How Much Light Can Fiber Optic Cables Carry?

AI Thread Summary
Fiber optic cables can carry varying amounts of light intensity, with upper limits determined by factors like material damage and effects such as Stimulated Brillouin Scattering. The thickness of fiber optic cables influences their bending radius and the efficiency of light transmission, although pulse spreading is less of a concern for lighting applications. For high-intensity applications, such as transmitting 1-2kW of sunlight, the attenuation rate of the cable is crucial, with a high-quality All Plastic Fiber (APF) cable showing about 97% power transmission per meter. Concerns about continuous power handling capabilities of thicker cables are valid and need further exploration. Understanding these factors is essential for designing effective illumination systems using fiber optics.
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I am trying to design a system that will carry light for illumination along a fiber optic cable. I see that there are many thicknesses of fiber optic cable - however I am unsure of the purpose of this. I've never heard of a 'density' of light that you can put into a cable - is there such a thing? Ie. is there a certain 'amount' of light that you can put through a certain diameter of fiber optic cabling, kind of like there is a maximum amperage you can put through a certain diameter wire? (I know it's due to resistance in electrical wire, which is very minimal in fiber.. which would lead to a negatory answer)

If not, then why the different thicknesses of fiber? (I'm talking about single strands for simplicity)

Thanks!
 
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Light density = Light Intensity (or, more correctly, irradiance).

There are upper limits on the intensity that can be put through an optical fibre, which limits are relevant depend on the application. The "hard" limit is material damage that arises due to high intensity light, though other "softer" limits such as Stimulated Brillouin Scattering can also arise, which can affect applications that use coherent light.

Claude.
 
Could the different thicknesses available relate to the minimum radius of bend that you can get? (As with copper cables)
Fibre width is very relevant for digital signalling, of course, but pulse spreading is not a problem in lighting applications.
 
Hmm.. I'm having trouble finding data on what kinds of irradiance fiber optics cables can handle.

My application will require something like 1-2kW of sunlight to be focused into the fiber.. I'm not sure if this is easily handled by most fiber cables or not.

I can see where bend radius might affect it - luckily my application won't need any tight bends so that isn't a major issue.
 
Ok, I've done some more thinking; here's what I've come up with.

A high quality APF (All Plastic Fiber) cable of some radius has an attenuation of about .15 db/m

Since attenuation is defined as ## att = 10*log(power_f/power_i),## my power transmission would be about 97% per meter.

For 1kw of power transmitted over 1m of cable, this equates to about 30W of power dissipated.. is this something a decently thick fiber optic cable can handle continuously?

Or am I on the completely wrong track?
 
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