The present invention relates to an optical communication device, and more particularly, to an optical detector for direct detection of an optical signal and an optical signal detecting circuit comprising the optical detector.
The information era is moving fast toward the development of ubiquitous environments where various devices can be connected to information networks and users can be provided with convenient services anytime and anywhere. Wireless techniques are widely used for terminal connections in ubiquitous networks due to the convenience of codeless communication, mobility, location, etc.
In nowadays wireless communication technologies, an RF/MW wavelength band from several MHz to tens of GHz is mainly used, a speed of service is relatively low compared to wire technologies, the wavelength band should be used in common with a plurality of users and a plurality of applications such as satellite communications, military communications, etc., physical security of information is not provided, and output waves might harm the human body.
Optical wireless communication where information is communicated through space light propagation can be an alternative technology to overcome the above-described problems of the conventional wireless communication technologies. In this case, the receiving features of optical communication devices are determined by the received electric power. Methods of increasing the received electric power include increasing a transmitting amount of optical power, reducing a path loss, increasing the area of a receiver antenna or a lens, improving the noise features of a receiver, etc.
Referring to
The size of the aperture of the object lens 11 determines the absolute amount of light incident on the photo diode 13. Thus, the aperture of the objective lens 11 should be as large as possible in order to increase the sensitivity of the optical detector. However, an objective lens having a large aperture has a relatively long focal length and a relatively narrow field of view. These disadvantages can be addressed by using the ball lens 12. The ball lens 12 widens the field of view and reduces a physical thickness of the optical detector 10.
The photo diode 13 should have a broad depletion layer which absorbs light, a small parasitic capacitance for a broadband operation, and a high reverse-bias resistance for an efficient combining of the detected signal.
Referring to
In the above-mentioned conventional optical detector using a single photo diode, the aperture of the objective lens 11 should be large in order to collect more signal light. On the other hand, the lens having the large aperture is heavy and has a long focal length. Accordingly, the volume and the weight of optical detectors increase, and a high degree of precision is required in the manufacturing process. In addition, the field of view of the optical detector becomes narrow as the aperture of the objective lens becomes large.
To address these problems of the optical detector of
Referring to
When the operation mode of the optical signal detecting circuit is a ‘Select Best’ mode, the combiner 80 selects and outputs the amplified output signal of the unit optical detector that has the greatest S/N ratio, and the amplification gains of the LNAs 60-1, . . . , 60-N are set to a fixed value that is determined by a feature of an optical system. When the operation mode of the optical signal detecting circuit is a ‘Maximal Ratio Combining’ mode, the combiner 80 simply adds the output signals of the LNAs 60-1, . . . , 60-N, and the amplification gains of the LNAs 60-1, . . . , 60-N are determined proportionately to the S/N ratio of the output optical power of respective unit optical detectors. When the operation mode of the optical signal detecting circuit is an ‘Equal Gain Combining’ mode, the combiner 80 simply adds the output signals of the LNAs 60-1, . . . , 60-N, and the amplification gains of the LNAs 60-1, . . . , 60-N are set to a fixed value that is determined by a feature of the optical system.
The array-type optical detector of the optical signal detecting circuit of
However, the conventional optical signal detecting circuit using the array-type optical detectors requires as many low noise amplifiers (LNAs) 60-1, . . . , 60-N and S/N ratio detectors 70-1, . . . , 70-N as the number of the unit optical detectors 50-1, . . . , 50-N, and thus signal wirings for connecting them become complicated. In addition, when a digital combiner 80 is used, the optical signal detecting circuit should further include a plurality of analog-to-digital converters corresponding to the unit optical detectors.
The present invention provides an optical detector and an optical signal detecting circuit including the same, which address problems related to complicated signal wiring, a need for a plurality of low noise amplifiers and signal-to-noise ratio detectors, etc.
According to an aspect of the present invention, there is provided a multi-aperture optical detector including transmission lines having two output terminals; and a plurality of unit optical detectors which respectively have random polarities through the transmission lines and are connected in parallel, wherein optical signals from each of the unit optical detectors are added and output through the two output terminals.
The unit optical detector may include an objective lens condensing light; a ball lens condensing again the light that is condensed by the objective lens; and a photo diode (PD) receiving the light that is condensed by the ball lens and generating a photo detected electrical current.
The photo diode (PD) may include a depletion layer which receives light and generates an electric current, and a high reverse-bias voltage is applied to the depletion layer.
The transmission lines may be formed by using one of strip lines, microstrip lines, coaxial lines, unshielded twisted pair (UTP) wires, and shielded twisted pair (STP) wires.
The transmission lines may be formed by using elements of a lumped constant circuit including a resistance, a capacitor, and an inductor.
The two output terminals may output the same optical signals having the same phase.
A matched impedance circuit which is conjugate-matched to the output impedance may be formed at one of the two output terminals.
The output impulse response characteristic of the unit optical detectors may have a parallel combination pattern in which several column vectors or row vectors of a Hadamard matrix are combined, and the multi-aperture optical detector may separately detect optical pulse signals transmitted with intervals of column vectors or row vectors of the Hadamard matrix.
The output impulse response characteristic of the unit optical detectors may have a parallel combination pattern in which several column vectors or row vectors of an orthogonal matrix are combined, and the multi-aperture optical detector may separately detect optical pulse signals transmitted with intervals of column vectors or row vectors of the orthogonal matrix.
According to another aspect of the present invention, there is provided an optical signal detecting circuit including a multi-aperture optical detector of claim 1; two low noise amplifiers (LNAs) that are respectively connected to the two output terminals; two sample holders which sample and maintain the signals that are output from each of the LNAs; two analog to digital (A/D) converters which convert the signals that are sampled and maintained in each of the sample holders into digital signals; and an adder which adds the digital signals from each of the A/D converters.
The information transmission capacity of the optical signal detecting circuit in which N unit optical detectors may be used for the multi-aperture optical detector is as high as log2(1+N) times the information transmission capacity of the optical signal detecting circuit in which a single unit optical detector is used.
The multi-aperture optical detector or the optical signal detecting circuit of the present invention can have a physically compact small aperture while having a high operating bandwidth and can detect optical signals with a high sensitivity by connecting a plurality of unit optical detectors having a low optical sensitivity.
Also, the multi-aperture optical detector using N unit optical detectors has an information transmission capacity that is a maximum of log2(1+N) times that of the unit optical detector. Thus, the multi-aperture optical detector of the present invention can be used for optical wireless communicators, millimeter wave communicators, etc., by being combined with a ‘unipolar OFDM’ device or a conventional modulation and demodulation device.
Further, a highly sensitive optical wireless communicator using the multi-aperture optical detector of the present invention can be used in indoor broadband backbones, plant and industrial machine control backbones, and space communications in the future.
While the present invention has been particularly shown and described with reference to exemplary embodiments thereof, it will be understood by those of ordinary skill in the art that various changes in form and details may be made therein without departing from the spirit and scope of the present invention as defined by the following claims.
The above and other features and advantages of the present invention will become more apparent by describing in detail exemplary embodiments thereof with reference to the attached drawings in which:
The present invention will now be described more fully with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which exemplary embodiments of the invention are shown. Hereinafter, when an element is described to be disposed above another element, the element can be disposed directly on another element or a third element can be interposed between the two elements. Also, the thickness or the size of each element is exaggerated for a better understanding of the present invention, and parts that are not related to the description are omitted in the drawings. Like reference numerals used in the drawings refer to like elements. The terms used herein are only intended for explaining the present invention, and do not limit the meaning or scope of the present invention.
Referring to
When unit transmission lines 200-(2k−1)(odd) and 200-(2k)(even) constituting a transmission line are in a form of a microstrip, upper transmission lines 200-(2k−1) correspond to strip wires and lower transmission lines 200-(2k) correspond to ground planes, or vice versa. The transmission line can be formed in a conventional form of a coaxial line, an unshielded twisted pair (UTP) wire, a shielded twisted pair (STP) wire, or the like, or in a form of a π-type or a t-type lumped constant network including elements such as a resistor, a capacitor, and an inductor.
The following equations are satisfied
d
k=√{square root over (lkck)}
and
z
k=√{square root over (lk/ck)}
, where ck is a total capacitance constituting (k)th unit transmission lines 200-(2k−1) and 200-(2k), lk is a total indictor constituting the (k)th unit transmission lines 200-(2k−1) and 200-(2k), dk is an electric current transmission delay of the (k)th transmission lines 200-(2k−1) and 200-(2k), and zk is a total impedance. Also, the transmission line can be formed as a partial circuit of a filter having a band pass characteristic which is required in a system, an electric current transmission delay dk, and a line impedance zk.
An attaching polarity of unit optical detectors to the transmission lines can have a structure of a combination of several column vectors or row vectors of a Hadamard matrix or an orthogonal matrix so that the impulse response characteristic of the two output terminals can be defined by a combination of several column vectors or row vectors of a Hadamard matrix or an orthogonal matrix, and the multi-aperture optical detector can separate and detect optical pulse signals that are transmitted with an interval of the magnitude of the Hadamard matrix or the orthogonal matrix under an ideal channel environment or a channel environment that is equalized by an equalizer.
The multi-aperture optical detector of the current embodiment operates as follows.
An impulse optical signal incident on a (k)th unit optical detector 100-k is detected and changed into an impulse optical current having a magnitude of 2ak. The magnitude 2ak of the optical current is determined according to the characteristic of the unit optical detector, and a main determining factor is the size of the aperture of the objective lens which determines the quantity of the incident light. When the output impedance of the unit optical detector is much greater than the impedance of the transmission line, almost all the detected optical current flows to the two output terminals 300 and 350 and the magnitude is respectively ak. When impulse optical signals are applied to all unit optical detectors, an impulse response characteristic h1(t) of the left output terminal 300 and an impulse response characteristic hr(t) of the right output terminal 350 respectively satisfy t Equations (1) and (2).
When the electric current transmission delay of all the unit transmission lines is uniformly T0, the impulse response characteristics of the output terminals 300 and 350 are expressed by the following equation.
Equations (3) and (4) are the impulse responses of a typical finite impulse response (FIR) filter. Therefore, the impulse response characteristics of the optical detector of the present invention are the same as the operational characteristics of known FIR filters.
Hereinafter, the effects of the multi-aperture optical detector of the present invention are described in comparison to the conventional single-aperture optical detector.
For a simple and general explanation, the response characteristic of the multi-aperture optical detector of the present invention is represented by Equation (3). Equation (3) is a permutation of the impulse over a time interval T0. Thus, the impulse response can be written as a row vector,
x=[a0 a1 . . . aN-1 0 . . . 0].
That is, the impulse response h1(t) is represented by a row vector
where
exp(−j2π(g−1)(h−1)/n).
If the operating band of the unit optical detectors is sufficiently broader than ½T0, the maximum speed of transmitting information, Ip, of the optical detector of the present invention is written as Equation (6) according to the well-known Shannon's Law, and the maximum speed of transmitting information is called ‘Shannon performance’ herein. In Equation (6), ci is a noise current in the optical detector at a frequency of i. In Equation (6), m is n/2 when n is an even number, and m is (n−1)/2 when n is an odd number.
The maximum limit of the Shannon performance is derived using the inequality relationship between the arithmetical mean and the geometrical mean and the Parseval's theorem. It is supposed that thermal noise vector elements are white noise and thus have a unit value. Therefore, when the noise current satisfies
|ci|2=1
for all frequency, the maximum limit of the Shannon performance of the present invention is inversely proportional to the electric current transmission delay T0 of the unit transmission line and directly proportional to the log of the square of the total light receiving area of the optical detector, and is expressed as Equation (7). In Equation (7), a light receiving area bi corresponds to a magnitude of the detected optical current ai as explained below. When the arithmetical mean and the geometrical mean are equal to each other, the left and right terms in Equation (7) become equal only when
with respect to all wavelengths. That is, when the wavelength response characteristic uniformly satisfies the equation
the optical detector of the present invention can have the mathematical maximum limit of the Shannon performance.
The condition for the mathematical maximum limit of the Shannon performance can satisfy Equation (5) only when a single unit optical detector is installed in
The optimal performance which can be obtained by the optical detector warding to the present invention is derived below. If the maximum possible response of a unit optical detector which can be embodied is expressed as ‘1 ’ and the unit optical detector having a bandwidth sufficiently broader than ½T0, the strength of the response characteristic of the unit optical detectors that can be installed in the circuit of the present invention in
|ci|2=1 ,
the Shannon performance of Equation (6) can be expressed as Equation (9). In Equation (10),
Equation (8) for the strength of the unit optical detectors that are installable and Equation (9) for the Shannon performance constitute a typical non-linear optimization problem in which variable values are limited. That is, the optimization of performance of the present invention becomes a matter of seeking a minimum value for Equation (9) under the condition that Equation (8) is satisfied. Thus, Equations (8) and (9) are expressed using the Lagrange function as Equation (11). In Equation (11), the Lagrange variable vectors
A necessary condition hat the Lagrange function defined by Equation (11) has a minimum value is given by Equation (12). Therefore, if the variable vectors of the optimal point, at which Equation (11) has the minimum value, are
∇x
The necessary conditions for the optimal point in Equation (12) are classified into three groups when applying the necessary conditions for ‘Karush-Kuhn-Tucker’ non-linear optimization according to the values of the elements of the vector
Two groups are expressed as Equation (13) and Equation (14). Equation (13), which is the first group of the necessary conditions for the optimal point, represents a boundary condition −1<aj<1, that is, represents cases where the element values of the vector
∇x
−∇x
The partial differential function
are always greater than ‘1.’ Accordingly,
where dk is a particular constant greater than ‘1.’ Also, the matrix sum
consists of the sum of the element matrices
is a full rank matrix, and no Null space exists. Therefore, the point
The second group, which is a necessary condition for the optimal point represented by Equation (14), represents cases where
The third group relates to the conditions where a part of the elements of
include all basis vector elements of the matrix
Therefore, when a part of the elements of
is ‘0’ exists. Thus, no optimal point where a part of the elements of the Shannon performance optimal point
To conclude the above-demonstrated results, the maximum Shannon performance in the present invention can be obtained when the circuit of the present invention is constituted by the unit optical detectors satisfying
The comparative impulse response vector of the conventional optical detector has a shape in which only one element of the impulse response vector
z
k=√{square root over (lk/ck)},
that is, the optical detector has a transmission line characteristic impedance value irrespective of the number of connected unit optical detectors. Therefore, the magnitude of thermal noise of the optical detector of the present invention is the same as that of the conventional unit detector.
[−1+1−1−1−1+1−1−1+1−1−1−1−1+1+1+1], [+1−1+1+1+1−1+1+1−1+1+1+1+1−1−1−1], [−1−1−1+1+1+1+1−1+1+1−1+1+1+1−1+1], [+1+1+1−1−1−1−1+1−1−1+1−1−1−1+1−1], [−1+1−1−1+1−1+1+1+1−1−1−1+1−1−1−1], [+1−1+1+1−1+1−1−1−1+1+1+1−1+1+1+1], [−1−1−1+1−1−1−1+1+1+1−1+1−1−1+1−1], [+1+1+1−1+1+1+1−1−1−1+1−1+1+1−1+1] Equation (16)
Referring to
The output terminals 300 and 350 of the multi-aperture optical detector 400 which is installed in the optical signal detecting circuit of
When Equation (18) is satisfied, the optical detection electrical signals that are output from the multi-aperture optical detector 400 satisfy Equation (17) and can be added by the adder of the optical signal detecting circuit of
The optical signal detection circuit of the present invention can effectively increase the strength of signals by adding the electrical signals that are detected by N unit optical detectors using only two amplifiers, sample holders, A/D converter and a single digital adder.
The above-described multi-aperture optical detector or the optical signal detecting circuit of the present invention can have a physically compact small aperture while having a high operating bandwidth and can detect optical signals with a high sensitivity by connecting a plurality of unit optical detectors having a low optical sensitivity.
Also, the multi-aperture optical detector using N unit optical detectors has an information transmission capacity that is a maximum of log2(1+N) times that of the unit optical detector. Thus, the multi-aperture optical detector of the present invention can be used for optical wireless communicators, millimeter wave communicators, etc., by being combined with a ‘unipolar OFDM’ device or a conventional modulation and demodulation device.
Further, a highly sensitive optical wireless communicator using the multi-aperture optical detector of the present invention can be used in indoor broadband backbones, plant and industrial machine control backbones, and space communications in the future.
While the present invention has been particularly shown and described with reference to exemplary embodiments thereof, it will be understood by those of ordinary skill in the art that various changes in form and details may be made therein without departing from the spirit and scope of the present invention as defined by the following claims.
The present invention relates to an optical communication device, and more particularly, to an optical detector for direct detection of an optical signal and an optical signal detecting circuit comprising the optical detector. The multi-aperture optical detector or the optical signal detecting circuit of the present invention can have a physically compact small aperture while having a high operating bandwidth and can detect optical signals with a high sensitivity by connecting a plurality of unit optical detectors having a low optical sensitivity.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
10-2006-0122545 | Dec 2006 | KR | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
PCT/KR07/06286 | 12/5/2007 | WO | 00 | 6/4/2009 |