How to Calculate the Attenuation of a Fibre Optic Link
Contents
Before commissioning a fibre optic link, it is essential to verify that the optical signal will reach its destination with sufficient power. This is the role of the attenuation calculation (or loss budget). This article explains the method step by step, with reference values for each component and a concrete example.
Why calculate the attenuation of a fibre link?
Each component in a fibre link (cable, connectors, splices, splitters) introduces a signal loss measured in decibels (dB). If the total loss exceeds the capacity of the transmitter/receiver pair, the link will not work — or will operate unstably with errors.
The loss budget is the difference between the power emitted by the transmitter and the minimum sensitivity of the receiver. All losses in the link must fit within this budget, with a safety margin (typically 3 dB).
Fundamental rule: Total link loss ≤ Loss budget – Safety margin. If this condition is not met, the link will be unstable or non-operational.
The 4 sources of loss in a fibre link
1. Fibre cable loss (linear attenuation)
The fibre cable itself absorbs and scatters part of the light. This loss is proportional to length and depends on the wavelength:
- Singlemode at 1310 nm: 0.35 dB/km
- Singlemode at 1550 nm: 0.22 dB/km
- Multimode at 850 nm: 2.5–3.5 dB/km
2. Connector loss
Each pair of connectors (joined via a coupler/adapter) introduces a loss due to fibre core misalignment:
- Standard connector (SC, LC, FC): 0.2–0.5 dB per pair
- High-quality connector (zirconia sleeve): < 0.2 dB per pair
3. Splice loss (fusion splices)
Fusion splices between two fibres add a minimal but cumulative loss:
- Fusion splice: 0.02–0.1 dB per splice (typically 0.05 dB)
- Mechanical splice: 0.1–0.5 dB per splice
4. Splitter loss (if present)
PLC splitters divide the signal and introduce a loss proportional to the ratio:
- 1:2: ~3.5 dB
- 1:4: ~7 dB
- 1:8: ~10.5 dB
- 1:16: ~13.5 dB
- 1:32: ~17 dB
Field tip
To reduce connector losses, use couplers with zirconia sleeves (< 0.2 dB) and always clean the ferrules before connection. A dirty connector can add 1 dB or more.
Loss budget formula
The basic formula for the attenuation calculation:
Total loss (dB) = (Length × Attenuation/km) + (Number of connectors × Loss/connector) + (Number of splices × Loss/splice) + Splitter loss + Margin
And the operating condition:
Total loss ≤ Transmitter power (dBm) – Receiver sensitivity (dBm)
The left side is your calculated loss. The right side is your available loss budget. If the loss exceeds the budget, you need to shorten the link, reduce the number of connectors, or use a more powerful transmitter.
Reference values by component
| Component | Typical loss | Max loss | Note |
|---|---|---|---|
| Singlemode cable 1310 nm | 0.35 dB/km | 0.40 dB/km | G.652D standard |
| Singlemode cable 1550 nm | 0.22 dB/km | 0.25 dB/km | Better long-distance performance |
| Multimode cable 850 nm | 2.5 dB/km | 3.5 dB/km | OM3/OM4 |
| Connector (pair) | 0.2 dB | 0.5 dB | Zirconia sleeve recommended |
| Fusion splice | 0.05 dB | 0.1 dB | Professional splicer |
| Mechanical splice | 0.2 dB | 0.5 dB | Less precise than fusion |
| Splitter 1:2 | 3.5 dB | 4.0 dB | PLC |
| Splitter 1:8 | 10.5 dB | 11.5 dB | PLC |
| Splitter 1:16 | 13.5 dB | 14.5 dB | PLC |
| Safety margin | 3 dB | — | Recommended standard |
Elfcam components with minimal loss
- Zirconia couplers — loss < 0.2 dB per pair
- Pigtails — pre-polished, loss < 0.3 dB
- PLC splitters — uniformity < 1 dB, Telcordia certified
- G657A2 fibre cables — attenuation compliant with G.652D
Complete calculation example
Scenario: 5 km singlemode FTTH link at 1310 nm, with 4 connector pairs, 2 splices and a 1:8 splitter.
| Component | Quantity | Unit loss | Total loss |
|---|---|---|---|
| Fibre cable (1310 nm) | 5 km | 0.35 dB/km | 1.75 dB |
| Connectors (pairs) | 4 | 0.3 dB | 1.20 dB |
| Fusion splices | 2 | 0.05 dB | 0.10 dB |
| Splitter 1:8 | 1 | 10.5 dB | 10.50 dB |
| Safety margin | — | — | 3.00 dB |
| TOTAL | — | — | 16.55 dB |
If your equipment's loss budget (transmitter – receiver) is 28 dB, the remaining margin is 28 – 16.55 = 11.45 dB. The link is viable with a good margin.
Measuring real attenuation: OTDR and OPM
OPM (end-to-end measurement)
The OPM (optical power meter) measures the power received at the end of the link (in dBm). By comparing with the emitted power, you obtain the real total loss. This is the simplest and most common method for link acceptance testing.
OTDR (reflectometer)
The OTDR (Optical Time Domain Reflectometer) sends light pulses and analyses the reflections. It produces a trace that shows the loss at each point of the link: each connector, each splice, each cable change. It is the professional diagnostic tool par excellence.
When to use which?
OPM: quick acceptance test, verification of total loss. OTDR: in-depth diagnostics, fault localisation, complete link characterisation. The two are complementary.
Elfcam fibre infrastructure
- Home Fiber — complete home fibre network guide
- Fibre converters — plug & play link, optimised loss budget
- SFP/SFP+ modules — transmit power and sensitivity specifications