The present invention relates generally to optical communications, and more specifically to an apparatus and method for generating chirp-free return-to-zero (RZ) differential phase-shift keyed (DPSK) optical signals for transmission in optical communication systems.
DPSK optical transmission has attracted much attention recently due to the unique advantages offered by DPSK modulation with balanced detection such as superior receiver sensitivity, high tolerance to some major nonlinear effects in high-speed transmissions, and high tolerance to coherent crosstalk.
The return-to-zero (RZ) pulse format, offering high receiver sensitivity and high immunity to inter-symbol interference, is well known to offer additional advantages over non-return-to-zero (NRZ) formats in most applications. RZ-DPSK has thus become the modulation format of choice for high-capacity, long-haul transmissions.
Existing Schemes for the generation of chirp-free RZ-DPSK signals typically require a Mach-Zehnder modulator (MZM) for pulse carving and another MZM for exact phase modulation. Such a format is discussed in A. H. Gnauck, “40-Gb/s RZ-differential phase shift keyed transmission,” Optical Fiber Communication Conference 2003 (OFC'03), Paper ThE1 which is incorporated herein by reference. To reduce the complexity and cost of an RZ transmitter, RZ on-off-keyed (RZ-OOK) signals have been generated using a single MZM and a differential amplifier. Such an implementation is discussed in Y. H. Kao et al, “10 Gb/s soliton generation for ULH transmission using a wideband GaAs pHemt amplifier,” OFC'03, Paper FF6, which is incorporated herein by reference. However, such an implementation cannot be used for the generation of RZ-DPSK signals because unlike an RZ-OOK signal which has two states, ‘0’ and ‘1’, in the optical field domain, an RZ-DPSK signal has three states, ‘1’, ‘0’, and ‘−1’. In addition, both the ‘1’ and ‘−1’ states need to be in an RZ format with a similar duty cycle.
Accordingly, a need still exists, for cost effective methods and apparatus for generating RZ-DPSK optical signals.
The present invention provides an apparatus and method for generating a chirp-free optical RZ-DPSK signal by using a MZM driven so as to achieve simultaneous RZ pulse formatting and DPSK data modulation.
In one embodiment a method of generating an RZ-DPSK optical signal is provided which comprises generating a 3-level RZ drive signal, and driving a modulator with the RZ drive signal to generate the RZ-DPSK optical signal.
In another embodiment an apparatus for generating RZ-DPSK optical signals is provided which comprises drive circuitry adapted to generate at least one 3-level RZ drive signal, and a modulator coupled to the drive circuitry such that the at least one 3-level RZ drive signal drives the modulator to generate RZ-DPSK optical signals.
a-c are diagrams depicting embodiments of optical transmitters according to the invention;
a-c are diagrams depicting an operation principle of one embodiment of an optical transmitter according to the invention;
a-c are diagrams depicting an operation principle of another embodiment of an optical transmitter according to the invention;
a-b are respectively the received electrical eye diagrams of back-to-back transmission of an RZ-DPSK signal in accordance with an embodiment of the invention at constructive and destructive ports of a delay-line interferometer;
a-b are respectively the received electrical eye diagrams of back-to-back transmission of an NRZ-DPSK signal at constructive and destructive ports of a delay-line interferometer;
a-b are respectively the received electrical eye diagrams of RZ-DPSK transmissions with different chromatic dispersions in accordance with an embodiment of the invention;
a-b are respectively the simulated electrical eye diagrams after balanced detection of a conventional NRZ-DPSK back-to-back transmission, and an RZ-DPSK back-to-back transmission in accordance with an embodiment of the invention; and
a-b are respectively the simulated electrical eye diagrams after balanced detection of a conventional NRZ-DPSK back-to-back transmission, and an RZ-DPSK back-to-back transmission in accordance with another embodiment of the invention.
In preferred embodiments of the present invention methods and apparatus are provided for generating chirp-free optical RZ-DPSK signals for transmission in an optical transmission system using a modulator for simultaneous RZ pulse formatting and DPSK modulation.
A chirp-free RZ-DPSK transmitter apparatus 100 of one embodiment of the invention is shown in
As used herein “2-level” signal refers to signals having two distinct states (or voltages) at two temporal locations, one at the center of each information bit, and the other between adjacent bits.
The inverse of the data signal 110 (inverted data signal 140) and another clock signal (or a copy of the clock signal 120) are input into a second differential amplifier 160 (DA #2) to generate a second 2-level signal in a similar manner as discussed above with regard to DA #1.
Alternatively, the DAs 130, 160 shown in
The output of DA #2160 is then inverted by an inverter 165 before being synchronously combined using a power combiner 170 with the output of DA #1130 to produce a “3-level” drive signal 180. The eye diagram of the inverted output of DA #2160 is represented in the plot 167. Those skilled in the art can appreciate that the inverted output signal of DA #2160 represents the original data as a negative electronic RZ pulse for each “0”, and zero for each “1” (or vice versa). Further, those skilled in the art can appreciate that retiming circuits may be employed to ensure the needed synchronicity of the signals discussed herein (e.g. between data signal 110 and clock signal 120, between the inverted data signal 140 and the clock signal 150, and between the output of DA #1 and the inverted output of DA #2, etc.) As used herein “3-level” refers to the three states (or voltages) of the generated RF drive signal such that there are two states +1, −1 (normalized) at the center of each information bit, and a third state 0 between adjacent bits. It should be noted that the two states +1, −1 will be used to generate, through a modulator (discussed below), the two optical phase states separated by π in the RZ-DPSK signal. The 0 state will be used to realize the RZ pulse shaping in the generated RZ-DPSK signal.
Those skilled in the art can appreciate that the inversion performed by the inverter 165 may be performed by the DA #2160 internally (i.e. with a DA having two complementary outputs).
The combined 3-level drive signal 180 represents the original data signal 110 as a positive electronic RZ pulse for each “1”, and a negative electronic RZ pulse for each “0” (or vice versa). The eye diagram for the 3-level signal is shown in the plot 185 of
The drive signal 180 is preferably amplified by amplifier 190 to have a peak-to-peak magnitude of ˜10 V before driving a modulator 195. As shown in
The laser source 197 may comprise, for example, a tunable CW laser operating at 1550 nm.
It can be understood by those skilled in the art that the inverter 165, the power combiner 170, and the amplifier 190 can be effectively replaced by a single differential amplifier 191, as shown in
As can be understood from
The inverse of the data signals 110 . . . 110.N (inverted data signals 140 . . . 140.N) and another clock signal or a copy of the clock signals 120 . . . 120.N discussed above are input into second differential amplifiers 160 . . . 160.N (DA #2 . . . DA #2.N) to generate a plurality of second 2-level signals in a similar manner as discussed above with regard to DA #1 . . . DA#2.N.
Alternatively, the DAs shown in
The outputs of DA #2 . . . DA #2.N 160 . . . 160.N are then inverted by inverters 165 . . . 165.N before being synchronously combined using power combiners 170 . . . 170.N with the outputs of DA #1 . . . DA #1.n 130 . . . 130.N to produce a plurality of “3-level” drive signals 180 . . . 180.N, respectively.
The plurality of 3-level drive signals 180 . . . 180.N are power combined using a power combiner 171 to produce a multi-level drive signal 181. The combined multi-level drive signal 181 represents the original data signals 110 . . . 110.N as positive or negative electronic RZ pulses for “1”, “0” or combinations thereof.
The drive signal 181 may be amplified by an amplifier (not shown) to have a peak-to-peak magnitude of ˜10 V before driving a modulator 195. The modulator 195 is preferably a Mach-Zehnder modulator. More preferably, the modulator 195 is a single-drive x-cut (chirp-free) LiNbO3 MZM (with Vπ˜6 V) biased at null.
The laser source 197 may comprise, for example, a tunable CW laser operating at 1550 nm.
It can be understood by those skilled in the art that the inverters 165 . . . 165.N, the power combiners 170 . . . 170.N, and any amplifier (not shown) can be effectively replaced by a single differential amplifier as discussed above with reference to
A chirp-free RZ-DPSK transmitter 200 of another embodiment of the invention is illustrated in
The inverse of the data signal 201 (inverted data signal 205) and another clock signal (or a copy of clock signal 202) 206 are input into a second differential amplifier 261 (DA #2).
Alternatively, the DAs 250, 261 shown in
The output of DA #1 and the inverted output of DA #2 (inverted data signal 262) are input into a power combiner 270 to produce a first “3-level” drive signal 220.
The output of DA #2261 is then combined using a power combiner 275 with the inverted output of DA #1 (inverted data signal 252) to produce a second “3-level” drive signal 230.
The first and second drive signals 220, 230 respectively represents data signals 201 and 205 as a positive electronic RZ pulse for each “1” in the data, and a negative electronic RZ pulse for each “0” (or vice versa).
The first and second 3-level drive signals 220, 230 are used to drive a modulator 210. Eye diagrams 290 and 295 show the 3-level drive signals 220, 230. As can be understood from the plots, 290295 the drive signals 220230 are complementary.
The modulator 210 is preferably a dual-drive z-cut LiNbO3 MZM, and is driven synchronously by the first and second 3-level drive signals 220, 230. The modulator 210 is preferably biased at null.
The laser source 280 may comprise, for example, a tunable CW laser operating at 1550 nm.
Additionally, those skilled in the art can appreciate that RF amplifiers (not shown) may be used to amplify the 3-level drive signals 220, 230 prior to driving the modulator 210.
As discussed above with reference to
a-c show an operation principle of embodiments of a transmitter according to the invention when the MZM is fully driven. Subplots (a), (b), and (c) respectively show an electronic drive signal, the response function of the MZM, and the generated optical signal. ΔV12 is the voltage difference between the two driving signals for the two arms of the MZM.
For apparatus having a single-drive x-cut MZM (e.g. as discussed with reference to
Eoutput(t)=Einput(t)·(eiπv1(t)/v
where v1(t) and v2(t) are the time-varying applied voltages on the two arms of the MZM, and vπ is the voltage needed to introduce (through the electro-optical effect) an optical phase change of π on the optical wave passing through one arm of the MZM (vπ is generally frequency dependent, and here we use it as a constant for simplicity) v2(t)=−v1(t), so the output optical field can be simplified to
where Δv12(t) is the voltage difference between the two arms of the MZM. The optical intensity transfer function is
The optical phase across each bit is always identical (either 0 or π), so the generated RZ-DPSK signal is intrinsically chirp-free (or there is no phase variation across each bit period). As shown in
Experimental testing was conducted to confirm the performance of embodiments of the present invention. A 10 Gb/s RZ-DPSK signal generated in accordance with an embodiment of the present invention was filtered by an optical bandpass filters with ˜0.6 nm 3-dB bandwidth. The signal was then de-modulated by a 100-ps delay-line interferometer (DLI). The de-modulated signals from the constructive and destructive ports of the DLI were measured.
As a comparison, the experiment was repeated for conventional NRZ-DPSK.
To further assess the performance of RZ-DPSK signals generated in accordance with embodiments of the present invention the bit-error-rate (BER) was measured for RZ and NRZ DPSK signals.
To verify the chirp-free nature of RZ-DPSK signals generated in accordance with the present invention additional measurements were performed.
Some of the potential advantages of RZ-DPSK transmitters according to the invention include cost-effectiveness, a compact design, lower power consumption and lower loss than conventional RZ-DPSK transmitters using two MZMs. Further, transmitters according to the invention provide better performance when the MZM bandwidth is limited, particularly when the modulator is under-driven.
Using embodiments of the present invention, driving signals are RZ formatted and their frequency range is narrowly located around the BR. Consequently, the generated optical signal has much smaller variation in amplitude at the center of each bit, resulting in better BER performance. Additionally, MZMs for use with the present invention can be designed to be narrow-banded to reduce driving voltage and cost, especially at high bit rates (e.g. 40 Gb/s).
a-b show respectively simulated electrical eye diagrams (after balanced detection, assuming the modulator has a limited bandwidth as shown in
Further, the transmitters according to the present invention outperform conventional transmitters with regard to the MZM bandwidth limitation-induced amplitude fluctuation when the MZM is not fully driven.
Although the invention has been described with reference to illustrative embodiments, this description should not be construed in a limiting sense. Various modifications of the described embodiments, as well as other embodiments of the invention, which are apparent to persons skilled in the art to which the invention pertains, are deemed to lie within the principle and scope of the invention as expressed in the following claims.