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What is a (N+1) x 1 Pump & Signal Combiner?

2025-10-08

A (N+1) x 1 Pump and Signal Combiner is a fiber optic component that takes multiple pump sources and one signal fiber, then combines them into a single output fiber. The “N” stands for however many pump inputs you’re working with, and the “+1” is your signal input.

A 6+1 x 1 combiner has six pump fibers and one signal fiber going into one output. You see these a lot in fiber amplifiers and laser systems.

What the Notation in (N+1) x 1 Pump & Signal Combiner Means

The (N+1) x 1 format tells you the setup:

  • N equals the number of pump input fibers
  • The +1 is one signal input fiber
  • The x 1 is one output fiber carrying everything

Pump fibers supply the energy that does the amplifying. The signal fiber carries whatever data or laser light you’re working to boost. All of it gets combined and exits through that single output fiber.

Why You Need Both Pumps and Signal

Fiber amplifiers don’t work on their own. You need pump energy to excite the gain medium – usually erbium-doped or ytterbium-doped fiber, before it can amplify anything passing through it.

A Pump and Signal Combiner takes care of both parts:

  • Gets the pump energy to the right place
  • Allows your signal to reach the gain fiber
  • Handles everything in one component

Without this combiner, you’d be trying to inject pump light and signal light separately into your amplifier.

How (N+1) x 1 Pump & Signal Combiner Is Different from a Regular Pump Combiner

A regular pump combiner just takes multiple pump sources and combines them. No signal involved.

A Pump and Signal Combiner does that but also has a dedicated port for your signal fiber. It keeps the signal path separate from the pump paths until the point when they both need to merge, which helps you maintain signal quality.

The signal port in a combiner connects to a single-mode fiber because you want to preserve the quality of the data or laser light you want to amplify. The pump ports use multimode fiber because pump diodes put out higher power and multimode can handle it better.

Configurations in Pump & Signal Combiners

You’ll see different configurations depending on how much pump power someone needs:

  • (6+1) x 1: Six pump inputs, one signal, one output
  • (7+1) x 1: Seven pump inputs, one signal, one output
  • (4+1) x 1: Four pump inputs, one signal, one output
  • (3+1) x 1: Six pump inputs, one signal, one output
  • (2+1) x 1: Six pump inputs, one signal, one output

Where Pump & Signal Combiners Get Used

Fiber amplifiers are the main application for a Pump and Signal Combiner. Telecommunications networks use them to boost optical signals over long distances. Industrial fiber lasers use them to scale up power.

Other places you’ll find them:

  • EDFA (Erbium-Doped Fiber Amplifier) systems in telecom
  • High-power fiber laser systems
  • Scientific research setups
  • Medical laser equipment

Anywhere you need to amplify an optical signal using pump energy, you’re probably looking at one of these combiners.

Signal Path Quality

One thing that matters a lot with these combiners is keeping the signal path clean. The signal fiber usually carries single-mode light that needs to stay clean and undistorted.

Good combiners are designed so the signal passes through with minimal loss and distortion while the pump light gets efficiently coupled in from the side ports. Keeping these paths properly separated until they need to combine is part of what makes a quality combiner.

Scaling Power

The main reason to use multiple pump inputs is power scaling. One pump diode might give you 5 or 10 watts. But if you need 50 watts of pump power, you combine multiple diodes through a (N+1) x 1 configuration.

More pump power means more gain in your amplifier. So, if you need higher output power from your fiber laser or amplifier, adding more pump inputs is usually how you get there.

Bottom Line

A (N+1) x 1 Pump and Signal Combiner takes multiple pump fibers plus one signal fiber and combines them into a single output. The N tells you how many pump sources you’re dealing with, and the +1 is your signal input.

These components are essential in fiber amplifiers where you need both pump energy and a signal path feeding into the same gain fiber. The configuration you need depends on how much pump power your application requires.