Transceiver Optical Interface Specifications

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Introduction

These are Optical Interface Specifications for the most common Network Standards.  ANY optical tranceiver that lists itself as compliant with the standard, MUST be able to operate correctly when the power of the optical signal at the receiver is in the range between Receiver Sensitivity and Receiver Saturation.  Transceivers by some vendors may perform better; resulting in higher limits for loss and length when using them on both ends of the link.

You may read these specifications as "worst case" values; under these circumstances the Network will work as specified by the Network Standard.

These tabels will grow as we come accross the specification for other interface specifications.

 

Solution

Permanent Damage

Always be very carefull when operating optical networks.  Infra-red radiation is invisible to the naked eye.

Most receivers will be permanently damaged after exposure to an optical power of 5dBm or more.  This is OK, as Average Launch Powers is not higher than +4.0dBm.  Be carefull though, as your retina's will not withstand that amount of power !

 

10 Gigabit Optical Interface Specifications

  Optical interface Standard Wavelength (nm) Receiver Saturation (dBm) Receiver Sensitivity (dBm) Maximum Distance rx--tx
10GBASE-E and -ER Single-mode IEEE 802.3ae - 2002 1550 -1.0 -15.8 40km
10GBASE-L and -LR Single-mode IEEE 802.3ae - 2002 1310 +0.5 -14.4 10km
10GBASE-LRM Multi-mode IEEE 802.3aq - 2006 1300 +1.5 -6.5

OM3:

OM4/OM5:

10GBASE-S and -SR Multi-mode IEEE 802.3ae - 2002 850 -1.0 -9.9

OM3:

OM4/OM5:

10GBASE-Z and -ZR Single-mode Multivendor agreement 1550 -7.0 -24.0 80km