A relatively large-radius bend in an optical fiber, such as might be found in a splice organizer tray or a fiber-optic cable that has been bent. Note: A macrobend will result in no significant radiation loss if it is of sufficiently large radius. The definition of "sufficiently large" depends on the type of fiber. Single-mode fibers have a low numerical aperture, typically less than 0. 15, and are therefore are more susceptible to bend losses than other types. Normally, they will not tolerate a minimum bend radius of less than 6. 5 to 7. 5 cm (2. 5 to 3 inches. ) Certain specialized types of single-mode fibers, however, can tolerate a far shorter minimum bend radius without appreciable loss. A graded-index multimode fiber having a core diameter of 50 m and a numerical aperture of 0. 20 will typically tolerate a minimum bend radius of not less than 3. 8 cm (1. 5 inches. ) The fibers commonly used in customer-premises applications (62. 5-m core) typically have a relatively high numerical aperture, (approximately 0. 27,) and can tolerate a bend radius of less than an inch (2. 5 cm. )
- Parte del discurso: noun
- Industria/ámbito: Telecomunicaciones
- Categoría: General - Telecomunicaciones
- Company: ATIS
Creador
- KeithC3
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