GlassOnWeb.com - Glass News - Schott unveils new optical fiber for use in erbium doped fiber amplifiers
 
 HOME   DIRECTORY   NEWS   ARTICLES   BUSINESS AREA   FORUM    JOBS  
 
Sign-in | Registration
  »  Home  »  News  »  Schott unveils new optical fiber for use in erbium doped fiber amplifiers
 
Apolishwheel
 
   CONTRIBUTE
Submit your news
Submitted news

   NEWS ARCHIVES
2008
November
October
September
August
July
June
May
April
March
February
January
2007
2006
2005
2004
2003
2002
2001




GLASS ON WEB - news feed
 
  News


Companies
Schott unveils new optical fiber for use in erbium doped fiber amplifiers

Schott, the international technology company based in Germany, announces a new broadband erbium-doped fiber based on its newly developed compact oxide glass, which will provide up to 50% more bandwidth. The new development will be presented at the Optical Fiber Communication Conference from March 17 to 22 in Anaheim, CA. With this new amplifier medium, Schott is expanding its successful product range of Erbium doped phosphate glasses for planar waveguide amplifiers. Furthermore, the fiber requires significantly less space, enabling more compact designs for amplifiers and telecom equipment.

The new amplifier glass material enables shorter fiber lengths, reduced from 15 meters to as short as 15 centimeters for a C-band design. These newly achieved benchmark lengths enable components to consume less space, translating to a significant reduction of the overall system design and assembly costs.

Additionally, the new material achieves a wider gain spectrum in the C- and L- bands. In the C-band, for example, the Schott fiber utilizes a gain spectrum up to 50% wider than conventional silica gain media. For an L-band amplifier, efficient amplification can be achieved between 1560 nm and 1610 nm. In both cases, the gain spectrum is optimized for maximum gain flatness, which requires less filtering and translates into cost savings due to less pumping power needed.

The new Schott fiber is based on the highly reliable silicate glass. With this glass, the mechanical strength and long term reliability is superior to other non-silica amplifier fibers, such as tellurite or fluoride glasses. Schott has recognized the reliability concerns in the telecommunication industry by introducing the use of new materials in optical networks.

“Our company is known for its cutting-edge innovation, and this new product development is yet another example of our commitment to provide new materials and new products that represent an immediate and recognizable increase in performance and cost-savings to our customers,” said Roland Langfeld, Vice President of Research & Technology at Schott headquarters in Mainz, Germany.

As the market demands more cost-efficient ways to manage bandwidth, Schott's new amplifier fiber will be available for alpha sampling to select customers increasing their options for smaller, broadband amplifiers.




March 18th, 2002
Source: Schott


Print this article  Printer friendly version Send this article to a friend  Send to a Friend



Add a Comment

You have to be registered in order to add your comment.
If you already have an account, please sign-in to comment.




Latest news
Nov-20-08
Glasstech Asia expo opens today
Nov-20-08
ALGOSCAN GmbH completes takeover of Jenoptik Surface Inspection Munich
Nov-20-08
New Study from Ceresana Research: Continued Growth of the PVC Market
Nov-20-08
Gomelsteklo attracts foreign investments to launch new production
Nov-20-08
Now glass producers propose import tax increase
Nov-20-08
Saflex(R) Trenton Plant to Focus Exclusively on Resin Production
Nov-20-08
STARPHIRE glass helps generate solar power on world’s largest ‘green’ museum
Nov-19-08
Listers Open Window of Opportunity
Nov-19-08
New Viracon VUE-50 Insulating Glass Balances Light, Comfort, Solar Performance and Sustainability
Nov-19-08
JEB Launches their New Website


ADVERTISING