The present disclosure relates to optical communication equipment and, more specifically but not exclusively, to a coherent optical receiver that can be used in medium- and/or short-reach links.
This section introduces aspects that may help facilitate a better understanding of the disclosure. Accordingly, the statements of this section are to be read in this light and are not to be understood as admissions about what is in the prior art or what is not in the prior art.
Optical receivers are often used in short- and medium-reach communication systems. Such receivers are represented by a very diverse group of devices, e.g., ranging from those directed to low-cost and/or high-volume applications to those providing extreme performance characteristics for niche and/or low-volume products. Different technical solutions and/or enabling technologies can be used to meet the specific requirements of each particular application. Such requirements may include one or more of: component density, power consumption, device cost, reach distance, performance benchmarks, etc. Several application-specific factors typically need to be considered before a suitable optical receiver can be designed and constructed for the intended application.
Disclosed herein are various embodiments of a coherent optical receiver having an analog electrical circuit connected to combine the outputs of multiple photodetectors to generate an electrical output signal from which the data encoded in the received modulated optical signal can be recovered in a robust and straightforward manner. In an example embodiment, the analog electrical circuit includes one or more transimpedance amplifiers connected between the photodetectors and the receiver's output port. The coherent optical receiver may include a dual-polarization optical hybrid coupled to eight photodiodes to enable polarization-insensitive detection of the received modulated optical signal. The analog signal processing implemented in the analog electrical circuit advantageously enables the use of relatively inexpensive local-oscillator sources that may have relaxed specifications with respect to linewidth and wavelength stability while still being able to provide the significant benefits of coherent detection. Different embodiments of the analog electrical circuit can be used to enable the receiver to receive amplitude- and/or intensity-encoded modulated optical signals.
According to an example embodiment, provided is a apparatus comprising: an optical hybrid configured to generate a plurality of different optical interference signals by optically mixing an optical input signal and an optical local-oscillator signal; a plurality of photodetectors, each configured to generate a respective electrical signal in response to receiving a respective subset of the different optical interference signals from the optical hybrid; an analog electrical circuit connected to the plurality of photodetectors to generate an electrical output signal at an output port thereof in response to at least four of the respective electrical signals; and wherein the analog electrical circuit comprises a first transimpedance amplifier connected between the plurality of photodetectors and the output port.
According to another example embodiment, provided is a manufacturing method comprising the steps of: configuring an optical hybrid to generate a plurality of different optical interference signals by optically mixing an optical input signal and an optical local-oscillator signal; connecting a plurality of photodetectors to cause each of the photodetectors to generate a respective electrical signal in response to receiving a respective subset of the different optical interference signals from the optical hybrid; and connecting an analog electrical circuit to the plurality of photodetectors to cause the analog electrical circuit to generate an electrical output signal at an output port thereof in response to at least four of the respective electrical signals, said connecting including connecting a transimpedance amplifier between the plurality of photodetectors and the output port.
According to yet another example embodiment, provided is a communication method comprising the steps of: applying an optical input signal to an optical hybrid to generate a plurality of different optical interference signals by optically mixing therein said optical input signal and an optical local-oscillator signal; operating a plurality of photodetectors to cause each of the photodetectors to generate a respective electrical signal in response to receiving a respective subset of the different optical interference signals from the optical hybrid; and generating an electrical output signal using an analog electrical circuit connected to the plurality of photodetectors, the electrical output signal being generated at an output port of the analog electrical circuit in response to at least four of the respective electrical signals, said generating including using a transimpedance amplifier connected between the plurality of photodetectors and the output port.
Other aspects, features, and benefits of various disclosed embodiments will become more fully apparent, by way of example, from the following detailed description and the accompanying drawings, in which:
Optical links for access and datacenter-interconnect applications are typically limited by optical loss, which can be addressed as a receiver-sensitivity problem. Optical amplifiers may not be suitable for these applications due to relatively high cost and/or complexity of the resulting systems. As an alternative to optical amplifiers, coherent detection using a local oscillator (laser) can be used to provide coherent gain. The coherent gain can increase the receiver sensitivity, thereby enabling the use of longer optical links and/or supporting more users, e.g., in a passive-optical-network (PON) configuration.
Various embodiments disclosed herein are directed at providing a robust method and apparatus suitable for coherently detecting a modulated optical signal, e.g., received through a loss-limited medium/short-reach optical link. Some embodiments can be used to implement an optical receiver that can operate without the use of digital signal processing. Some embodiments can be used to reduce the cost of the optical receiver, e.g., by using, as a local oscillator, a laser whose output has a relatively large linewidth.
Some of the disclosed embodiments can provide one or more of the following benefits and/or advantages:
In an example embodiment, optical input signal 102 is not polarization-division multiplexed. As a result, in each time slot, optical input signal 102 applies a single optical symbol to receiver 100. Depending on the type of modulation used at the remote transmitter, the optical symbol may encode one bit (e.g., using on/off keying, OOK) or multiple bits (e.g., using pulse amplitude modulation, PAM). In the latter case, the bit-word value carried by the optical symbol may be encoded in the amplitude thereof or in the intensity (e.g., squared amplitude) thereof. Embodiments of analog electrical circuit 150 that can be used for processing the amplitude-encoded optical signals are described in reference to
O/E converter 120 is configured to generate electrical signals 1421-1428 using an optical local-oscillator (LO) signal 112 supplied by a laser 110. In some embodiments, laser 110 can be tunable and, as such, capable of changing the carrier wavelength of LO signal 112, e.g., to enable detection of any selected channel of a wavelength-division-multiplexed (WDM) channel set.
In an example embodiment, O/E converter 120 comprises polarization beam splitters (PBSs) 122a and 122b configured to decompose optical signals 102 and 112, respectively, into two respective orthogonally polarized components, illustratively vertically polarized components 102v and 112v and horizontally polarized components 102h and 112h. Polarization components 102v, 112v, 102h, and 112h are applied to an optical hybrid 126. The internal structure of optical hybrid 126 shown in
As shown, optical hybrid 126 is configured to split each of polarization components 102v, 112v, 102h, and 112h into two respective (attenuated) copies, e.g., using a conventional 3-dB power splitter (not explicitly shown in
As used herein, the term “optical hybrid” refers to an optical mixer designed to mix a first optical input signal having a carrier frequency and a second optical input signal having approximately the same (e.g., to within ±10 GHz) carrier frequency to generate a plurality of mixed optical signals corresponding to different relative phase shifts between the two optical input signals. An optical 90-degree hybrid is a particular type of an optical hybrid that is designed to produce at least four mixed optical signals corresponding to the relative phase shifts between the two optical input signals of approximately 0, 90, 180, and 270 degrees, respectively (e.g., to within an acceptable tolerance). Depending on the intended application, the acceptable relative phase-shift tolerances can be, e.g., to within ±5 degrees or ±10 degrees, etc. A person of ordinary skill in the art will understand that each of the relative phase shifts is defined without accounting for a possible additional phase shift that is an integer multiple of 360 degrees. A dual-polarization optical hybrid, such as optical hybrid 126, operates to perform the above-indicated optical signal mixing on a per-polarization basis.
Example optical hybrids that can be used as optical hybrid 126 in some alternative embodiments of O/E converter 120 are disclosed, e.g., in U.S. Pat. Nos. 7,809,284 and 8,275,224, both of which are incorporated herein by reference in their entirety.
The signal processing implemented in analog electrical circuit 150 advantageously enables the use of relatively inexpensive LO sources 110 that may have relaxed specifications with respect to linewidth and wavelength stability when used for detecting amplitude/intensity-modulated signals. For example, in a representative embodiment of receiver 100, it may be acceptable for LO signal 112 to have a relatively large linewidth and/or be not precisely spectrally aligned with optical input signal 102. In conventional systems, the relatively large linewidth typically causes an unacceptable level of phase noise, and the carrier-wavelength mismatch between the input and LO signals typically requires the use of elaborate carrier-offset compensation schemes. In contrast, computer simulations of some embodiments of receiver 100 indicate that electrical output signal 152 has a good-quality (e.g., widely open) eye diagram even when the carrier frequency of LO signal 112 deviates from the carrier frequency of optical input signal 102 by as much as ±150% of the baud rate of the latter signal.
Circuit 150 of
In some embodiments, TIAs 2101-2104 can be variable gain amplifiers, as indicated in
In some embodiments, TIAs 2101-2104 can be designed and configured for burst-mode operation.
As used herein, the term “burst mode” refers to an operating mode in which relatively short time periods during which the optical receiver (e.g., receiver 100,
TIAs that can be used to implement TIAs 2101-2104 configured for burst-mode operation are disclosed, e.g., in U.S. Pat. Nos. 7,583,904 and 9,673,797 and International Patent Application No. WO 2011/109770, all of which are incorporated herein by reference in their entirety.
Circuit 150 of
Analog signal-processing circuit 226 is configured to convert electrical signals 2221-2224 into electrical output signal 152 in accordance with the following approximate formula:
V
out
∝|X
I|2+|XQ|2+|YI|2+|YQ|2 (1)
where Vout is the voltage of electrical output signal 152; and XI, XQ, YI, and YQ denote the instantaneous amplitudes of electrical signals 2221-2224, respectively. A person of ordinary skill in the art will understand that the value of Vout expressed by Eq. (1) provides a measure of the intensity (optical power) of optical input signal 102. As such, the embodiment of circuit 150 shown in
In an example embodiment, analog signal-processing circuit 226 comprises squaring circuits 2301-2304 and adders 2401-2403 connected as indicated in
Each of squaring circuits 2301-2304 operates to generate a respective electrical output signal whose amplitude is proportional to the square of the amplitude of the respective one of electrical signals 2221-2224. In an example embodiment, a squaring circuit 230 can be implemented using an analog multiplier whose two inputs are connected to one another and further connected to receive the corresponding electrical signal 222.
Each of adders 2401-2403 operates to generate a respective electrical output signal that is a sum of the two respective input signals. In an example embodiment, an adder 240 can be implemented using an operational amplifier, e.g., configured as known in the pertinent art.
One difference between the embodiments of circuit 150 shown in
V
out∝√{square root over (|XI|2+|XQ|2)}+√{square root over (|YI|2+|YQ|2)} (2)
A person of ordinary skill in the art will understand that the value of Vout expressed by Eq. (2) can be used as an approximate measure of the electric-field strength (amplitude) of optical input signal 102. As such, the embodiment of analog signal combiner 150 shown in
In an example embodiment, a square-root generator 310 can be implemented using an operational amplifier and an analog signal multiplier, with the latter being appropriately connected in the feedback loop of the operational amplifier.
Circuit 150 of
V
out
∝|X
I
+Y
I|2+|XQ+YQ|2 (3)
A person of ordinary skill in the art will understand that the value of Vout expressed by Eq. (3) provides a measure of the intensity (optical power) of optical input signal 102. As such, the embodiment of circuit 150 shown in
In an example embodiment, analog signal-processing circuit 426 comprises squaring circuits 2301 and 2302 and adders 2401-2403 connected as indicated in
V
out∝√{square root over (|XI+YI|2+|XQ+YQ|2)} (4)
A person of ordinary skill in the art will understand that the value of Vout expressed by Eq. (4) can be used as an approximate measure of the electric-field strength (amplitude) of optical input signal 102. As such, the embodiment of circuit 150 shown in
Circuit 600 comprises an array of photodiodes 6401-6408 arranged in pairs, as shown in
Circuit 600 further comprises an analog signal-processing circuit 626 and a TIA 610. In different embodiments, analog signal-processing circuit 626 can be a nominal copy of one of the above-described analog signal-processing circuits 226, 326, 426, and 526 (see
For some applications, the use of circuit 600 instead of the circuits described in reference to
Circuit 700 comprises a threshold slicer 710 and a clock-recovery circuit 720. Clock-recovery circuit 720 is configured to generate a clock signal 722 that is synchronous with the internal clock of optical input signal 102 by processing a copy of electrical output signal 152, e.g., as known in the pertinent art. Clock signal 722 is applied to slicer 710 to cause the slicer to sample electrical output signal 152 at appropriate times. Slicer 710 is configured to compare each of the signal samples obtained in this manner with a set of thresholds. Based on the comparison, slicer 710 generates a binary value (e.g., a bitword) representing the signal sample. The sequence of these binary values is data stream 730.
The use of digital signal processing provided by circuit 800 may be beneficial in some embodiments, e.g., due to the concomitant ability to apply digital equalization and/or forward-error correction. In addition, circuit 800 can be used to decode both intensity- and amplitude-encoded signals, e.g., because the square-root (SQRT) function can be performed in the digital domain instead of being performed in the analog domain as depicted in
System 900 leverages the wavelength selectivity of receivers 1001-100N by employing a 1:N optical power splitter 910 instead of a normally required wavelength demultiplexer. In operation, splitter 910 splits a WDM signal 902 into N attenuated copies thereof and directs each copy to a respective one of receivers 1001-100N. Receiver 1001, which is tuned to wavelength λ1, detects the λ1 component of the received copy of signal 902, while rejecting all other wavelength components of that signal. The resulting electrical output signal 1521 is applied to a data-recovery circuit 9201, which processes that signal to recover the data encoded in the λ1 component of signal 902 to generate a corresponding output data stream 9041. Receiver 1002, which is tuned to wavelength λ2, detects the λ2 component of the received copy of signal 902, while rejecting all other wavelength components of that signal. The resulting electrical output signal 1522 is applied to a data-recovery circuit 9202, which processes that signal to recover the data encoded in the λ2 component of signal 902 to generate a corresponding output data stream 9042, and so on. Receiver 100N, which is tuned to wavelength λN, detects the λN component of the received copy of signal 902, while rejecting all other wavelength components of that signal. The resulting electrical output signal 152N is applied to a data-recovery circuit 920N, which processes that signal to recover the data encoded in the λN component of signal 902 to generate a corresponding output data stream 904N.
In various embodiments, each of data-recovery circuits 9201-920N can be implemented using a nominal copy of data-recovery circuit 700 (
According to an example embodiment disclosed above in reference to
In some embodiments of the above apparatus, the apparatus further comprises a data-recovery circuit (e.g., 920,
In some embodiments of any of the above apparatus, the data-recovery circuit comprises: a clock-recovery circuit (e.g., 720,
In some embodiments of any of the above apparatus, the data-recovery circuit comprises: an analog-to-digital converter (e.g., 810,
In some embodiments of any of the above apparatus, the analog electrical circuit further comprises three additional transimpedance amplifiers (e.g., 2102-2104,
In some embodiments of any of the above apparatus, the analog electrical circuit further comprises four tunable phase shifters (e.g., 2201-2204,
In some embodiments of any of the above apparatus, the first transimpedance amplifier comprises: a positive input connected to a first photodetector (e.g., 1401,
In some embodiments of any of the above apparatus, the analog electrical circuit is configured to generate the electrical output signal at the output port thereof in response to eight of the respective electrical signals (e.g., 1421-1428,
In some embodiments of any of the above apparatus, the plurality of photodetectors comprises eight photodiodes (e.g., 1401-1408,
In some embodiments of any of the above apparatus, the first transimpedance amplifier (e.g., 610,
In some embodiments of any of the above apparatus, the optical hybrid is configured to generate first, second, third, and fourth optical interference signals of the plurality of different optical interference signals using different respective combinations of light of a first polarization (e.g., v,
In some embodiments of any of the above apparatus, the optical hybrid is configured to generate fifth, sixth, seventh, and eighth optical interference signals of the plurality of different optical interference signals using different respective combinations of light of a second polarization (e.g., h,
In some embodiments of any of the above apparatus, each of the different respective combinations of the light are mixtures of the light of the first polarization of the optical input signal and the optical local-oscillator signal with relative phases of 0±5 degrees, 90±5 degrees, 180±5 degrees, and 270±5 degrees, respectively.
In some embodiments of any of the above apparatus, the apparatus further comprises a laser (e.g., 110,
In some embodiments of any of the above apparatus, the laser is capable of controllably changing a carrier wavelength of the optical local-oscillator signal.
In some embodiments of any of the above apparatus, the analog electrical circuit is configured to generate the electrical output signal in a manner (e.g., according to Eq. (1)) that causes the electrical output signal to be proportional to an optical power of the optical input signal.
In some embodiments of any of the above apparatus, the analog electrical circuit comprises: a squaring circuit (e.g., 2301-2304,
In some embodiments of any of the above apparatus, the analog electrical circuit comprises: a squaring circuit (e.g., 2301-2304,
In some embodiments of any of the above apparatus, the analog electrical circuit comprises: a first adding circuit (e.g., 2401-2402,
In some embodiments of any of the above apparatus, the analog electrical circuit comprises: a first adding circuit (e.g., 2401-2402,
According to another example embodiment disclosed above in reference to
According to yet another example embodiment disclosed above in reference to
While this disclosure includes references to illustrative embodiments, this specification is not intended to be construed in a limiting sense. Various modifications of the described embodiments, as well as other embodiments within the scope of the disclosure, which are apparent to persons skilled in the art to which the disclosure pertains are deemed to lie within the principle and scope of the disclosure, e.g., as expressed in the following claims.
Unless explicitly stated otherwise, each numerical value and range should be interpreted as being approximate as if the word “about” or “approximately” preceded the value or range.
It will be further understood that various changes in the details, materials, and arrangements of the parts which have been described and illustrated in order to explain the nature of this disclosure may be made by those skilled in the art without departing from the scope of the disclosure, e.g., as expressed in the following claims.
Reference herein to “one embodiment” or “an embodiment” means that a particular feature, structure, or characteristic described in connection with the embodiment can be included in at least one embodiment of the disclosure. The appearances of the phrase “in one embodiment” in various places in the specification are not necessarily all referring to the same embodiment, nor are separate or alternative embodiments necessarily mutually exclusive of other embodiments. The same applies to the term “implementation.”
Also for purposes of this description, the terms “couple,” “coupling,” “coupled,” “connect,” “connecting,” or “connected” refer to any manner known in the art or later developed in which energy is allowed to be transferred between two or more elements, and the interposition of one or more additional elements is contemplated, although not required. Conversely, the terms “directly coupled,” “directly connected,” etc., imply the absence of such additional elements.
The described embodiments are to be considered in all respects as only illustrative and not restrictive. In particular, the scope of the disclosure is indicated by the appended claims rather than by the description and figures herein. All changes that come within the meaning and range of equivalency of the claims are to be embraced within their scope.
The functions of the various elements shown in the figures, including any functional blocks labeled as “processors” and/or “controllers,” may be provided through the use of dedicated hardware as well as hardware capable of executing software in association with appropriate software. When provided by a processor, the functions may be provided by a single dedicated processor, by a single shared processor, or by a plurality of individual processors, some of which may be shared. Moreover, explicit use of the term “processor” or “controller” should not be construed to refer exclusively to hardware capable of executing software, and may implicitly include, without limitation, digital signal processor (DSP) hardware, network processor, application specific integrated circuit (ASIC), field programmable gate array (FPGA), read only memory (ROM) for storing software, random access memory (RAM), and non volatile storage. Other hardware, conventional and/or custom, may also be included. Similarly, any switches shown in the figures are conceptual only. Their function may be carried out through the operation of program logic, through dedicated logic, through the interaction of program control and dedicated logic, or even manually, the particular technique being selectable by the implementer as more specifically understood from the context.