How Optical Fiber Cables Prevent Longitudinal Moisture Propagation
Optical fiber cables are highly sensitive to moisture. Once water enters a cable—whether from a damaged sheath, rodent bite, mechanical stress, or manufacturing defect—it can migrate longitudinally along the cable and reach the optical fibers. This leads to:
- Increased attenuation
- Hydrogen-induced losses
- Ice expansion damage
- Long-term degradation of fiber coatings
To prevent these failures, modern optical fiber cables use a combination of water-blocking materials and structural protection mechanisms that stop water from moving along the cable’s length.
Below is a detailed breakdown.
1. Water-Blocking Materials: Mechanisms and Engineering Principles
Water-blocking materials work through two primary mechanisms:
A. Water Swelling (Hydro-Expansion)
These materials absorb water quickly and expand into a gel-like state, blocking water pathways.
B. Physical Isolation (Barrier Formation)
These materials do not absorb water but instead create a mechanical barrier that prevents water from entering fiber-containing areas.
Different cable types use different combinations depending on installation scenario.
2. Detailed Explanation of Water-Blocking Materials
2.1 Water-Blocking Yarn (Swelling Yarn)
Mechanism: Water Swelling
Water-blocking yarn is typically polyester filament coated with super-absorbent polymer (SAP). When water contacts the yarn:
- SAP absorbs water up to 20–50 times its mass.
- SAP turns into a hydrogel.
- The yarn expands rapidly in diameter.
- The swelling fills empty spaces inside the cable core.
- Longitudinal water propagation is stopped within seconds.
Applications
- Direct-buried cables
- ADSS cables
- Loose tube cables
- Submarine cables (inner layers)
Advantages
- Fast swelling response (<10 seconds)
- Lightweight
- Clean, non-messy
- Excellent for dry-type cables
2.2 Water-Blocking Tape (Swelling Tape / SAP Tape)
Mechanism: Water Swelling + Physical Isolation
Water-blocking tape is a laminate of polyester nonwoven fabric + SAP powder.
How it blocks water:
- The tape forms a physical wrap around loose tubes or the cable core.
- When water enters, SAP absorbs and expands laterally.
- It forms a flat, gel-like barrier preventing water from moving along the cable length.
Applications
- Direct-buried cables
- Submarine cables
- High-protection outdoor cables
- Hybrid ADSS/OPGW designs
Advantages
- Very high swelling volume
- Good coverage and uniformity
- Prevents both radial and longitudinal penetration
2.3 Water-Blocking Gel (Thixotropic Gel)
Mechanism: Physical Isolation
This gel fills empty spaces inside loose tubes or central buffer tubes.
How it blocks water:
- Gel fills 100% of the internal tube space.
- Water cannot pass through because the gel is hydrophobic.
- Even if the tube is punctured, water infiltration is localized.
Characteristics
- Thixotropic: flows under stress, stays firm at rest
- Maintains fiber strain-free environment
- Provides cushioning and vibration damping
Applications
- GYTA / GYTS
- Submarine cables (multi-gel designs)
- Power OPGW inner tubes
Advantages
- Excellent isolation
- Long-term stability
- High temperature resilience
2.4 Water-Blocking Grease / Petroleum Jelly
Mechanism: Physical Isolation
This is a thicker hydrophobic gel covering metallic elements and cable cores.
Used in:
- Armored direct-buried cables
- Submarine fiber optic cables
OPGW
- High-moisture, high-pressure environments
- Grease fills all micro-gaps to stop water pathways.
2.5 Super Absorbent Polymer (SAP) Powder
Mechanism: Water Swelling
Used in some low-cost or lightweight designs.
How it works:
- SAP powder is sprinkled in the core during manufacturing.
- Upon water entry, the powder forms swollen gel granules.
- It fills and seals the area.
Limitations
- Easy to lose uniformity
- Used less in high-end cables today
3. Structural Moisture-Blocking Mechanisms
3.1 Loose Tube Structure
Loose tubes isolate fibers from direct water contact.
Protection roles:
- Tube walls slow down water movement
- Combined with gel or yarn, tubes act as enclosed sub-channels
- Even if water penetrates one tube, others remain dry.
3.2 Corrugated Steel Tape Armor (CST)
Mechanism: Physical Barrier
- Provides a strong anti-burial moisture barrier
- Prevents water diffusion through the jacket
- Increases mechanical strength
Used heavily in direct burial cables.
3.3 Aluminum Tape (APL) Moisture Barrier
Mechanism: Hermetic Seal
Aluminum tape blocks both water and vapor molecules.
Used in:
- GYTA
- GYTY53
- Duct cables requiring high-level moisture protection
3.4 Multiple Jackets (Dual / Triple Jackets)
Each layer reduces penetration risk.
Direct-buried and submarine cables often use:
- Inner PE jacket
- Outer HDPE jacket
- UV-resistant layer
3.5 Sealant Rings and Special Closures
For submarine cables:
- Elastomeric seals
- Thermoplastic barriers
- High-pressure-resistant joints
These prevent water from entering at splice points.
4. Moisture Protection in Special Cable Types
4.1 Direct-Buried Optical Cable
Uses the strongest anti-water system:
- Water-blocking yarn
- Water-blocking tape
- Gel-filled loose tubes
- Steel tape armor
- Double jackets
Engineered to survive decades in soil moisture.
4.2 Submarine Optical Cable
Highest protection level:
- Full gel-filling design
- Multiple steel wire armors
- Polypropylene yarn flooding
- Waterproof layers
- Pressure-resistant sheath
Even micro-cracks must not allow water ingress.
4.3 ADSS Cable
Uses dry water-blocking materials to prevent dripping:
- Water-blocking yarn
- Dry water-blocking tape
- Non-gel structure
- UV/heat resistant jacket
4.4 OPGW (Optical Ground Wire)
Moisture control inside metal tubes:
- Stainless steel tube filling compound (gel)
- Helically wrapped steel/aluminum wires block external water
- Sealed stainless-steel welds prevent ingress
5. Summary Table
| Material | Method Mechanism | Best For |
| Water-blocking yarn | Water swelling | Direct-buried / ADSS |
| Water-blocking tape | Swelling + barrier | Direct-buried / submarine |
| Water-blocking gel | Physical isolation | Loose tube/submarine |
| Grease | Heavy isolation | Armored / submarine |
| SAP powder | Swelling | Economical outdoor cables |
| Steel tape armor | Physical barrier | Direct-buried |
| Aluminum tape | Vapor barrier | Duct cables |
| Multiple jackets | Redundant barrier | All outdoor scenarios |
Post time: Nov-20-2025

