This invention relates to the field of communications systems and, more specifically, to a method and system for improving the spectral efficiency of a binary coded digital signal for optical transmission.
To meet today's demand for high-speed cost-effective communications, optical transmission systems having increased data capacity are highly desirable. One approach used in modern high-capacity transmission systems to increase the aggregate data-rate of transmission systems is to use a technique called dense wavelength division multiplexing (DWDM). In DWDM, an optical transmission link is divided into a plurality of channels with each channel having its own center frequency. Data transmitted on a particular channel is then affected by modulating the optical carrier at the center frequency of that channel. At the receiver, a band-pass filter tuned to the center frequency of the channel is used for detecting and demodulating the transmitted signal. By combining a plurality of channels in this manner, the aggregate data capacity of the optical link is increased. A limitation in increasing the aggregate data-handling capacity of DWDM optical transmission systems, however, is the amount of separation required between adjacent channels sufficient to reduce cross-channel interference to acceptable levels. Channel separations in the range of 50 GHz-100 GHz are commonly used to achieve sufficient separation.
However, the aggregate data rate presently achievable in conventional optical transmission systems is still orders of magnitude below the total capacity of optical fibers. In other words, the spectral efficiency (defined as the ratio between the aggregate bit rate transmitted over the optical link and the total optical bandwidth) of conventional transmission systems is not maximized for many reasons. First, the need to maintain channel separation of between 50-100 GHz to reduce interference between channels reduces the number of channels that can be multiplexed on the optical link. As a result, the aggregate bit rate of the optical link is limited thereby reducing the spectral efficiency of the transmission system. Also, because dispersion and nonlinearities in the optical transmission link limits the modulation bandwidth, and thus the bit-rate of any particular signal channel, the spectral efficiency of the system is decreased. As such, robust and cost efficient modulation formats for increasing spectral efficiency are of high interest for optical transmission systems.
For example, spectrally efficient signaling techniques, such as duobinary signaling, have been investigated in an attempt to reduce the spectral bandwidth required for each particular channel so that more channels can be supported by an optical link. In duobinary signaling, the required spectral bandwidth for a channel is reduced by manipulating the phase of the output data symbols transmitted over that channel. In duobinary, the data to be output consists of a combination of zeros and ones. In various duobinary signaling arrangements, the phase of the output data symbols are selected as follows: 1's in the input data stream that are separated by an even number of 0's have an identical phase in the duobinary signal output while 1's that are separated by an odd number of 0's have an opposite phase to that of the previously output 1. For example, the input data sequence {1, 1, 0, 1, 0, 0, 1, 1} is converted to a duobinary signal output of {1, 1, 0, −1, 0, 0, −1, −1} where −1 denotes a data bit having an opposite phase of a 1 data bit. Although duobinary signaling does increase the spectrally efficiency of the transmission system by narrowing the spectral bandwidth required for a channel, an improvement in bandwidth efficiency with duobinary signaling is limited to a factor of the square root of two (2) and there is no improvement in the tolerance of a signal to nonlinear effects caused by transmission of the signal along an optical path.
The present invention addresses various deficiencies of the prior art by providing a method and system for improving the spectral efficiency of a binary coded digital signal, while contemporaneously limiting distortion of the optical signal induced by optical nonlinear effects during transmission in an optical transmission system.
In one embodiment of the present invention, a method for improving the spectral efficiency of a binary coded digital signal includes encoding a received binary bit sequence indicative of a binary coded digital signal to convert said binary bit sequence into a series of rectangular pulses having varying repetition rates, modulating a continuous wave carrier signal via a control signal representative of the encoded signal, and performing single side band filtering of the modulated carrier signal to produce a resulting modulated carrier signal having a normalized frequency deviation about a central frequency of the resulting modulated carrier signal.
In an alternate embodiment of the present invention a system having increased spectral efficiency of transmitted binary coded signals includes at least one coding circuit for encoding an input binary bit sequence such that the input binary bit sequence is converted into a series of rectangular frequency pulses having varying repetition rates and for providing a control signal representative of the encoding, at least one continuous wave source for providing an optical carrier signal, at least one optical modulator for receiving the control signal and modulating the carrier signal according to the control signal, and at least one narrow band optical filter for filtering the modulated optical signal to produce a resulting modulated carrier signal having a normalized frequency deviation about a central frequency of the resulting modulated carrier signal.
The teachings of the present invention can be readily understood by considering the following detailed description in conjunction with the accompanying drawings, in which:
To facilitate understanding, identical reference numerals have been used, where possible, to designate identical elements that are common to the figures.
The present invention advantageously provides a method and system for improving the spectral efficiency of a binary coded digital signal, while contemporaneously limiting distortion of the optical signal induced by optical nonlinear effects during transmission. Although various embodiments of the present invention are described herein with respect to dense wavelength division multiplexing (DWDM) transmission systems, the specific embodiments of the present invention should not be treated as limiting the scope of the invention. It will be appreciated by those skilled in the art and informed by the teachings of the present invention that the method and system of the present invention may be advantageously implemented in various other transmission systems, such as single channel transmission systems and the like.
In the DWDM transmission system 100 of
However, conventional transmission systems implementing amplitude modulation formats, such as the DWDM transmission system 100 of
For example,
The coding and pulse shaping circuit 202 of the DWDM transmission system 200 of
The MSK demodulator 260 of the DWDM transmission system 200 of
The MSK demodulator 260 further comprises a feedback path 265 to accomplish phase locking between optical paths P1 and P2 with respect to a resulting center frequency of the SSB filtered optical signal (described in greater detail below). In the MSK demodulator 260 of
In the DWDM transmission system 200 of
In the coding and pulse shaping circuit 202 as depicted in
The control signal from the coding and pulse shaping circuit 202 is communicated to the optical modulator 212 for causing the modulator to modulate the encoded input data, as described above, onto a carrier signal of the DFB laser 210. In accordance with the present invention, the carrier signal of the DFB laser 210 may be phase modulated or amplitude modulated. For example, the electrical field of the DFB laser 210 phase modulated in accordance with an embodiment of the present invention may be characterized according to Equations one (1) and two (2), which follow:
Similarly, the electrical field of the DFB laser 210 amplitude modulated in accordance with the present invention may be characterized according to Equations three (3) and eight (4), which follow:
In equations 1-4 above, EMSK(t) denotes the electric field of the DFB laser 210 after modulation, where A depicts the field amplitude of the optical signal prior to modulation, ωo denotes the frequency of the signal from the DFB laser 210, rb=1/Tb depict the data bitrate, and Θ is an arbitrary phase offset equally distributed over the interval [0, 2π]. Specifically, equations (1) and (3), above, depict the electric field of a modulated optical signal when a logical low (L, dn=0) modulation signal (code) is used, while equations (2) and (4) depict the electric field of a modulated optical signal when a logical high (H, dn=1) modulation signal (code) is used. In equations 1-4 above, the logical levels of L and H correspond to a logic zero (0) and a logic one (1), respectively, for amplitude modulation, and to 0 and π for phase modulation, however it will be appreciated by those skilled in the art that, inversely, the logical levels attributed to L and H may be reversed. More specifically, application of an equal phase shift to L and H simultaneously with respect to the signals depicted in
The modulated optical signal is communicated to the narrow band optical filter 215. The narrow band optical filter 215 of the DWDM transmission system 200 performs single side band (SSB) filtering of the modulated optical signal such that the converted rectangular frequency pulses have a normalized frequency deviation about a central wavelength of said filtered, modulated optical carrier. In accordance with the present invention, the SSB filtering may take place on either side (i.e., the right side or the left side) of the converted rectangular optical pulses. The SSB filtering of the present invention is implemented to generate a Minimum Shift Keying (MSK) modulated optical signal.
More specifically, in the DWDM transmission system 200 in accordance with an embodiment of the present invention, to improve the spectral efficiency, a frequency shift keying (FSK) modulation format is implemented by the coding and pulse shaping circuit 202 to modulate data onto the carrier signal of the DFB laser 210. That is, carrier signals from the DFB laser 210 are encoded such that a binary bit sequence is converted to a series of rectangular frequency pulses with a normalized frequency deviation about a central frequency equal to the bitrate of the binary bit sequence. For example, in one embodiment of the present invention, a binary bit sequence is converted to a series of rectangular frequency pulses with a normalized frequency deviation of 0.5 with respect to the bitrate. That is, defining f0 as the central frequency, a logical one is represented by f0+0.25 times the bitrate and a logical zero is represented by f0−0.25 times the bitrate.
Subsequently, MSK is obtained by shaping the transmitted frequency pulses with a narrow band filter, such as the narrow band optical filter 215 of
The advantage of the MSK coding of the present invention is its superior spectral efficiency over other currently utilized modulation formats. MSK coding allows for tight channel spacing and at least double or even quadruple transmission capacity may be achieved in a transmission system in accordance with the present invention, such as the DWDM transmission system 200 of
After the SSB filtering of the present invention using, for example said narrow band optical filter 215 of the DWDM transmission system 200 on a leading edge of the rectangular optical pulses, the remaining optical frequencies are described by, in one embodiment, ωo+πrb and ωo+2πrb. In an alternate embodiment of the present invention, the other side of the rectangular optical pulses may be filtered (i.e., the trailing edge of the rectangular optical pulses) by the narrow band optical filter 215 and as such, the remaining optical frequencies may be characterized as ωo−πrb and ωo−2πrb. In the latter embodiment, the output of the DWDM transmission system 200 of
In equations (5) and (6) above, in and qn depict the quadrature information symbols taking values 0 and 1 with equal probability.
The MSK signals from the narrow band optical filters 215 in each of the 2N channels of the DWDM transmission system 200 of
Furthermore, although the DWDM transmission system 200 of
Referring back to
where A depicts the field amplitude of the optical signal at the input of the MZI 262, ωc depicts the center frequency of the filtered, modulated optical signal, θ(t) depicts the phase modulation corresponding to the transmitted data, Θ depicts an arbitrary phase offset equally distributed over the interval [0, 2π], T=Tb depicts the duration of a single bit, and φ represents the phase change imposed by the adjustable optical phase shifter 267 in optical path P2. The phase in the optical path P2 is adjusted such that
where n is an arbitrary integer. As such, the optical power at the receiver 250, may be characterized according to equation nine (9), which follows:
In an alternate embodiment of the present invention balanced detection is applied at the output of the MZI. The inventor determined that balanced detection offers up to 3 dB improvement in receiver sensitivity over the single-branch detection depicted in the DWDM transmission system 200 of
In the balanced detection scheme of the embodiment of the present invention depicted in
In equation (10) above, the underscore in P_(t) reflects the fact that this power is complementary to P(t) because of the balanced detection. At the balanced receiver, P(t) and P_(t) are subtracted from each other leading to a signal with twice the amplitude as the case with single-ended detection described above, thus explaining the 3 dB advantage. It should be noted, however, that in alternate embodiments of the present invention, the phase in the second optical path P2 of the MZI 262 may be adjusted such that
where n is an arbitrary integer. In such an embodiment, the output of the power signals P(t) and P_(t) would be reversed.
The implementation of the MSK pre-coding results in smaller bandwidth requirements per channel in a DWDM transmission system in accordance with the present invention due, at least in part, to the condensed spectrum of the MSK modulation format compared to conventional on/off keying (OOK). For example, with MSK 99% of the power is contained within a bandwidth of 1.2rb whereas OOK requires 20.6rb for the same 99% of the power. As such, the number of channels in a DWDM transmission system of the present invention may be doubled or even quadrupled compared to a conventional DWDM transmission system, such as the conventional DWDM transmission system 100 of
While the forgoing is directed to various embodiments of the present invention, other and further embodiments of the invention may be devised without departing from the basic scope thereof. As such, the appropriate scope of the invention is to be determined according to the claims, which follow.
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