The present invention relates to the detection and compensation of dynamic tilt created in optical fiber due to the Raman effect during and after a transient event i.e. when the channel load is variable in time, and in particular to Raman tilt compensation performed by an EDFA.
In a wavelength division multiplexing (WDM) transmission system, various different information channels are encoded, i.e. modulated, into light at different frequencies, i.e. different wavelength channels. Typically continuous wavelength light is generated at a particular frequency, modulated with some kind of modulator, which encodes the information into the light, and then combined with other optical channels at different light frequencies using a multiplexer. The combined light is transmitted through an optical fiber and/or an optical fiber network to a receiver end of the optical fiber. At the receiver end, the signal is separated, i.e. demultiplexed, back into the individual optical channels through a de-multiplexer, whereby each optical channel can be detected by some optical detector, e.g. photo-diode, and the information can reconstructed on a per-channel basis.
While propagating through the optical fiber, light tends to loose intensity due to the losses related to the physics of how the light interacts with the optical fiber. Yet some minimal level of optical channel intensity is required at the receiver end in order to decode information encoded on the optical channel. In order to boost the optical signal while propagating in the optical fiber, optical amplifiers are deployed at multiple locations, known as nodes, along the transmission link. The amplifiers extend the maximum possible length of the link, e.g. from a few hundred kilometers to several thousand kilometers, whereby after each fiber span, the optical signal is amplified to power levels close to the original levels at the transmitter. During the amplification process some amount of noise is introduced which prevents links from being of unlimited length.
The amplifiers at amplification nodes should similarly amplify all optical wavelength channels, which are propagated in the link; otherwise, some channels will not have sufficient intensity and signal-to-noise level at the receiver end, resulting in information being lost. A typical communication link 5, schematically illustrated in
Optical fibers in communication links introduce optical dispersion, which has undesirable effects on the performance of the link. Typically, Dispersion Compensation Modules (DCMs) are inserted at amplifier nodes of the link, between stages of EDFAs, in order to compensate the link dispersion and thus to improve the link performance. Moreover, additional optical components, such as add/drops, cross-connects and DGEs (Dynamic Gain Equalizers) may also be inserted in the middle of an amplifier, requiring multiple controlled gain stages in the amplifier to compensate for the loss due to the additional optical components.
A multi-stage EDFA 20, illustrated in
Portions of the light are deviated from the main optical link by taps 41, 42, 43 and 44 into photo-detectors 51, 52, 53 and 54, respectively, for measuring the light's power before and after the first and second optical amplification sub-stages 23 and 24. The information needed for gain control is passed by electrical signals 61, 62, 63 and 64 from detectors 51, 52, 53 and 54, respectively, into a master controller 75. The detectors 51, 52, 53 and 54 are calibrated in such a way that an accurate representation of the power at various parts of the amplifier gain stages 21 and 22 can be determined by the measurements performed thereby.
The amplifiers 11, i.e. the first and second controlled gain stages 23 and 24 can be Raman optical amplifiers, distributed or discrete, or a combination of EDFA and Raman amplifiers. During Raman amplification, pump light is launched into the optical fiber via the first and/or second controlled amplifier stages 23 and 24, and signal amplification occurs in the fiber spans 12. The pump light can be launched either co-propagating with the WDM signal or counter-propagating therewith. The pump light can consist of multiple wavelengths to achieve desired signal amplification characteristics. The internal portions of each amplifier 11, such as dispersion compensation module containing long portions of the fiber can also be pumped for Raman amplification.
One effect of light propagation through the communication fiber is inter-channel Raman interaction, which manifests as tilt in the transmitted spectra, i.e. the wavelength channels with shorter wavelengths have lower power than the wavelength channels with longer wavelengths, after propagation through the fiber. The spectral tilt depends on both total optical power and wavelength channel distribution. Conventional optical amplifiers 11 have tried to compensate for the Raman spectral tilt effect by introducing a gain tilt of the opposite sign.
The communication links described above are so called point-to-point links, in which all information is transmitted from one point only to another point. However, in a realistic transmission system there are multiple points that need to transmit information and multiple points that need to receive information. Different optical channels, which originated at the same transmitter 10, are required to go to different receivers situated at different locations. Instead of simple point-to-point optical communication links, more complex, network-type or web-type topology is used, in which optical channels are switched from one path to another path at multiple network nodes, which are referred as cross-connect nodes and add/drop nodes.
The process of switching the channels at multiple network nodes results in the number of channels passing through each optical amplifiers 11 to vary with time. In order to keep the channel power at the output of each amplifier 11 constant over time, regardless of the number of wavelength channels passing through, the pump power of the first and second controlled amplifier stages 23 and 24 needs to be adjusted to compensate for the changes in the wavelength channel load, which is called “transient control”. Amplifiers 11 with transient control are called either transient controlled amplifiers or gain controlled amplifier, i.e. the control is achieved by monitoring and keeping the average gain of the amplifier constant. Failing to do transient control results in the signal power significantly varying at the receiver 13 over time and over wavelength, which could result in some of the transmitted information being lost.
During a transient event, conventional transient controlled amplifiers adjust the pump power in the first and second controlled amplifier stages 23 and 24 to compensate for variations in input signal power by keeping the average amplifier gain constant; however, conventional transient controlled amplifiers do not compensate for Raman tilt variations with time when channel loading and total power is changing.
While some Raman tilt compensation techniques have been developed to compensate for different steady state loads, most require measurement of the per channel power by an optical channel monitor (OCM) or other similar device. Due to the relatively long time for OCM devices to perform measurements, accurate tilt compensation is not possible during fast transient events.
An object of the present invention is to overcome the shortcomings of the prior art by providing an optical amplifier which compensates for Raman tilt during and after a transient event.
Accordingly, the present invention relates to a method for compensating for Raman tilt in an optical signal, defined by a center wavelength, transmitted in an optical fiber link, which includes an optical amplifier, comprising the steps of:
a) tapping off a portion of the optical signal;
b) determining a measure of optical power from the tapped off portion;
c) determining the Raman tilt from the measure of optical power; and
d) adjusting gain provided by the optical amplifier to compensate for the Raman tilt.
Another aspect of the present invention relates to an optical amplifier device for compensating for Raman tilt in an optical signal, defined by a center wavelength, transmitted in an optical fiber link, which includes an optical amplifier, comprising:
a tap for separating a portion of the optical signal;
a photo-detector for determining a measure of optical power from the separated portion;
a controller for determining the Raman tilt based on the measure of optical power; and
an adjustable optical amplifier controlled by the controller for amplifying the optical signals to compensate for the Raman tilt.
The invention will be described in greater detail with reference to the accompanying drawings which represent preferred embodiments thereof, wherein:
a to 6c illustrate examples of signal measurement systems for the estimation of the necessary Raman tilt correction; and
a to 7d illustrate filter transmission functions used for extraction of spectral information for Raman tilt compensation calculation.
With reference to
Portions of the light are deviated from the main optical link by taps 91, 92, 93 and 94 into photo-detectors 101, 102, 103 and 104, respectively, for measuring the light's power before and after the first and second optical amplification sub-stages 83 and 84. The information needed for gain control is passed by electrical signals 111, 112, 113 and 114 from detectors 101, 102, 103 and 104, respectively, into a master controller 125. The detectors 101, 102, 103 and 104 are calibrated in such a way that an accurate representation of the power at various parts of the amplifier gain stages 81 and 82 can be determined by the measurements performed thereby.
The first and second controlled gain stages 83 and 84 can be Raman optical amplifiers, distributed or discrete, or a combination of EDFA and Raman amplifiers. During Raman amplification, pump light is launched into the optical fiber via the first and/or second controlled amplifier stages 83 and 84, and signal amplification occurs in the fiber spans 12. The pump light can be launched either co-propagating with the WDM signal or counter-propagating therewith. The pump light can consist of multiple wavelengths to achieve desired signal amplification characteristics. The internal portions of each amplifier 80, such as the dispersion compensation module 86 containing long portions of the fiber can also be pumped for Raman amplification. Alternatively, the first and second controlled gain stages 83 and 84 are EDFA's and the DCM 86 is replaced by a Raman optical amplifier (ROA).
In a steady state situation, i.e. when the input channel load is constant, the first and second controlled amplifier stages 83 and 84, (and the ROA 86, if provided) of the amplifier 80 are set into a particular gain level via pump control through communication lines 130a, 130b and 130c, respectively, and by control of the first and second VOAs 85a and 85b via communication lines 135a and 135b, respectively. The gain of each amplifier stage is obtained from the powers measured by detectors 101, 102, 103 and 104.
A typical goal of the transient control of the amplifier 80 is to hold the average signal gain constant, by adjusting the pump powers in such a way that the measured gain of each stage 81 and 82 (and 86, if an ROA) is also constant, which is done through some kind of feed-back control by controller 125. Some other additional types of control, such as feed-forward control, can be employed in combination with feed-back control.
Understanding how tilt is formed is important in order to understand what parameters of the signal need to be measured for the fast compensation of Raman tilt. When multiple wavelength channels propagate through the communication fiber, each channel creates wavelength dependent gain or loss to other channels. An example of the gain shape created by a single channel is shown in
GR(λ)=a·λ+b·λ3 (1)
The total gain G of all channels acting upon themselves is:
λ0 is an arbitrary wavelength that is introduced for convenience; which can be put into the center of the band. The linear tilt is defined by the last term
which includes multiplication by the linear term (λ−λ0). The rest of the terms do not have linear dependence on (λ−λ0). The value of the linear tilt T is proportional to the expression in the square brackets:
Thus the Raman tilt is the sum of two terms, the first term is proportional to the total power Ptotal and the second term is proportional to the second moment P2.
The total power Ptotal term is a numerically larger term than the second moment term P2, whereby the total power can be used for a rough approximation of the Raman induced tilt.
There are a plurality of means and methods for estimating the required tilt correction. Preferably, the tap 94 and the detector 104 (hereinafter referred to as tap/detector module) shown in
A general topology of a tap/detector module in accordance with a preferred embodiment of the present invention is shown in
A practical topology, in which both Ptotal and P2 values are estimated by the tap/detector module, is illustrated in
Various possible examples of the transmission function for the filters 202a to 202n and 214 are shown in
Generally, the filter 214 blocks all of center wavelength's λ0 optical power and the optical power of wavelength's on either side thereof, and gradually decreasingly less amounts of the optical power of the wavelengths on either side of the center wavelength, as the wavelengths get farther away from the center wavelength λ0. With reference to
c and 7d illustrate alternative transmission functions for the filters 202 and 214, which are only linear approximations, e.g. trapezoidal-shaped, of the above transmission functions illustrated in
Once the values corresponding to Ptotal alone, or corresponding to Ptotal and P2 are obtained, the calculation of tilt T becomes possible with known constants a and b according to the equation 3. The constants a and b can be provided to the amplifier 80 by an external control system of the service provider or alternatively, a set of a and b coefficients can be measured in advance for all possible fibers that are used in optical communication systems and the external system and memorized in the amplifier controller 125. The external system then provides only the type of the fiber for which amplifier controller selects the appropriate a and b coefficients. The coefficients a and b are on the order of a=0.3 dB/(W*nm) and b=0.0001 dB/(W*nm3).
After the tilt value T is calculated, the appropriate correction to the gains of the first and second controlled amplifier stages 83 and 84 (and the ROA 86, if provided) and the first and second VOA's 85a and 85b should be applied from the controller 125 via communication lines 130a, 130b and 130c. Typically the best results in terms of amplifier performance are obtained when all gains and VOA values are modified. But for practical reasons some of the gains and VOA values can be kept constant and others are modified. After the gain and VOA values corrections are calculated, the controller 125 adjusts the gain targets and the loss targets in the EDFA control algorithms. Due to the fact that the Raman tilt change occurs at the same time when the channels are added and dropped, the amplifier 80 reacts on the change of the input power at the same time as it reacts on the command to change VOA values and stage gain values for Raman tilt compensation. The control loop and the reaction time for the VOA's 85a and 85b, should be sufficiently fast, so that by the time the transient adjustments of the pumps in the EDFA's 83 and 84 are done, the VOA adjustment is also finished.
Table 1 defines stage gains (ΔG1 and ΔG2) for the first and second controlled amplifier stages 83 and 84, and VOA loss values (ΔVOA1 and ΔVOA2) for the first and second VOAs 84 and 85 for various Raman tilt values T for compensation of the Raman tilt for the preferred embodiment of a two stage amplifier, e.g. EDFA. During the amplifier's design process, Table 1 is filled with the data, which is later stored in the amplifier controller memory 125. During a transient event when the tilt value is calculated, the amplifier control 125 finds the appropriate line in Table 1, and adjusts the stage gains and VOA loss values accordingly. If particular tilt values are not in the table, then the amplifier controller 125 can calculate the adjustments by interpolating values from neighboring lines.
In an alternate embodiment of the present invention, the Raman tilt is compensated by Raman amplifiers present in the system, not by EDFA. Compensation is achieved by adjusting the pump powers in the Raman amplifiers at different pump wavelengths in such a manner that the Raman gain tilt produced by the pump lights changes. A feedback loop can be provided to ensure complete compensation or a table of known Raman tilt and Raman amplifier settings can be accessed by the controller 125. If at the same time EDFAs are present in the system, i.e. a hybrid Raman/EDFA system as in
Special tilt compensation devices, whichcanc have variable tilt in the loss spectrum thereof, can also be deployed in the link. The special device, which are fast enough, also can be used for dynamic tilt compensation to change tilt values during the transient event.
The present invention claims priority from U.S. Patent Application No. 60/827,957 filed Oct. 3, 2006, which is incorporated herein by reference for all purposes.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
5818629 | Kinoshita | Oct 1998 | A |
6088152 | Berger et al. | Jul 2000 | A |
6275313 | Denkin et al. | Aug 2001 | B1 |
6341034 | Sun et al. | Jan 2002 | B1 |
6421169 | Bonnedal et al. | Jul 2002 | B1 |
6441950 | Chen et al. | Aug 2002 | B1 |
6476961 | Ye et al. | Nov 2002 | B1 |
6535330 | Lelic et al. | Mar 2003 | B1 |
6542287 | Ye et al. | Apr 2003 | B1 |
6678088 | Stummer et al. | Jan 2004 | B1 |
6690505 | Ye | Feb 2004 | B1 |
6697187 | Seydnejad et al. | Feb 2004 | B2 |
6785042 | Onaka et al. | Aug 2004 | B1 |
6943937 | Lelik et al. | Sep 2005 | B2 |
6963681 | Mao et al. | Nov 2005 | B2 |
6975449 | Mok et al. | Dec 2005 | B1 |
6985284 | Denkin et al. | Jan 2006 | B2 |
7038841 | Chang et al. | May 2006 | B2 |
7038843 | Denkin et al. | May 2006 | B2 |
7064887 | Mongardian et al. | Jun 2006 | B2 |
7443576 | Eiselt | Oct 2008 | B2 |
20030021009 | MacCormack et al. | Jan 2003 | A1 |
20040197105 | Khatana et al. | Oct 2004 | A1 |
20040240042 | Charlet et al. | Dec 2004 | A1 |
20040252366 | Monnard | Dec 2004 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
1 686 710 | Aug 2006 | EP |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20080192333 A1 | Aug 2008 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
60827957 | Oct 2006 | US |