Optical Power Meter
calibration and accuracy is a contentious issue. The accuracy of most primary reference standards (e.g.
Weight,
Time, Length,
Volt, etc.) is known to a high accuracy, typically of the order of 1 part in a billion. However the optical power standards maintained by various National Standards Laboratories, are only defined to about one part in a thousand. By the time this accuracy has been further degraded through successive links, instrument calibration accuracy is usually only a few %. The most accurate field optical power meters claim 1% calibration accuracy. This is orders of magnitude less accurate than a comparable electrical meter. Calibration processes for optical power meters are given in IEC 61315 Ed. 3.0 b:2019 - Calibration of fibre-optic power meters. Furthermore, the in-use accuracy achieved is usually significantly lower than the claimed calibration accuracy, by the time additional factors are taken into account. In typical field applications, factors may include: ambient temperature, optical connector type, wavelength variations,
linearity variations, beam
geometry variations, detector saturation. Therefore, achieving a good level of practical instrument accuracy and linearity is something that requires design skill, and high manufacturing proficiency. With the increasing global importance in the reliability of data transmission and optical fiber, and also the sharply reducing optical loss margin of these systems in data centres, there is increased emphasis on the accuracy of optical power meters, and also proper traceability compliance via
International Laboratory Accreditation Cooperation (ILAC) accredited calibration, which includes metrological traceability to national standards and external laboratory accreditation to
ISO/IEC 17025 to improve confidence in overall accuracy claims. ==Extended sensitivity meters==