Embodiments of the invention generally relate to optical networks. More particularly, an aspect of an embodiment of the invention relates to array of optical gain mediums capable of lasing contained in a single integral unit.
Fiber optic systems typically transmit optical signals back and forth between a central office to a multitude of residential and business locations. Each residential or business location may be assigned a narrow bandwidth of wavelengths or channel within an overall optical signal to communicate with and from the central office. As the number of subscribers using that fiber optical system increases, the amount of components in the central office may increase to transmit and receive optical signals from those subscribers.
Various methods and apparatuses are described in which an array of optical gain mediums capable of lasing contained in a single integral unit. The array may contain four or more optical gain mediums capable of lasing. Each optical gain medium capable of lasing supplies a separate optical signal containing a band of wavelengths different than the other optical gain mediums capable of lasing in the array to a first multiplexer/demultiplexer. A connection for an output fiber exists to route an optical signal to and from a passive optical network.
Other features and advantages of the present invention will be apparent from the accompanying drawings and from the detailed description that follows below.
The present invention is illustrated by example and not limitation in the figures of the accompanying drawings, in which like references indicate similar elements and in which:
In general, various methods and apparatuses are described in which an array of optical gain mediums capable of lasing and an array of optical receivers are contained in a single integral unit. The array may contain four or more optical gain mediums capable of lasing. Each optical gain medium capable of lasing supplies a separate optical signal containing a band of wavelengths different than the other optical gain mediums capable of lasing in the array to a first multiplexer/demultiplexer. Similarly, a second multiplexer/demultiplexer may route optical signals to the array of optical receivers. A connection for an output fiber exists to route an optical signal to and from a passive optical network.
Multiple optical gain mediums capable of lasing 102, such as a first gain medium 116 through an Nth gain medium 118, may exist in the planar light circuit 100. Each gain medium 102 supplies an optical signal having a narrow band of wavelengths (λ) different than the other gain mediums. Each of the gain mediums 102 couples to it's own port on the multiplexer/demultiplexer 112. The broadband wavelength reflector 106 couples to the output of the multiplexer/demultiplexer 112. The wavelength reflector 106 routes a portion of each optical signal as regenerative feedback through the multiplexer/demultiplexer 112 to the gain medium 102 that supplied the optical signal.
The modulation source 108 may supply a data signal to the gain medium array 102 to directly modulate the gain mediums in that array. The electrical modulation source 108, by directly supplying the data to a particular gain medium, directly modulates that gain mediums capable of lasing. For example, the modulation source 108 may directly modulate the first gain medium capable of lasing 116. The data signal is amplified by the first gain medium capable of lasing 116 at a band of wavelengths around approximately one or more of its cavity modes. The first gain medium capable of lasing 116 routes the modulated signal to a first input 120 of the multiplexer/demultiplexer 112.
The multiplexer/demultiplexer 112 routes the modulated signal to the wavelength reflector 106. The wavelength reflector 106 routes a portion of the modulated signal as regenerative feedback back through the multiplexer/demultiplexer 112 to the first gain medium capable of lasing 116 that supplied that modulated signal. The modulated signal and the reflected portion of the modulated signal reinforce each other, in phase, at a resonant frequency of the first gain medium capable of lasing 116. The modulated signal and the reflected portion of the modulated signal are also amplified by the first gain medium capable of lasing 116.
The first gain medium capable of lasing 116 then transmits the reinforced modulated signal through the multiplexer/demultiplexer 112 and a portion of that reinforced modulated signal passes through the wavelength reflector 106 to the connection 110 to the output fiber. Also, as described above, the wavelength reflector 106 reflects a portion of that reinforced modulated signal back through the multiplexer/demultiplexer 112 to the first gain medium. This regenerative amplification of a narrow band occurs for each of the gain mediums capable of lasing 102. Each of the gain mediums capable of lasing 102 amplifying its own distinct narrow band of wavelengths.
The multiplexer/demultiplexer 112 acts as a narrow band filter to define the band of wavelength developed by the first gain medium capable of lasing 116. A natural characteristic of the multiplexer/demultiplexer 112 is to pass a different band of wavelengths on each of its outputs. For example, the first output may pass the band of wavelengths from 1530 to 1531 nanometers (nm). The second output may pass the band of wavelengths from 1531 to 1532 nm. Therefore, the multiplexer/demultiplexer 112 creates a narrow band of wavelengths supplied back to each gain medium capable of lasing 102. Accordingly, each gain medium capable of lasing 102 develops and amplifies a resonant wavelength within that band of wavelengths corresponding to a cavity mode of the gain medium. When the amplified band of wavelengths is reinforced with the reflected modulated signal, then the gain medium generates an optical signal of sufficient power to transmit over the passive optical network to a subscriber's home. The reflected modulated signal provides resonant feedback to the gain medium capable of lasing.
The array of gain mediums capable of lasing 102, the multiplexer/demultiplexer 112, the optical amplifier 104, and the broadband wavelength reflector 106 can all be integrated into a single integrated unit. The integral unit may be a single substrate where all the components are grown on that single substrate. Alternatively, the integral unit may be two or more substrates made out of different materials and physically joined together.
The integral unit may use optical couplings 122 other than optical fibers in the optical path of the integral unit, such as air, lens arrays, or other such waveguides. Optical fibers typically require minimum bend radiuses and have other disadvantages that do not allow them to be used in a small compact space. However, optical couplings 122 other than optical fibers such as air or lens arrays may be used in a very small physical space to allow the communication of optical signals from one optical component to the next optical component. Further, in an integral unit where all of the gain mediums capable of lasing 102 are grown on the same substrate, the physical spacing between the gain mediums may be much shorter and smaller in physical size than if each of the gain mediums capable of lasing 102 was a fabricated as a discrete component and placed onto a common platform.
The substrate may be composed of Indium-Phosphide, where both active devices, such as the gain mediums capable of lasing, optical amplifiers, and modulators, can be integrated along with passive devices, such as the waveguides and multiplexer/demultiplexer. The substrate may also be composed from other materials, such as erbium-doped silica.
The array of gain mediums capable of lasing 102 may contain a large number of lasers, such as thirty-two or sixty-four lasers, acting as gain mediums, however the gain medium array may be as small as four or so laser sources acting as gain mediums capable of lasing. The optical gain medium capable of lasing may be a distributed feed back laser having its center wavelength set by a Bragg grating, a Fabry Perot laser diode, reflective semiconductor optical amplifiers, or similar laser grown on a single substrate. Each of the gain mediums capable of lasing has its own resonant wavelength and may be biased to operate above or below a lasing threshold.
The reflective semiconductor optical amplifiers may be gain mediums capable of lasing that have a highly reflective back facet, such as 90%, with a front facet surface that is at a non-normal angle/non-perpendicular angle to the optical waveguide of the reflective semiconductor optical amplifier. The highly reflective back facet causes a greater amount of the injected wavelengths to be amplified and reflected back out of the reflective semiconductor optical amplifier. The front facet waveguide at a non-normal angle reduces the front facet reflectivity and allows a greater amount of gain to be provided by the reflective semiconductor optical amplifier before lasing action occurs in the reflective semiconductor optical amplifier on the injected wavelengths.
The optical amplifier 104 coupled to the multiplexer/demultiplexer 112 may amplify the optical signal coming from the multiplexer/demultiplexer 112 to increase the overall gain and compensate for any insertion losses. A connection 110 to an output fiber exists in the output optical path of the multiplexer/demultiplexer 112 to a passive optical network. The passive optical network may have an optical splitting component such as a wave division multiplexer.
The gain mediums capable of lasing may be also continuous wave sources modulated by a separate array of modulators rather than directly modulated. Each continuous wave modulator connects to its own gain medium. The continuous wave modulator data modulates the continuous wave coming from the gain medium capable of lasing. The multiplexer/demultiplexer 112 may be an array wave-guide, an eschelle grating, or other similar technique to combine multiple unique wavelengths into a single wave-guide with a low signal power loss.
The wavelength reflector 106 may also be located at the output of the planar lightwave circuit 100 to provide regenerative optical feedback to each gain medium capable of lasing 102 in order to develop the resonant wavelength of that gain medium. The wavelength reflector 106 may be created by etching a vertical facet in the wave guide to create a change in the index of refraction, or be a Bragg grating, or maybe a coating at the edge of the substrate of the integral unit/interface with the output optical fiber with a reflective material to reflect a portion of the optical signal back to the multiplexer/demultiplexer 112, or may be a grating at the entrance of the optical fiber 114 pigtailed to the planar lightwave circuit 100.
The construction of the planar lightwave circuit 100 having an array of gain mediums capable of lasing resembles a distributed laser having an external cavity which can operate above or below the lasing threshold in order to develop or reinforce a multiple bands of wavelengths each having different wavelength bands. Thus, the construction of the distributed laser may be defined as from the gain mediums capable of lasing section through the multiplexer/demultiplexer 112 to the wavelength reflector 106 and back through the multiplexer/demultiplexer 112 to each gain medium section. Each laser in the gain medium section may or may not have a reflective front facet.
Thus, the active components may be fabricated on a first substrate 226 and the passive components may be fabricated on a second substrate 228 that are merged and physically joined together into an integral unit. The first substrate 226 as discussed may be silicon dioxide, indium phosphide, or similar substrate. Note, Distributed Bragg Reflector lasers, for example, can also be used to generate the optical signal containing the band of wavelengths instead of the distributed feedback lasers. The Distributed Bragg Reflector lasers may have Bragg grating at the output of the laser to set the center wavelength of that laser.
The broadband light source 330 supplies an optical signal containing a broad band of wavelengths, such as the C-band (1530 nm˜1560 nm), through an optical coupler 331 to the multiplexer/demultiplexer 312. Each of the Fabry-Perot laser diodes in the array 302 couples to it's own port on the multiplexer/demultiplexer 312. Each of the Fabry-Perot laser diodes in the array 302 receives a spectral slice of the optical signal from the broadband light source 330 in order to wavelength lock an output wavelength of that Fabry-Perot laser diode to within the bandwidth of the injected spectral slice. For example, the first Fabry-Perot laser diode 316 may receive a spectral slice of 1530 to 1531 nm. The first Fabry-Perot laser diode 316 then may reflect and amplify the spectral slice back out through the multiplexer/demultiplexer 312 to the connection 310. The connection 310 couples to an output fiber 314 in order to route an optical signal to the wavelength division multiplexing passive optical network.
All of the Fabry-Perot laser diodes in the array 302, the multiplexer/demultiplexer 312, the connection 310, and the broadband light source 330 are integrated into a compact integral unit. The broadband light source 330 may also be discrete from the integral unit. The broadband light source 330 may consist of two or more super luminescent diodes connected to supply orthogonal polarized signals, an erbium fiber that acts as a broadband light source, an erbium doped waveguide, a single super luminescent diodes connected to the integral unit with polarization persevering fiber, a single on chip super luminescent diode, or other similar light emitting source. All of the components may be located in a single planar lightwave circuit.
The integral unit containing the receivers 440 may be located at the central office where returning signals need to be locally processed. Note, the integral unit of the optical gain mediums capable of lasing may also be located at the central office where minimizing the space occupied by components is at a premium and all of the components may be compactly, centrally located. The first substrate 426 having the optical receivers array 432 may be composed of indium phosphide, gallium arsenide, silicon, or other similar semiconductor substrates. The first substrate 426 may be coupled in a planar lightwave circuit to the multiplexer/demultiplexer 430 on the second substrate 428. The electrical processing chip 438 containing the electrical processing components that process the signal from the optical receivers in the array 432 can also be on another third substrate 442 made of silicon. The third substrate 442 may be coupled and physically joined to the first substrate 426. The substrates 426, 428 in the integral unit may communicate optical signals via wave-guides without optical fibers, such as the first non-optical fiber waveguide 422, the second non-optical fiber waveguide 423, and the third non-optical fiber waveguide 425. All of the substrates 426, 428, 442 may be fabricated as a single integral unit 440.
Each of the arrays 550, 554 may contain a multiplexer/demultiplexer or a power splitter to distribute the signals coming from and going to the passive optical network 558. On each of the arrays 550, 554, the components may be grown on that substrate to make the spacing between individual components as small as possible. The integral unit 556 may also contain a band splitting filter 560 and a broadband light source. The broadband light source 562 may also be exterior to the integral unit 556.
The broadband light source supplies an optical signal containing a broadband of wavelengths, such as the L-band, to the multiplexer/demultiplexer in the optical gain medium array 550. As discussed above, the multiplexer/demultiplexer routes a narrow band optical signals to each of the optical gain medium in the array 550 to wavelength lock the output wavelength of the optical gain medium capable of lasing within the bandwidth of the injected spectral slice.
The array of optical gain mediums capable of lasing 550 through its multiplexer/demultiplexer may send a single optical signal consisting of, for example, thirty-two individual bands of wavelengths contained within the C-band across the passive optical network 558 to a remote multiplexer/demultiplexer 564. The remote multiplexer/demultiplexer 564 may distribute the individual band of wavelengths from each optical gain mediums capable of lasing in the array 550 to a corresponding subscriber location. For example, the remote multiplexer/demultiplexer 564 may distribute the band of wavelengths from the second optical gain medium capable of lasing to the location of a second subscriber 566. The remote multiplexer/demultiplexer 564 may distribute all of the N number of individual band of wavelengths from the array of optical gain mediums capable of lasing 550 in this manner to corresponding subscriber locations.
The group of users/subscribers may also transmit optical signals back to the array of receivers 554 in central office in the L-band (1570 nm˜1600 nm). The band-splitting filter 560 separates the L-band wavelengths from the C-band wavelengths. The band-splitting filter 560 routes the L-band signals to the array of optical receivers 554 and the C-band wavelengths from the broad light source to the array of optical gain mediums capable of lasing 550.
The transmitters in the central officer may use a first band such as the L-band to communicate information to subscribers and the transmitters at the subscribers use another band such as the C-band to communicate information to the central office. Accordingly, the optical gain mediums capable of lasing may generate individual optical signals in different band of wavelengths such as the O-band (around 1300 nm), S-band (around 1480 nm), etc.
A second multiplexer/demultiplexer in the optical receiver array 554 routes individual signals in the C-band to each of the corresponding optical receivers. Each of the optical receivers receives a separate signal containing a band of wavelengths different than the other optical receivers in the array 554. The array of optical gain mediums capable of lasing 550 and the array of optical receivers 554 may be positioned at set angles such as approximately 90 degrees and approximately 180 degrees with respect to the band splitting filter 560 to route optical signals with waveguides, lenses or in air and without using optical fibers.
The fabrication of the array of optical receivers and lasers in a single integral unit may be accomplished in a more simple fashion by using a band-splitting filter reflecting optical signals to the arrays at a small angle. If the laser array is operated in the O-band, around 1300 nanometers, rather than the L-band, band, then the reflected angle may be about 90° which can make the packaging easier by using a beam splitting prism. All of the configurations described above may be integrated into a passive optical network. The passive optical network may or may not wavelength lock gain mediums capable of lasing by injecting a narrow band Amplified Spontaneous Emission light into laser diodes acting as gain mediums capable of lasing.
In the foregoing specification, the invention has been described with reference to specific exemplary embodiments thereof. It will, however, be evident that various modifications and changes may be made thereto without departing from the broader spirit and scope of the invention as set fourth in the appended claims. The specification and drawings are, accordingly, to be regarded in an illustration rather then a restrictive sense.
The present application claims priority from and is a divisional application of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 11/983,720, filed Nov. 9, 2007 now U.S. Pat. No. 7,593,444 which is a divisional application of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 10/741,134, filed Dec. 19, 2003, which has issued as U.S. Pat. No. 7,313,157.
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