Structured Cabling & Wiring Contractors
Voice & Data Cabling Glossary
A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z
A
Absorption
The loss of light energy in
an optical fiber resulting from impurities in the glass.
Acceptance Cone
A cone angled area that
light must enter in order to "bounce" down the fiber, or travel
between the core and the cladding.
Acrylate
Acrylic resin.
Adapter
A mechanical media termination
device designed to align and join fiber optic connectors. Often
referred to as a coupling, bulkhead, or interconnect sleeve.
All-dielectric
Non-conducting; made entirely
of dielectric (insulating) materials, without any metal conductors.
Analog
A format that uses continuous
physical variables such as voltage amplitude or frequency variations
to transmit information.
Aramid Yarn
Strength elements that provide
tensile strength and provides support and additional protection
of the fiber bundles. Kevlar® is a particular brand of aramid
yarn.
Armor
Additional protective element beneath
outer jacket to provide protection against severe outdoor environments.
Usually made of plastic-coated steel, it may be corrugated for
flexibility.
Attenuation
The decrease in magnitude
of power of a signal in transmission between points. A term
used for expressing the total loss of an optical system, normally
measured in decibels (dB) at a specific wavelength.
Attenuation Coefficient
The rate of optical
power loss with respect to distance along the fiber, usually
measured in decibels per kilometer (dB/km) at a specific wavelength.
The lower the number, the better the fiber's attenuation. Typical
multimode wavelengths are 850 and 1300 nanometers (nm); single
mode wavelengths are 1310 and 1550 nm. Note: When specifying
attenuation, it is important to note whether the value is average
or nominal.
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B
Backbone Cabling
The portion of premises
telecommunications cabling that provides connections between
telecommunications closets, equipment rooms, and entrance facilities.
The backbone cabling consists of the transmission media (optical
fiber cable), main and intermediate cross-connects, and terminations
for the horizontal cross-connect, equipment rooms, and entrance
facilities. The backbone cabling can further be classified as
inter-building backbone (cabling between buildings), or intrabuilding
backbone (cabling within a building).
Bandwidth
Measure of the information-carrying
capacity of an optical fiber. Note: This term is often used
to specify the normalized modal bandwidth (MHz·km) of a multimode
fiber. See Dispersion for single-mode fibers.
Bandwidth-Distance Product
The information-carrying
capacity of a transmission medium is
normally referred to
in units of MHz·km. This is called the
bandwidth-distance
product or, more commonly, bandwidth. The
amount of information
that can be transmitted over any medium
changes according
to distance. The relationship is not linear,
however. A 500
MHz·km fiber does not translate to 250 MHz for
a 2 kilometer
length or 1000 MHz for a 0.5 kilometer length. It is
important,
therefore, when comparing media, to ensure that the
same
units of distance are being used.
Broadband
Typically referring to copper,
it denotes transmission facilities
capable of handling a
wide range of frequencies simultaneously, thus
permitting
multiple channels in data systems, rather than direct
modulation.
Buffering
(1) A protective material extruded
directly on the fiber coating to
protect it from the environment
(tight-buffered); (2) extruding a tube
around the coated
fiber to allow isolation of the fiber from stresses
in the
cable (buffer tubes).
Buffer Tubes
Extruded cylindrical tubes
covering optical fiber(s) used for
protection and isolation.
See Loose Tube.
Bundle
Many individual fibers contained
within a single jacket or buffer
tube. Also, a group of buffered
fibers distinguished in some fashion
from another group in
the same cable core.
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C
Cable
An assembly of optical fibers and
other material providing
mechanical and environmental protection.
Cable Assembly
Optical fiber cable that
has connectors installed on one or both
ends. General use
of these cable assemblies includes the
interconnection of
optical fiber cable systems and opto-electronic
equipment.
If connectors are attached to only one end of a cable, it
is known as a pigtail. If connectors are attached to both ends,
it is
known as a jumper or patch cord.
Cable Bend Radius
Cable bend radius during
installation infers that the cable is
experiencing a tensile
load. Free bend infers a smaller allowable
bend radius since
it is at a condition of no load.
Central Member
The center component of
a cable. It serves as an antibuckling
element to resist temperature-induced
stresses. Sometimes serves
as a strength element. The central
member material is either steel,
fiberglass, or glass-reinforced
plastic.
Centralized Cabling
A cabling topology
used with centralized electronics connecting the
optical
horizontal cabling with intrabuilding backbone cabling
passively
in the telecommunications closet.
Cladding
The material surrounding the
core of an optical waveguide. The
cladding must have a lower
index of refraction to keep the light in
the core.
Coating
A material put on a fiber during
the draw process to protect it from
the environment and handling.
Composite Cable
A cable containing both
fiber and copper media per article 770 of
the National Electrical
Code (NEC).
Conduit
Pipe or tubing through which
cables can be pulled or housed.
Connecting Hardware
A device used to
terminate an optical fiber cable with connectors
and adapters
that provides an administration point for
cross-connecting
between cabling segments or interconnecting to
electronic
equipment.
Connector
A mechanical device used to
align and join two fibers together to
provide a means for
attaching to and decoupling from a transmitter,
receiver,
or another fiber (patch panel). Commonly used
connectors
include the 568SC (Duplex SC), ST® compatible,
FDDI, ESCON,
SMA 905/906, Biconic, FC, or D4.
Connector Panel
A panel designed for
use with patch panels; it contains either 6, 8,
or 12 adapters
pre-installed for use when field-connectorizing
fibers.
Connector Panel Module
A module designed
for use with patch panels; it contains either 6 or
12 connectorized
fibers that are spliced to backbone cable fibers.
Consolidation
The second manufacturing
step in the OVD process; manufacturing
step which removes
water vapor from the preform, and sinters it
into a solid,
dense, transparent glass blank.
Core
The central region of an optical
fiber through which light is
transmitted.
Coupling
See Adapter.
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D
Decibel (dB)
Unit for measuring the relative
strength of light signals. Normally
expressed in dB, it is
equal to one-tenth the common logarithm of
the ratio of the
two levels. Expressed in dBm when a power level is
compared
to a milliwatt.
Dielectric
Non-metallic and, therefore,
non-conductive. Glass fibers are
considered dielectric. A
dielectric cable contains no metallic
components.
Digital
A data format that uses two physical
levels to transmit information
corresponding to 0s and 1s.
A discrete or discontinuous signal.
Dispersion
The cause of bandwidth limitations
in a fiber. Dispersion causes a
broadening of input pulses
along the length of the fiber. Three major
types are: (1)
modal dispersion caused by differential optical path
lengths
in a multimode fiber; (2) chromatic dispersion caused by a
differential delay of various wavelengths of light in a waveguide
material; and (3) waveguide dispersion caused by light traveling
in
both the core and cladding materials in single-mode fibers.
Draw
The third and final step in the
OVD process; draws the glass blank
into a continuous strand
of glass fiber.
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E
Entrance Facility
An entrance to a building
for both public and private network
service cables including
the entrance point at the building wall and
continuing to
the entrance room or space.
Equipment Room
A centralized space for
telecommunications equipment that serves
the occupants of
a building. An equipment room is considered
distinct from
a telecommunications closet because of the nature or
complexity
of the equipment.
Extrinsic
External; outside the fiber.
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F
FOTP
Fiber Optic Test Procedures. Defined
in TIA/EIA Publication
Series 455.
Fan-Out
Siecor multifiber cable constructed
in the tight-buffered design.
Designed for ease of connectorization
and rugged applications for
intra- or interbuilding requirements.
Ferrule
A mechanical fixture, generally
a rigid tube, used to protect and
align a fiber in a connector.
Generally associated with fiber optic
connectors.
Fiber
Thin filament of glass. An optical
waveguide consisting of a core
and a cladding that is capable
of carrying information in the form of
light.
Fiber Bend Radius
Radius a fiber can
bend before the risk of breakage or increase in
attenuation.
Fiber Distributed Data Interface (FDDI)
A standard for a 100 Mbit/s fiber optic local area network.
Fiber Optics
Light transmission through
optical fibers for communication or
signaling.
Fresnel Reflection Losses
Reflection
losses that are incurred at the input and output of optical
fibers due to the differences in refraction index between the
core
glass and immersion medium.
Frequency
The number of pulses or cycles
per second; measured in units of
Hertz (Hz) where 1 hertz
equals 1 pulse/cycle per second.
Fusing
The actual operation of joining
fibers together by fusion or by
melting.
Fusion Splicing
A permanent joint produced
by the application of localized heat
sufficient to fuse or
melt the ends of the optical fiber, forming a
continuous
single fiber.
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G
Gigahertz (GHz)
A unit of frequency that
is equal to one billion cycles per second,
109 Hertz.
Graded-Index
Fiber design in which the
refractive index of the core is lower
toward the outside
of the fiber core and increases toward the center
of the
core; thus, it bends the rays inward and allows them to travel
faster in the lower index of refraction region. This type of
fiber
provides higher bandwidth capabilities for multimode
fiber
transmission.
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H
Hertz (Hz)
The frequency in pulses/cycles
per second where 1 hertz equals 1
pulse/cycle per second.
Horizontal Cabling
That portion of the
telecommunications cabling that provides
connectivity between
the horizontal cross-connect and the
work-area telecommunications
outlet. The horizontal cabling
consists of transmission media,
the outlet, the terminations of the
horizontal cables, and
horizontal cross-connect.
Horizontal Cross-Connect (HC)
A cross-connect
of horizontal cabling to other cabling, e.g.,
horizontal,
backbone, equipment.
Hybrid Cable
A fiber optic cable containing
two or more different types of fiber,
such as 62.5 µm multimode
and single-mode.
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I
IEEE
Institute of Electrical and Electronics
Engineers.
Index-Matching Fluid
A fluid with an
index of refraction close to that of glass that reduces
reflections
caused by refractive-index differences.
Index of Refraction (IOR)
The ratio of
light velocity in a vacuum to its velocity in a given
transmission
medium.
Interbuilding Backbone
The portion of
the backbone cabling between buildings. See
Backbone Cabling.
Intermediate Cross-Connect (IC)
A secondary
cross-connect in the backbone cabling used to
mechanically
terminate and administer backbone cabling between
the main
cross-connect and horizontal cross-connect.
Intrabuilding Backbone
The portion of
the backbone cabling within a building. See
Backbone Cabling.
Intrinsic
Inherent; within; inside the
fiber.
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J
Jumper
Optical fiber cable that has connectors
installed on both ends. See
Cable Assembly.
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K
kpsi
A unit of force per area expressed
in thousands of pounds per
square inch. Usually used as the
specification for fiber proof test,
e.g., 100 kpsi.
Kevlar
See Aramid Yarn.
Kilometer (km)
One thousand meters, or
approximately 3,281 feet, or 0.62 miles.
The kilometer is
a standard unit of length measurement in fiber
optics. Conversion
is 1 ft. = 0.3048 m.
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L
LAN
See Local Area Network.
LASER Diode
Light Amplification by Stimulated
Emission of Radiation. An
electro-optic device that produces
coherent light with a narrow
range of wavelengths, typically
centered around 780 nm, 1310 nm,
or 1550 nm. Lasers with
wavelengths centered around 780 nm are
commonly referred
to as CD Lasers.
Laydown
The first step of fiber manufacturing
using the OVD process;
deposition of ultrapure vapors around
a rotating target rod to form
a glass preform.
Light Emitting Diode (LED)
A semiconductor
device used to transmit light into a fiber in
response to
an electrical signal. It typically has a broad spectral
width.
Link
A telecommunications circuit between
any two telecommunications
devices, not including the equipment
connector.
Local Area Network (LAN)
A geographically
limited communications network intended for the
local transport
of voice, data, and video. Often referred to as a
customer
premises network.
Loose Tube Cable
Type of cable design
whereby coated fibers are encased in buffer
tubes offering
excellent fiber protection and segregation.
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M
MDPE
Abbreviation used to denote medium
density polyethylene. A type
of plastic material used to
make cable jacketing.
Macrobend
A large cable bend that can
be seen with the unaided eye; often
reversible.
Main Cross-Connect (MC)
The centralized
portion of the backbone cabling used to
mechanically terminate
and administer the backbone cabling,
providing connectivity
between equipment rooms, entrance
facilities, horizontal
cross-connects, and intermediate
cross-connects.
Mechanical Splicing
Joining two fibers
together by permanent or temporary mechanical
means (vs.
fusion splicing or connectors) to enable a continuous
signal.
The CamSplice is a good example of a mechanical splice.
Megahertz (MHz)
A unit of frequency that
is equal to one million cycles per second.
Meter
A decimal unit of measure equaling
3.28 feet.
Microbend
A small, microscopic bend which
may be caused by the cabling
process; mechanical stress due
to water in the cable during
repeated freeze and thaw cycles,
packaging, or installation.
Micrometer (µm)
One millionth of a meter;
10-6 meter. Typically used to express the
geometric dimension
of fibers, e.g., 62.5 µm.
Mini Bundle® Cable
Siecor loose tube
cable in which the buffer tube contains two or
more fibers,
typically 6 or 12 fibers.
Minimum Bend Radius
The amount of bend
a fiber (or cable) can withstand before
experiencing problems
in performance.
Mode
A term used to describe an independent
light path through a fiber,
as in multimode or single-mode.
Mode Field Diameter
The diameter of the
one mode of light propagating in a single-mode
fiber. The
mode field diameter replaces core diameter as the
practical
parameter in single-mode fiber.
Modulation
Coding of information onto
the carrier frequency. This includes
amplitude, frequency,
or phase modulation techniques.
Multifiber Cable
An optical fiber cable
that contains two or more fibers.
Multimode Fiber (MM)
An optical waveguide
in which light travels in multiple modes.
Typical core/cladding
size (measured in micrometers) is 62.5/125.
Multiplex
Combining two or more signals
into a single bit stream that can be
individually recovered.
Multi-User Outlet
A telecommunications
outlet used to serve more than one work
area, typically in
open-systems furniture applications.
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N
National Electrical Code (NEC)
Defines
building flammability requirements for indoor cables. Note:
Local codes take precedence but may refer to or require
compliance
to the NEC.
Nanometer (nm)
A unit of measurement
equal to one billionth of a meter; 10-9
meters. Typically
used to express the wavelength of light, e.g., 1300
nm.
Numerical Aperture (NA)
The number that
expresses the light gathering ability of a fiber.
Related
to acceptance angle.
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O
Optical Fiber
See Fiber.
Optical Time Domain Reflectometer (OTDR)
An instrument that measures transmission characteristics by
sending
a series of short pulses of light down a fiber and
providing a graphic
representation of the backscattered light.
Outside Vapor Deposition (OVD)
An optical
fiber manufacturing method developed, patented, and
used
by Corning; manufacturing method using three steps: laydown,
consolidation, and draw.
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P
PE
Abbreviation used to denote polyethylene.
A type of plastic
material used for outside plant cable jackets.
PVC
Abbreviation used to denote polyvinyl-chloride.
A type of plastic
material used for cable jacketing. Typically
used in flame-retardant
cables.
PVDF
Abbreviation used to denote polyvinyl-difluoride.
A type of material
used for cable jacketing. Often used in
plenum-rated cables.
Pigtail
Optical fiber cable that has
a connector installed on one end. See
Cable Assembly.
PIN Diode
A semiconductor device used
to convert optical signals to electrical
signals in a receiver.
Plenum
An air-handling space such as
that found above drop-ceiling tiles or
in raised floors.
Also, a fire-code rating for indoor cable.
Point-to-Point
A connection established
between two specific locations as
between two buildings.
Prefusing
Fusing with a low current to
clean the fiber end. Precedes fusion
splicing.
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Q
Rr
RH
Relative humidity.
Receiver
An electronic package that converts
optical signals to electrical
signals.
Reflectance
Reflectance is the ratio
of power reflected to the incident power at
a connector junction
or other component or device, usually
measured in decibels
or dB. Reflectance is stated as a negative
value, e.g., -30
dB. A connector that has a better reflectance
performance
would be a -40 dB connector or a value less than -30
dB.
The terms return loss, back reflection, and reflectivity are
also
used synonymously in the industry to describe device
reflections,
but stated as positive values.
Repeater
A device used to regenerate
an optical or electrical signal to allow
an increase in the
system length.
Return Loss
See Reflectance.
Riser
Pathways for indoor cables that
pass between floors. It is normally
a vertical shaft or space.
Also a fire-code rating for indoor cable.]
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S
Scattering
A property of glass that causes
light to deflect from the fiber and
contributes to optical
attenuation.
Single-Mode Fiber (SM)
An optical waveguide
(or fiber) in which the signal travels in one
mode. The fiber
has a small core diameter, typically 8.3 µm.
Splice Closure
A container used to organize
and protect splice trays. Typically
used in outside plant
environments.
Splice Tray
A container used to secure,
organize, and protect spliced fibers.
Splicing
The permanent joining of bare
fiber ends to another fiber. See
Fusion Splice and Mechanical
Splicing.
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T
Telecommunications Closet (TC)
An enclosed
space for housing telecommunications equipment,
cable terminations,
and cross-connects. The closet is the recognized
cross-connect
between the backbone and horizontal cabling.
Tensile
Pulling (strength or stress).
Termination
A connection.
Tight-Buffered Cable
Type of cable construction
whereby each glass fiber is tightly
buffered by a protective
thermoplastic coating to a diameter of 900
micrometers. Increased
buffering provides ease of handling and
connectorization.
Total Internal Reflection
Reflection
that occurs when a light ray traveling in one material hits
another material and reflects back into the original material
without
any loss of light.
Transmitter
An electronic package used
to convert an electrical
information-carrying signal to a
corresponding optical signal for
transmission by fiber. The
transmitter is usually a Light Emitting
Diode (LED) or Laser
Diode.
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U
UL
Underwriters Laboratories, Inc.
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V
Video
Video cameras and cable television.
Visible spectrum
The portion of the electromagnetic
spectrum that can be seen by the
unaided human eye.
Voice
Telephone services.
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W
Wavelength
The distance between two successive
points of an electromagnetic
waveform, usually measured in
nanometers (nm).
Window
A range of wavelengths within
which a fiber best operates.
Work-Area Telecommunications Outlet
A
connecting device located in a work area at which the horizontal
cabling terminates and provides connectivity for work-area patch
cords.
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X
Y
Z
Zero-Dispersion Wavelength
Wavelength
at which the chromatic dispersion of an optical fiber is
zero. Occurs when waveguide dispersion cancels out material
dispersion.