WO2008141442A1 - Emetteur et récepteur pour des systèmes de communication optiques - Google Patents
Emetteur et récepteur pour des systèmes de communication optiques Download PDFInfo
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- WO2008141442A1 WO2008141442A1 PCT/CA2008/000953 CA2008000953W WO2008141442A1 WO 2008141442 A1 WO2008141442 A1 WO 2008141442A1 CA 2008000953 W CA2008000953 W CA 2008000953W WO 2008141442 A1 WO2008141442 A1 WO 2008141442A1
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- H—ELECTRICITY
- H04—ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
- H04J—MULTIPLEX COMMUNICATION
- H04J14/00—Optical multiplex systems
- H04J14/005—Optical Code Multiplex
Definitions
- the present relates generally to devices and methods used in optical communication systems. More specifically, it relates to the encoding and decoding of optical signals in multiplexed access optical communication systems.
- WDM Wavelength Division Multiplexing
- OCDMA Optical Code Division Multiplexing Access
- the broadband source is sliced using an optical filtering device, such as a fiber Bragg grating in reflection mode, a thin film or a diffraction grating.
- an optical filtering device such as a fiber Bragg grating in reflection mode, a thin film or a diffraction grating.
- n 1 for Spectrum Sliced WDM (SS-WDM).
- SS-WDM Spectrum Sliced WDM
- the user's data sequence modulates the sliced broadband source and the modulated signal is propagated through the network.
- Coherent OCDMA systems such as the one disclosed by Brackett et al. in U.S. patent no. 4,866,699, suffer from high receiver complexity and high system cost because of the use of mode-locked lasers.
- OCDMA systems using incoherent sources are attractive because they are potentially more cost effective and more spectrally efficient than WDM systems (see J. A. Salehi, "Code division multiple-access techniques in optical fiber networks. I. Fundamental principles", IEEE Transactions on Communications, VoI 37, pp 824-833, Aug. 1989). Two versions of such OCDMA systems are the most promising.
- transceivers for both Spectrum Sliced Wavelength Division Multiplexing (SS-WDM) and incoherent Optical Code Division Multiplexing Access (OCDMA) systems capable of enhancing the quality of the received signal before photo-detection.
- a balanced receiver is used to limit the intra-channel crosstalk as well as the additive amplified spontaneous emission (ASE) noise in the amplified SS- WDM case.
- the combination of an optical amplifier transmitter and a balanced receiver reduces excess intensity noise (also called beat noise and phase induced intensity noise) in the case of both WDM and OCDMA systems with optical incoherent broadband sources and also in the case of OCDMA systems using coherent sources.
- a receiver using balanced detection which is capable of limiting at least one of intra-channel crosstalk, ASE noise and multiple access interference in a SS-WDM system or a OCDMA system using incoherent sources.
- the use of balanced detection increases spectral efficiency and robustness to variation in signal power throughout the communications link.
- a new receiver architecture using balanced detection which is capable of limiting at least one of intra-channel crosstalk, ASE noise and multiple access interference
- the optical amplifier can, for example, be a semiconductor optical amplifier (SOA) or hybrid AIGalnAs-silicon evanescent amplifier.
- SOA semiconductor optical amplifier
- HEOA Hybrid Evanescent Optical Amplifiers
- an optical amplifier is used in a transmitter, before performing external data modulation. When used in combination with the provided balanced receiver, these transmitters afford substantial excess intensity noise suppression without sacrificing spectral efficiency. With the use of balanced detection in combination with an optical amplifier at the transmitter before external modulation, noise suppression is achieved and multiple rate transmissions are supported with greater spectral efficiency and/or increased transmission rate. An increase in the achievable bit rate may also be provided.
- a self re-injected semiconductor optical amplifier SOA
- SOA semiconductor optical amplifier
- the re-injection improves the power efficiency and can be performed using reflective fiber Bragg gratings, or a cascade of a mirror and a band pass filter. When used in combination with the provided balanced receiver, this transmitter affords substantial excess intensity noise suppression.
- a receiver for decoding an optical multiplexed communication signal encoded with a spectral access function associated with an end-user, the receiver comprising: an optical splitter for receiving the optical multiplexed communication signal carrying data addressed to the end-user and splitting the signal in two signal portions to inputs of two optical paths with substantially equivalent losses and substantially equivalent path lengths, a first one of the optical paths having a filter with a spectral response corresponding to the spectral complement function of the spectral access function, and a second one of the optical paths having an all pass filter; and a balanced photodetector connected between outputs of the two optical paths for detecting a difference between the signal portions propagated in the two optical paths to retrieve the data addressed to the end-user.
- a method for decoding an optical multiplexed communication signal encoded with a spectral access function associated with an end-user comprising: receiving the optical multiplexed communication signal to be decoded, the signal carrying data addressed to the end- user; splitting the signal into a first portion and a second portion; filtering the first portion with a spectral complement function of the spectral access code along a first optical path; propagating the second portion in an unfiltered manner along a second optical path, the first optical path and second optical path having substantially equivalent losses and substantially equivalent path lengths; and detecting a difference between the first portion and the second portion propagated in the first and the second optical paths to retrieve the data addressed to the end-user.
- an optical multiplexed communication system comprising: a transmitter having: an encoder for encoding a broadband light with a spectral access function associated with an end-user; and an electro-optical modulator for modulating the encoded light with data addressed to the end-user to provide an optical multiplexed communication signal, the modulating to be performed after the encoding; and a receiver for decoding the optical multiplexed communication signal, and comprising: an optical splitter for splitting the optical multiplexed communication signal in two signal portions to inputs of two optical paths having substantially equivalent losses and substantially equivalent path lengths, a first one of the optical paths having a filter with a spectral response corresponding to a spectral complement function of the access function, and a second one of the optical paths having an all pass filter; and a balanced photodetector connected between outputs of the two optical paths for detecting a difference between the signal portions propagated in the two optical paths to retrieve the data addressed to the end-user.
- OCDMA Multiplexing Access
- the transmitter comprising: an OCDMA encoder for encoding a broadband light with an access code associated with an end- user; and an electro-optical modulator receiving the encoded broadband light for modulating the encoded light with data addressed to the end-user to provide an OCDMA signal; wherein the modulation is performed after the OCDMA encoding.
- a spectral amplitude coded Optical Code Division Multiplexing Access (OCDMA) system comprising: a transmitter having an OCDMA encoder for encoding an OCDMA signal with a spectral access code associated with an end-user, the encoder comprising a multi- wavelength reflective grating used in reflection; and a balanced receiver for decoding the OCDMA signal and having two optical paths with substantially equivalent losses and path lengths, a first one of the optical paths having a filter comprising an equivalent one of the cascade used in transmission to provide a spectral complement function of the spectral access code.
- OCDMA Optical Code Division Multiplexing Access
- an optical multiplexed communication system comprising: a transmitter source for generating an optical multiplexed communication signal encoded with a spectral access function associated with an end-user, the transmitter source having: an optical amplifier modulated with data addressed to the end-user and generating amplified spontaneous emission, and an encoding filter having a spectral response corresponding to the spectral access function, and connected to the optical amplifier so as to filter the amplified spontaneous emission according to the spectral response and re-inject it back in the optical amplifier in order to saturate the optical amplifier and generate the optical multiplexed communication signal encoded with the spectral access function; and a receiver for decoding the optical multiplexed communication signal, and comprising: an optical splitter for splitting the optical multiplexed communication signal in two signal portions to inputs of two optical paths having substantially equivalent losses and substantially equivalent path lengths, a first one of the optical paths having a filter with a spectral response corresponding to a spectral complement
- noise suppression is meant to mean a reduction of the noise to an acceptable level for optical communication practical purposes, i.e. to obtain an acceptable transmission error rate. It is not required that the noise be completely eliminated.
- optical multiplexed communication is an expression meant to include both WDM and OCDMA communication.
- Fig. 1 is a block diagram showing a SS-WDM receiver according to an example embodiment
- Fig. 2 is a block diagram showing an incoherent SAC-OCDMA receiver according to an example embodiment, where Fig. 2A shows the behavior of the receiver when receiving a user encoded signal and Fig. 2B, when receiving B an interference encoded signal;
- Fig. 3 is a block diagram showing a Wavelength Division Multiplexing (WDM) transmitter which can be used in conjunction with the receiver of Fig. 1 and wherein the noise suppression device is a saturated semiconductor optical amplifier;
- WDM Wavelength Division Multiplexing
- Fig. 4 is a block diagram showing a silicon SS-WDM transmitter which can be used in conjunction with the receiver of Fig. 1 and wherein the noise suppression device is a saturated hybrid evanescent optical amplifier;
- Fig. 5 is a block diagram showing an incoherent SAC-OCDMA transmitter which can be used in conjunction with the receiver of Fig. 2;
- Fig. 6 is a block diagram showing a transmitter with a saturated optical amplifier according to another embodiment wherein the optical amplifier is used for both noise suppression and modulation;
- Fig. 7 is a block diagram showing a transmitter incorporating a saturated optical amplifier according to yet another embodiment wherein the optical amplifier is placed after the electro-optical modulation;
- Fig. 8 is a block diagram showing an SS-WDM transmitter which can be used in conjunction with the receiver of Fig. 1 , the transmitter being based on a self re- injection reflective semiconductor optical amplifier;
- Fig. 9 is a graph showing the output power spectral density from the transmitter of Fig. 8A compared to the ASE generated from the optical amplifier without slicing and re-injection;
- Fig. 10 comprises Fig. 10A, Fig. 10B and Fig. 10C which are block diagrams showing other SS-WDM transmitters that can be used in conjunction with the receiver of Fig. 1 and based on a self re-injection of a directly modulated semiconductor optical amplifier, wherein Fig. 10A uses a fiber Bragg grating in reflection as an encoding filter, Fig. 10B uses a filter in transmission in combination with a mirror, and Fig. 10C uses a transmission filter that is integrated between the semiconductor optical amplifier and the reflective element in a reflective semiconductor optical amplifier;
- FIG. 11 is a block diagram showing an example architecture of a SS-WDM Passive Optical Network which uses the transmitter of Fig. 8 at the optical network unit side and the receiver of Fig. 1 at the optical line terminal side;
- Fig. 12 is a block diagram of an experimental setup of a WDM transmission system using the transmitter of Fig. 4 and the receiver of Fig. 1 ;
- Fig. 13 is a graph showing the Q-factor experimental results as a function of the bit rate obtained with the experimental setup of Fig. 12, for five different transmission system configurations;
- Fig. 14 is a graph showing bit error rate (BER) experimental results at 5 Gbps for the transmission system of the experimental setup of Fig. 12, under various loads; and [0039] Fig. 15 is a graph comparing the bit error rate (BER) experimental results of the balanced and the conventional receiver of the experimental setup of Fig. 12, at 10 Gbps.
- BER bit error rate
- the present concerns Optical Amplifier (OA) based transmitters and balanced detection receivers particularly adapted to incoherent Wavelength Division Multiplexing (WDM) and both incoherent and coherent Optical Code Division Multiplexing Access (OCDMA) telecommunication systems.
- WDM Wavelength Division Multiplexing
- OCDMA Optical Code Division Multiplexing Access
- a balanced detection receiver able to suppress interference, either crosstalk interference or multiple access interference, as well as other additive noises in the link. More particularly, in several example embodiments which will be detailed hereinafter, the receiver is used in WDM, Spectral Amplitude Coded OCDMA (SAC-OCDMA), Fast Frequency Hopped (FFH) OCDMA systems and wavelength- time ( ⁇ -t) OCDMA systems.
- SAC-OCDMA Spectral Amplitude Coded OCDMA
- FH Fast Frequency Hopped
- ⁇ -t wavelength- time
- Fig. 1 shows an example balanced WDM receiver 100 for use in the Spectrum Sliced WDM (SS-WDM) systems.
- the receiver 100 is for decoding a SS- WDM signal corresponding to a given end-user.
- the receiver 100 comprises an input optical fiber 10 adapted to be connected to an optical communication network to receive from the network the signal to be decoded.
- the received signal comprises encoded data addressed to a plurality of users, i.e. the data addressed to the plurality of users is multiplexed on the received signal.
- the receiver 100 decodes the received signal to retrieve the signal addressed to the given end-user which it is set to decode.
- the signal addressed to the given end-user is encoded with a specific spectral access function [ ⁇ user ] associated with the end-user.
- the spectral access function is a spectrum-sliced function, i.e. each user is allocated a single wavelength channel.
- the input optical fiber 10 is connected to an input of a 1x2 optical splitter 20, a 50/50 optical fiber coupler in this case.
- the two outputs of the optical splitter 20 are respectively connected to a first and a second optical fiber path 30 and 40.
- the first optical fiber path 30 has a filter 32 which spectral response is the spectral complement function [ ⁇ user ] of the spectral access function of the end-user, i.e. the filter 32 filters out the user's channel wavelength but let through all other channel wavelengths.
- the second optical path 40 has no filtering, herein denoted by the Optical Delay Line 42 (ODL) just to emphasize the fact that the optical lengths of both paths 30, 40 are equal so that all additive noises occurring during the link, as well as crosstalk channels, cancel out during balanced detection.
- ODL typically consists of a piece of optical fiber which length is adjusted so that the lengths of both paths 30, 40 are equal.
- a Variable optical Attenuator 44 (VA) is also typically placed on the second path 40.
- VA Variable optical Attenuator 44
- the ends of the first and second paths 30, 40 are connected to a balanced photodetector 50, respectively on the negative input and the positive input of the balanced photodetector 50.
- the output 60 of the balanced photodetector 50 is an electrical signal representative on of the decoded data addressed to the end- user.
- the signal received from the optical communication network on the input optical fiber 10 is first split into two optical paths 30 and 40 using the 1x2 optical splitter 20.
- the user signal (at ⁇ user ) is blocked, i.e. signal on the wavelength channel associated with the user channel is dropped and all the other channels are let through. This is depicted on Fig. 1 as the spectral complement function [ ⁇ mer ].
- the transmitter and receiver filters may be matched during fabrication.
- the encoding filter of the transmitter is a Fiber Bragg Grating (FBG) used in reflection to slice only the channel wavelength associated with the user.
- the filter 32 is then made of an identical FBG that is used in transmission to provide a notch filter that corresponds to the spectral complement function [ ⁇ user ].
- both paths 30, 40 let the signal through.
- the balanced photodetector 50 detects a power difference between the outputs of the second and the first path 40, 30. Accordingly, the optical power received from the first and the second paths 30, 40 respectively at the negative and positive inputs of the balanced photodetector 50 cancels out for all channels but the user channel.
- the second path 40 lets the signal through, while signal in the user channel is blocked by the filter 32 in the first path 30.
- the balanced photodetector 50 detects a power difference between the outputs of the second and the first path 40, 30 and therefore detects the optical power within the user channel.
- the output 60 of the balanced photodetector 50 is therefore representative of the data addressed to the user.
- the two optical paths 30, 40 should be adjusted to have substantially equal optical losses and optical path lengths.
- the optical loss of the second path 40 is adjusted using the variable optical attenuator 44.
- the optical powers at the first and the second optical paths 30, 40 are equal.
- the output of the balanced photodetector 50 then gives a logical zero.
- the optical power at the output of the second path 40 is higher than that of the first path 30, and the output 60 of the balanced photodetector 50 gives a logical one.
- the optical path lengths of the two paths 30, 40 should be sufficiently equal to allow noise samples to hit the balanced photodetector 50 synchronously, even though they have traveled in different optical paths.
- the optical delay line 42 consists of a simple piece of optical fiber which length is adjusted such that the resulting optical path lengths of the two paths 30, 40 are substantially equal.
- Fig. 2 shows an example receiver 200 for use in a SAC-OCDMA system using incoherent light sources.
- Fig. 2A illustrates the detection of user encoded signal using the receiver 200
- Fig. 2B illustrates the suppression of interference signal, i.e. addressed to other users.
- the receiver 200 of Fig. 2 is in most points similar to the receiver 100 of Fig. 1 and similar components will not be herein repetitively described.
- the difference between the receivers 100 and 200 lies in the filter 232 which in the case of Fig. 2 is adapted to decode SAC-OCDMA encoded signals.
- the spectral response of the filter 232 therefore corresponds to the spectral complement function [ ⁇ user ] of the SAC-OCDMA encoding filter of the transmitter used to encode the user encoded signal.
- the encoded signal coming from the network is split into a first and a second optical path 30, 40 at the receiver 200.
- the first optical path 30 has a filter 232 which spectral response is the spectral complement function of the OCDMA spectral access code function corresponding to the user.
- variable optical attenuator 44 is used to balance the multiple access interference as in prior art SAC balanced detection.
- the attenuation value depends on the cross-correlation of the OCDMA codes.
- the encoder filter and the decoder filter 232 are made of FBG filters which are readily fiber compatible.
- the encoder filter uses a first FBG in reflection while the decoder filter 232 uses a second FBG identical to the first one but used in transmission.
- Other types of filters such as thin films and diffraction gratings may be used as well.
- Fig. 2A illustrates the detection of user encoded signal using the receiver 200.
- the user OCDMA spectra access function i.e. the OCDMA code
- [ ⁇ u se r] [ ⁇ -i, A 2 , A 4 ].
- the filter 232 with the spectral complement function [A user ] [A 3 , A 5 , A 6 , A 1 ] blocks the user encoded signal while the encoded signal is let through the second path 40.
- the balanced photodetector 50 therefore detects a differential optical power that corresponds to the user encoded signal and the detected signal at the output 60 of the balanced photodetector 50 is representative of the data addressed to the user.
- Fig. 2B illustrates the detection of an interference encoded signal using the receiver 200.
- the variable optical attenuator 44 is used to balance the multiple access interference as in prior art SAC balanced detection. The attenuation value is adjusted given the cross-correlation of the OCDMA codes.
- the attenuation is set once as a function of the system parameters, namely, the properties of the OCDMA spreading codes.
- the optical attenuation is set to 2/3 or 1.76 dB such that the optical power received from the first path 30 encounters the optical power received from the second path 40 at the balanced photodetector 50.
- the interference coded signal is therefore suppressed.
- FIG. 3 an example optical WDM transmitter 300, which can be used in conjunction with the receiver 100 described above, is described.
- Spectrum slicing uses a single broadband light source 310 which is split in power onto multiple optical paths 314 using an optical splitter 312.
- the various WDM channels are provided by spectral slice filters 316, which act as encoders.
- One spectral slice filter 316 is provided on each optical path 314, following the optical splitter 312 and each spectral slice filter 312 corresponds to one of the WDM channels.
- SOA Semiconductor Optical Amplifier
- the SOA 318 is used to suppress the intensity noise on each individual channel prior to modulation.
- the SOA 318 is operated in saturation and is placed just after slicing and prior to modulation. This technique suppresses noise fluctuations over several gigahertzes independently of the SOA dynamic response.
- the resultant signal passes through a Polarization Controller 320 before being modulated by an electro-optical modulator 322.
- the modulated signals are then combined using an optical multiplexer 324.
- a key drawback of prior art spectrum sliced systems is the high degree of excess intensity noise, which can dramatically impair system performance.
- the superior signal quality offered by the suppression technique of the transmitter 300 of Fig. 3 would be noticeably degraded if it was used with a conventional receiver (see, for example, McCoy et al., "Noise Suppression of Incoherent Light Using a Gain-Saturated SOA: Implications for Spectrum-Sliced WDM Systems", IEEE J. Lightwave Tech., Vol. 23, No. 8, pp. 2399-2409, Aug. 2005.), since the superior signal quality is degraded by an optical filtering at the receiver. Filtering is unavoidable in conventional receiver.
- the SOA-based transmitter 300 is combined with the balanced receiver 100 of Fig. 1.
- the SOA-based transmitter 300 is combined with the balanced receiver 100 of Fig. 1.
- the data sent by the transmitter 300 corresponds to a logical one.
- the excess intensity noise is significantly suppressed by the SOA 318 at the transmitter 300.
- a clean signal with a logical one power is received on the positive input of the balanced photodetector 50.
- the signal is mostly blocked by the filter 32.
- the filter 32 can be seen as a wide optical filter that accomplishes most of the noise cleaning.
- the differential detection results in a detected logical one level without any significant intensity noise, in contrast to conventional receivers.
- the noise is not major issue since the power level of the signal is low.
- Fig. 4 shows another embodiment of a WDM transmitter 400 which is adapted for full integration on a single silicon photonic chip.
- the transmitter 400 uses a Hybrid Evanescent Optical Amplifiers (HEOA) as the noise suppression device.
- HEOA Hybrid Evanescent Optical Amplifiers
- a broadband light source 410 an incoherent light source, such as a light emission diode (LED) for example, is connected to a wavelength demultiplexing arrayed waveguide grating 412, in this case a silicon-on-insulator arrayed waveguide grating (see P. D. Trinh, S. Yegnanarayanan, F. Coppinger, and B. JaIaIi, "Silicon-on- insulator (SOI) phased-array wavelength multi-demultiplexer with extremely low- polarization sensitivity," IEEE Photon. Technol. Lett., vol. 9, no. 7, pp. 940-942, July 1997 for an example of SOI-AWG).
- SOI-AWG silicon-on-insulator arrayed waveguide grating
- the arrayed waveguide grating 412 splits the broadband light in wavelength onto a plurality of optical paths 414, such that each optical path 414 carries its individual WDM channel.
- a hybrid amplifier 418 such as a hybrid AIGalnAs-silicon amplifier, is placed on each optical path 414, at each of the WDM outputs of the arrayed waveguide grating 412.
- the hybrid amplifier is used to suppress the intensity noise on each individual WDM channel prior to modulation.
- the hybrid amplifiers 418 are operated in saturation and are placed just after slicing and prior to modulation. This technique typically suppresses noise fluctuations over several gigahertzes.
- the excess intensity noise of the main mode propagating into the silica waveguide is coupled to the hybrid amplifier 422 through evanescent wave coupling.
- the saturated amplifier 422 suppresses the noise similarly to the SOA 318 in the transmitter 300 of Fig. 3 and the noise of the mode propagating in the silicon waveguide region is substantially suppressed.
- the output of each hybrid amplifier 418 is then connected to the input of a silicon-based electro- optical modulator 422 modulated by the data to be transmitted using the corresponding WDM channel (see L. Liao, D. Samara-Rubio, M. Morse, A. Liu, D.Hodge, D. Rubin, U. Keil, and T. Frank, "High speed silicon Mach-Zehnder modulator, " Opt. Express, vol. 13, no. 8, pp.3129-3135, Apr. 2005 for an example of a modulator).
- the end of the optical paths 414 are then connected to a multiplexer 424, e.g. a passive silicon coupler, which combines all the WDM channels back in a single optical fiber 426 for transmission over the network.
- a multiplexer 424 e.g. a passive silicon coupler, which combines all the WDM channels back in a single optical fiber 426 for transmission over the network.
- Fig. 5 shows an example of a transmitter 500 to be used in a SAC-OCDMA system along with the receiver 200 of Fig. 2.
- the transmitter 500 is in most points similar to the transmitter 300 of Fig. 3 and similar components will not be herein repetitively described.
- the spectral slice filters 316 of the transmitter 300 of Fig. 3 are replaced by SAC-OCDMA encoding filters 516.
- Each encoding filter 516 has a spectral response corresponding to the spectral access function of its associated user.
- Fig. 5 shows an example of a transmitter 500 to be used in a SAC-OCDMA system along with the receiver 200 of Fig. 2.
- the transmitter 500 is in most points similar to the transmitter 300 of Fig. 3 and similar components will not be herein repetitively described.
- the spectral slice filters 316 of the transmitter 300 of Fig. 3 are replaced by SAC-OCDMA encoding filters 516.
- Each encoding filter 516 has a spectral response corresponding to the
- both the encoding filter 516 and the saturated optical amplifier 318 which can be a SOA, a HEOA or another optical amplifier in this case, are placed before the modulator 322, which provides substantial noise cleaning.
- the encoding filter 516 consists of a multi-wavelength reflective grating 532, a series of cascaded FBGs in this case, connected to port 2 of a three-port optical circulator 534 in order to use the multi-wavelength reflective grating 532 in reflection.
- the receiver 200 used in combination with the transmitter SOA uses a filter 32 that has a spectral response which corresponds to the spectral complement function of the encoding filter 516.
- Fig. 6 shows another embodiment of a transmitter 600 to be used in a SAC- OCDMA system along with the receiver 200 of Fig. 2.
- the transmitter 600 is in most points similar to the transmitter 500 of Fig. 5 and similar components will not be herein repetitively described. The difference between the transmitter 600 of Fig.
- the modulator is integrated in the saturated optical amplifier 618 which is used for both noise suppression and modulation. Accordingly, no separate modulator is used and the polarization controller 320 is placed before the modulator/amplifier 618.
- This configuration however limits the maximal achievable bit rate to that of the modulation bandwidth of the modulator/amplifier 618 (around 10 GHz for SOAs). Nevertheless, the use of an integrated modulator/amplifier 618 in combination with an OCDMA or WDM receiver as described above, provides good robustness against intensity noise, interference and other additive noise sources.
- Fig. 7 shows yet another embodiment of a transmitter 700 to be used in a SAC-OCDMA system along with the receiver 200 of Fig. 2.
- the transmitter 700 is also in most points similar to the transmitter 500 of Fig. 5 and similar components are not herein repetitively described.
- the difference between the transmitter 700 of Fig. 7 and the transmitter 500 of Fig. 5 is that, in the transmitter 700, a single saturated optical amplifier 718 is used after the optical multiplexer 324, the optical amplifiers 318 being removed from the individual optical paths 314.
- This configuration allows the sharing the optical amplifier 718 among several users instead of an individual optical amplifier 618 for each user.
- the common optical amplifier 318 is used as both a booster and a noise cleaner for all the OCDMA channels.
- the combination of the transmitter 700 with the receiver 200 is less efficient for excess intensity noise suppression.
- the amplified spontaneous emission generated by the optical amplifier 318 is modulated through cross-gain modulation and detected at the receiver 200, reducing the noise reduction performance.
- the transient response of the optical amplifier gain can produce patterning effects that give rise to eye pattern distortion.
- Fig. 8 shows a SS-WDM transmitter 800 based on a self re-injected Reflective Semiconductor Optical Amplifier (RSOA), and which may be used with the receiver 100 of Fig. 1 in a SS-WDM optical communication system.
- the transmitter 800 uses a RSOA 810 as the light source that is directly modulated.
- the input current of the RSOA 810 is modulated with the data to be transmitted at a low extinction ratio and at high current levels. This modulation is transferred to modulated Amplified Spontaneous Emission (ASE).
- ASE modulated Amplified Spontaneous Emission
- the output of the RSOA 810 is connected to port '2' of a three-port optical circulator 820.
- the output of port '3' of the circulator 820 is connected to an optical splitter 830, a 50/50 fiber coupler in this case, which splits the modulated ASE between the transmitter output 832 and a re-injection loop 834.
- the modulated ASE is filtered using a band pass slice filter 840 of which the output is connected to port '1 ' of the optical circulator 820 for re-injection to the RSOA 810 through port '2' of the optical circulator 820.
- the ASE re-injected to the RSOA 810 has sufficient power for the RSOA to operate in saturation.
- Re-injecting the RSOA 810 with a specific wavelength favors its output/gain at that wavelength, therefore the ASE is lowered and the desired channel is amplified, effectively siphoning off power from the ASE to the desired channel. While such a configuration gives greater power efficiency and allows data to directly modulate the source, it also provides noise cleaning provided the RSOA 810 is appropriately saturated. The noise cleaning can be retained in a SS-WDM system when the receiver 100 of Fig. 1 is used. Since the light source is being directly modulated, such a transmitter is well adapter for use on the client side of the network.
- Fig. 8 may also be used in a SAC-OCDMA transmitter by replacing the band pass slice filter 840 by a multi-wavelength SAC- OCDMA filter integrating a SAC-OCDMA spectral access function.
- This provides a SAC-OCDMA transmitter based on a self re-injected RSOA.
- a wavelength-time OCDMA transmitter may also be provided using a wavelength-time OCDMA filter.
- Fig. 9 shows an experimental result of the transmitter in Fig. 8A when modulated at 1.25 Gbps with 3.5 dB of extinction ratio and for a 50 GHz slice at 1550 nm.
- the amplified spontaneous emission (ASE) generated from the RSOA without slicing is shown in dashed line.
- the ASE spectrum corresponds to the output port '3' of the circulator 820 when the coupler 830 is disconnected.
- the output spectrum of the transmitter in Fig. 8A is shown in solid line.
- the RSOA 810 is a CIP SOA-R-OEC-1550 manufactured by CIP TechnologiesTM, Ipswich, United Kingdom.
- a 30 dB of noise suppression is achieved when the current the RSOA 810 is directly modulated at 1.25 Gb/s.
- An experimental validation of the noise cleaning potential of the transmitter 800 is provided by comparing its performance with a prior art configuration where the incoherent output ASE of an RSOA is simply sliced, without self re-injection. The output power of the transmitter 800 is 1 dBm compared to -21 dBm for the prior art configuration. While it is impossible to achieve any reliable communications with the sliced version (the eye is closed), good performance is achieved with the transmitter 800 of Fig. 8.
- Fig. 9 also includes the eye diagram measured at -12 dBm for a bit error rate below 10 '10 . It shows that noise cleaning is indeed effective.
- Fig. 10 shows other SS-WDM transmitters, which are based on the self re- injection of a SOA.
- the transmitter uses a SOA 1010 that is directly modulated.
- One end of the SOA 1010 constitutes its output 1012 while a FBG 1040 is connected at its other end.
- the spectral response of the FBG 1040 in reflection corresponds to the spectral access function.
- the ASE produced in the SOA 1010 is sliced by the FBG 1040 at the wavelength corresponding to the user channel and is reflected back in the SOA 1010. The resultant is similar to the transmitter 800 of Fig.
- the transmitter 1000 is more compact and eliminates the additional insertion loss introduced by the re-injection loop.
- This configuration may also be used in an OCDMA transmitter using a FBG 1040 with an OCDMA spectral access function, i.e. a cascade of FBGs for example.
- Fig. 1OB the FBG 1040 is replaced by a a bandpass filter 1050 used in transmission and a mirror 1060, the bandpass filter 1050 being optically located between the mirror 1060 and the SOA 1010.
- the bandpass filter 1050 may be made using thin film technology for example.
- Fig. 1OC shows another possible integration where a bandpass thin film filter 1090 and a mirror 1080 are integrated together with the SOA 1070 on the same substrate, i.e. a single silicon photonic chip. This is equivalent to the insertion of a thin film filter 1090 between the SOA and the mirror in an otherwise standard RSOA.
- the configurations of Figs. 1OB and 1OC may also be used in an OCDMA transmitter using OCDMA encoding filters in the filter 1050 or the filter 1090.
- Fig. 11 shows an example architecture of a SS-WDM Passive Optical Network (PON) which use the self-reinjected RSOA transmitter 800 of Fig. 8A at the Optical Network Unit (ONU) side and the balanced receiver 100 at the Optical Line Terminal (OLT) side.
- the architecture also includes an OLT transmitter 1110 on the OLT side and an ONU receiver 1120 on the ONU side, for bi-directional communication.
- the balanced receiver 100 is made tunable in this case to accommodate various channel wavelengths. Because filtering a noise-cleaned incoherent SS-WDM signal degrades its performance, the remote node in Fig. 11 consists of passive couplers as standard time-division multiplexed (TDM) PONs.
- TDM time-division multiplexed
- the system of Fig. 11 is compatible with current deployments of single wavelength passive optical networks. There is no need to replace the existing couplers with array- waveguide gratings (AWGs) as for existing WDM and SS-WDM PONs.
- the OLT receiver 100 should include a multiple and/or tunable version of the balanced receiver 100 of Fig. 1 to exploit the effect of noise cleaning. It is noted that the OLT transmitter 1110 and the ONU receiver 1120 may use any of the suitable configurations described herein.
- the media access control (MAC) protocol used for time division multiplexing PONs to control the uplink transmission of the different ONUs can be used to tune the filter 32 in the SS-WDM balanced receiver.
- MAC media access control
- Fig. 12 illustrates an experimental setup of a system architecture using the transmitter 400 of Fig. 4 and the receiver 100 of Fig. 1.
- a broadband source 410 is sliced into eight channels using an arrayed waveguide gratings 412 with a 30-GHz channel bandwidth and a 100-GHz channel spacing in this case.
- the power at the input of each noise cleaning device 418 is -8.3 dBm.
- the noise cleaning devices 418 are fast gain recovery SOAs such as the ones described in W. Mathlouthi, P. Lemieux, L. A. Rusch, Optimal SOA-based noise reduction schemes for incoherent spectrum-sliced PONs", IEEE 2006 European Conference on Optical Communication, 1993, Sept. 2006.
- cascading two SOAs is equivalent to one faster SOA.
- Two SOAs are thus cascaded for the user channel.
- a variable attenuator between the two cascaded SOAs sets the input power of the second SOA also at -8.3 dBm, providing a cascade representing a faster SOA, but with unchanged saturation characteristics.
- the user channel ( ⁇ use r) and adjacent interferer channels (A 1 , A 3 ) are individually modulated with a Non-Retum-to-Zero (NRZ) PseudoRandom Binary Sequence (PRBS) at several bit rates up to 10 Gbps.
- NRZ Non-Retum-to-Zero
- PRBS PseudoRandom Binary Sequence
- a 4 , A 5 , A 6 , A 7 are added. Powers are adjusted so that the average power per channel is the same for all users.
- the signal coming from the network is first split into two paths 30, 40.
- the first path 30 of the balanced receiver 100 blocks the desired user signal, i.e., the desired user channel is dropped and all other channels pass through.
- the receiver filter 32 is a sine apodized (first lobe) uniform (over 15 mm) Fiber Bragg Grating (FBG) fabricated with techniques known in the art.
- the 3-dB bandwidth of the filter 32 is 0.75 nm, and transmission depth is 45 dB.
- a conventional receiver 1200 is also used alternately with the receiver 100 to provide a reference to which the performance of the balanced receiver 100 is to be compared.
- the filter 1232 of the conventional receiver 1200 is the same as the filter 32 but used in reflection instead of transmission.
- Fig. 13 shows the Q-factor experimental results as a function of the bit rate for five different transmission system configurations, namely 1) with a single user with no receiver filtering (the '*'-solid curve), 2) the balanced receiver 100 (the ' ⁇ '-solid curve), 3) the balanced receiver 100 but with a single SOA as the noise cleaner (the ' ⁇ '-solid curve), 4) the conventional SS-WDM receiver 1200 (the V-dashed curve) and 5) no noise cleaning (the O'-solid curve). It is noted that the single user curve degrades to the conventional SS-WDM receiver curve if filtering at the receiver is used to isolate one SS-WDM channel.
- the balanced receiver 100 outperforms the conventional receiver 1200, bridging part of the gap in performance between the conventional receiver 1200 and the single user configuration which has no filtering whatsoever at the receiver.
- the curve showing the results obtained with the balanced receiver 100 used with a single SOA is also included to confirm that the faster SOA cascade yields better performance.
- Fig. 14 shows the Bit Error Rate (BER) experimental results at 5 Gbps for the setup of Fig. 12 under various loads, namely 1) with a single user, i.e. no interferers (the ' ⁇ ' curves); 2) with two interferers, i.e. the adjacent channels (the '•' curves); and 3) with six interferers (the 'A' curves).
- the solid curves denote the use of the balanced receiver 100 while the dashed curves denote the use of the conventional receiver 1200.
- the balanced receiver shows an error free performance, while the conventional receiver shows bit error rate floors at 10 "9 . Neither the balanced receiver performance nor the conventional receiver performance is significantly degraded by crosstalk from interferers.
- Fig. 15 compares the performance of both balanced and conventional receivers at 10 Gbps, an important future milestone for access networks and passive optical networks.
- the balanced receiver 100 results (the ' ⁇ '-solid curve) are two orders of magnitude better than for the conventional receiver (the V-dashed curve). Results obtained with a single user and no receive filtering are also included on the graph (the ' ⁇ '-solid curve).
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Abstract
Des émetteurs-récepteurs améliorés sont fournis à la fois pour des systèmes de multiplexage par répartition en longueur d'onde divisé de spectre (SS-WDM) et d'accès de multiplexage par répartition en code optique incohérent (OCDMA), et pouvant améliorer la qualité du signal reçu avant la photodétection. Une conception de récepteur équilibré annule la diaphonie intra-canal ainsi que le bruit d'émission spontanée amplifiée supplémentaire (ASE) dans le cas du SS-WDM amplifié. La combinaison de l'émetteur de l'amplificateur optique et du récepteur équilibré réduit le bruit d'intensité excessif (également appelé bruit de battement et bruit d'intensité induit de phase) dans le cas des deux systèmes WDM et OCDMA avec des sources optiques à large bande incohérentes et également dans le cas des systèmes OCDMA utilisant des sources cohérentes.
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| US93854007P | 2007-05-17 | 2007-05-17 | |
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Cited By (3)
| Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
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| CN101848403A (zh) * | 2010-04-23 | 2010-09-29 | 中兴通讯股份有限公司 | 基于光码分多址复用的无源光网络系统及光线路终端 |
| CN103001695A (zh) * | 2012-12-27 | 2013-03-27 | 北京邮电大学 | 一种光网络性能监测装置及监测方法 |
| CN106841117A (zh) * | 2017-01-05 | 2017-06-13 | 上海理工大学 | 基于差分检测方法和游程编码的超快成像方法 |
-
2008
- 2008-05-16 WO PCT/CA2008/000953 patent/WO2008141442A1/fr not_active Ceased
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| AYOTTE ET AL.: "Experimental Verification and Capacity Prediction of FE-OCDMA Using Superimposed FBG", JOURNAL OF LIGHTWAVE TECHNOLOGY, vol. 23, no. 2, February 2005 (2005-02-01), pages 724 - 731, XP011127623 * |
| FATHALLAH ET AL.: "Network Management Solution for PS/PON, WDM/PON and Hybrid PS/WDM/PON using DS-OCDM", CONFERENCE ON OPTICAL FIBER COMMUNICATION AND THE NATIONAL FIBER OPTIC ENGINEERS CONFERENCE, 2007. OFC/NFOEC 2007, 25 March 2007 (2007-03-25) - 29 March 2007 (2007-03-29), pages 1 - 3, XP031146621 * |
| MCCOY ET AL.: "Feasibility Study of SOA-Based Noise Suppression for Spectral Amplitude Coded OCDMA", JOURNAL OF LIGHTWAVE TECHNOLOGY, vol. 25, no. 1, January 2007 (2007-01-01), pages 394 - 401, XP011175482 * |
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Cited By (5)
| Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| CN101848403A (zh) * | 2010-04-23 | 2010-09-29 | 中兴通讯股份有限公司 | 基于光码分多址复用的无源光网络系统及光线路终端 |
| WO2011130982A1 (fr) * | 2010-04-23 | 2011-10-27 | 中兴通讯股份有限公司 | Système de réseau optique passif s'appuyant sur un accès multiple par répartition en code optique et terminal de ligne optique associé |
| CN103001695A (zh) * | 2012-12-27 | 2013-03-27 | 北京邮电大学 | 一种光网络性能监测装置及监测方法 |
| CN106841117A (zh) * | 2017-01-05 | 2017-06-13 | 上海理工大学 | 基于差分检测方法和游程编码的超快成像方法 |
| CN106841117B (zh) * | 2017-01-05 | 2019-04-19 | 上海理工大学 | 基于差分检测方法和游程编码的超快成像方法 |
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