filters 401′ and 402′ to couple these wavelengths out of the fiber.
Referring to
Similar to
In a feedforward path, the pair of photodiodes 322″″ and 324″″ detect the OSC wavelengths λ1 and λ2 sent by the upstream node and a pair of WDM filters 312′ and circulators 802′ and 802 couple these wavelengths out of the fiber. A pair of lasers 118″ and 116″ inject the OSC wavelengths λ3 and λ4 through two WDM filters 401′ and 402′ and the circulators 801′ and 801 into the fiber and toward the next amplifier 304.
An important function in a secure optical network is the ability to precisely locate the position of any suspected interference with the system. This can be done using the technique of optical time domain reflectometry (OTDR). An OTDR launches a pulse of light in to an optical fiber and monitors the light reflected in the fiber by Rayleigh scattering. The time dependence of the reflected light provides information about the loss as a function of position along the fiber. However conventional optical fiber transmission links are unidirectional because of input and output isolators within the amplifiers. These isolators prevent OTDR from being performed on a whole link by blocking the Rayleigh scattering from the OTDR pulse.
Referring to
Referring to
On the post-amp side of the amplifier there is a pair of OSC laser sources 116 and 118 connected to the OSC add filters 502. There is also a switch 530′ on this side of the amplifier to switch between the OSC laser sources 116 and 118 and the OTDR path 504.
Similarly, another optical switch 530 is connected to the OSC drop filters 401 and 402. The optical switch 530 can direct wavelength dependent monitor light for tap detection in one setting by the controller 120 or back-propagating Rayleigh scattering in the other setting for the back path 504. Alarming 340 from the input of the first amplifier 304 back to the network management center 410 of
With either forward or backward monitoring, the fast optical switch 330, is preferably a semiconductor optical amplifier (SOA) which can switch very fast with a demonstrated fast switching time of 1 ns.
Switches 530 and 530′ are more conventional optical switches Conventional optical switches can be opto-mechanical devices or other types of optical components moving within the switch to direct light from an input fiber to a choice of output fibers. An example of such a fiber-optic switch is the MOM series available from JDS Uniphase.
An optional SOA 535 can be used in the backwards path 504 to provide further gain to the OTDR signal. Hence, a signal blocking switch 330 alarmed to a fiber tap detector 322 and 324 locally-placed within the amplifier is taught by the present invention.
The few additional components added to provide continuous power-ratio monitoring of the fiber link 104 for detection of any change in the wavelength-dependent loss of the fiber are relatively low cost and readily available. Continuous monitoring minimizes the latency of a tap detection. Targeting smaller loss (<1 dB), as taught, allows the system manager instant feedback on the health of the optical link which would cause errors in the bit stream. Using OSC wavelengths insures access to relatively high volume, standard lasers 116 and 118 and filters 106, 108, 312 for example. These wavelengths are already in use and components to extract and detect them already packaged in amplifiers. What is new, according to the teachings of the present invention, is the use of both OSC channels and the continuous monitoring of their power ratio. Some of the problems this invention solves which were unaddressed by prior commercially-available devices are the detection and localization of small power drops indicative of a fiber tapping event.
Alarming with the network tamper alarm 340 could also initiate a transmission loss link characterization by the network management 410 of
Another aspect of the invention is the teaching of a single, central-office OTDR 540 and specially-designed in-line amplifiers allowing for Rayleigh backscattering along the entire link for loss localization. Conventional amplifiers have input and output isolators to block counter-propagating signal power. The present invention teaches a configuration to preferentially pass the backscatter of the OTDR signal along the counter-propagating path 504 but not the data signals (which implies that the OTDR signal as transmitted by the Rayleigh filter 512 is also out of the signal band) on the forward path 104.
There are several possibilities in choosing the wavelength of the OTDR 540. If input and output circulators were used instead of OSC filters before and after a two-stage amplifier, the OTDR 540 can operate in-band because the OTDR pulse would need amplifying between fiber spans. The back-propagating path 504 is required because of isolators already included in the amplifiers which would prevent the back-scattered OTDR signal from returning to the OTDR 540 at the transmitter 101.
On the other hand, using OTDR filters as in
Optionally, the filter 512 transmits the OTDR signal at whatever selected wavelength and filters out the in-band signals. Filter design of the transmitted vs. reflected bands insures sufficient crosstalk to isolate the bidirectional signals.
Add/drop filters 401, 402, and 502 or other similar components for the inventive completely secured amplifiers, such as input and output circulars for conventional unsecured amplifiers, act as isolators to the forward propagating data signals and redirects the counter-propagating Rayleigh signal around the amplifier in the backward direction 504.
The backward path 504 has the optional SOA amplifier 535 so that the dynamic range limit of the centralized OTDR is not exceeded. Gain from the broadband SOA 535 can insure the required dynamic range of the signal through the entire transmission link. Moreover, gain of the SOA 535 needs be controlled to keep the OTDR wavelength within the bandwidth of the filter 512 from lasing upon spurious back-reflections.
Multi-path interference is not an issue since the Rayleigh signal is not within the data signal band. The second optical switch 530 is used to select forward propagating light onto the photodetectors 322 and 324 in normal transmission mode of operation and re-injection of Rayleigh scattered light in OTDR loss characterization mode of operation in the backwards Rayleigh path 504.
Although the pass-through OTDR configuration is directed toward tap detection, it also has great benefit for any fault location or loss detection event. The single OTDR 540 placed at the transmitter 101 can find the loss drop in seconds rather than the hours it would take a trained engineer to drive to the correct repeater hut. Optionally, designing multiple pass-through wavelengths gives a better picture of the nature of the loss, specifically. The design is flexible enough to be used with any OTDR signal wavelength.
It will be apparent to those skilled in the art that various modifications and variations can be made to the present invention without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention, such as substituting in circulators for the drop or add filters. Thus it is intended that the present invention cover the modifications and variations of this invention provided they come within the scope of the appended claims and their equivalents.