This application is based upon and claims priority to earlier filed Japanese Patent Application No. 2018-248337 filed Dec. 28, 2018, which is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.
The present invention relates to an optical communication apparatus, a server apparatus, an optical transport system, and an optical communication method.
In response to growing demand for expansion of data transmission volume, digital coherent techniques have been widely spreading to achieve high-speed high-capacity optical communications. With a digital coherent technique, a received light signal is detected using a local oscillation light beam, and digital processing is applied after optical-to-electrical conversion of the detected light signal to compensate for waveform distortion generated on the optical transmission path. Since individual chromatic dispersion compensators as well as optical amplifiers for compensating for the insertion loss, which have been required in a conventional technique, are omitted, the system can be downsized and stabilized, while achieving cost reduction.
For a next-generation optical transponder equipped with a digital signal processor, adaptive modulation schemes are discussed. In adaptive modulation, a bandwidth or a bit rate of a network is selective and the system will operate with a modulation scheme suitable to the selected bit rate. However, in reality, it is difficult to use appropriately adaptive modulation because the spectrum width expands upon increase of a baud rate responsive to an increased bit rate. Besides, baud rate is limited due to limit in speed of a digital-to-analog converter (DAC), and it cannot be increased beyond the limit of the DAC speed.
An optical communication technique capable of maintaining a transmission quality and suppressing an increase in power consumption is desired when performing adaptive modulation in accordance with a bit rate.
A new modulation scheme, 4-dimensional m-ary amplitude, n-ary phase shift keying (4D-mAnPSK) is proposed. See, for example, Japanese Laid-open Patent Publication No. 2017-513347 (JP 2017-513347 A). It is proposed to use, for example, 4D-2A8PSK and 4D-2A16QAM in place of conventional DP-8QAM and DP-16QAM.
In one aspect of the invention, an optical communication apparatus includes
The object and advantages of the invention will be realized and attained by means of the elements and combinations particularly pointed out in the claims. It is to be understood that both the foregoing general description and the following detailed description are exemplary and explanatory and are not restrictive to the invention as claimed.
In an embodiment, when a bit rate equal to or greater than a predetermined value is selected, an optical signal is transmitted in a first modulation scheme (for example, a quadrature amplitude modulation (QAM)). When a bit rate which is less than the predetermined value is selected, an optical signal is transmitted in a second modulation scheme (for example, 4D-mAnPSK) that has a higher performance of fiber optic data transfer, thereby achieving adaptive modulation in accordance with the bit rate.
Prior to describing particulars of the structures and methods of the embodiments, explanation is made to technical problems in the conventional 4D-mAnPSK found by the inventors, with reference to
4D-mAnPSK provides “m” amplitude levels and “n” optical phases using four light components, XI (X-polarized wave, in-phase component), XQ (X-polarized wave, quadrature component), YI (Y-polarized wave, in-phase component), and YQ (Y-polarized wave, quadrature component). In order to achieve a higher bit rate over 400 Gbps, the “m” value or the “n” value of 4D-mAnPSK needs to be increased. Because the 4D-mAnPSK scheme has a greater number of signal points on the constellation plane (i.e., I-Q plane) compared to a QAM scheme, the distance between constellation points becomes shorter as the number of bits per symbol increases, and the transmitter will exceed the margin not meeting with the required conditions faster than QAM schemes. Besides, the amount of computation for determining a constellation point is greater than QAM schemes, and the limit of power consumption is easily breached when the level of multilevel in modulation (i.e., the number of bits per symbol) increases.
Comparing between DP-8QAM and 4D-2A8PSK, there are a greater number of constellation points on the I-Q plane with 40-2A8PSK. When the level of modulation or the number of bits per symbol is increased, the distance between constellation points becomes less than the threshold earlier in 4D-2A8PSK.
In
In the 4D-2A8PSK of
Returning to
However, 4D-2A8PSK has less margin in the distance between signal constellation points, and in reality, it cannot accommodate increase in the level of modulation. In contrast, DP-aQAM can increase the level of modulation compared to 4D-2ABPSK.
In
For this reason, the distances from the measured received signal to all the constellation points are calculated, and the constellation point with the minimum distance is selected as the received data. In k-bits/symbol modulation, 2 k comparisons are required. Using 6-bits/symbol 4D-2A8PSK, 26, namely 64 comparisons are performed to determine the constellation point with the minimum distance. The amount of computation is heavy compared to that in DP-aQAM modulation.
As illustrated in
To meet with such customer demands and solve the technical problems described above with reference to
The FPGA 11 has a bit rate receiving circuit 111 and a modulation scheme determination circuit 112. The bit rate receiving circuit 111 receives bit rate configuration information via the input/output interface 14. The modulation scheme determination circuit 112 refers to associated information 116 saved in the memory 16 and determines a modulation scheme in accordance with the bit rate. The determined modulation scheme is input to the DSP 15. The FPGA 11 and the memory 16 may form a modulation scheme selector part 110, which will be described below.
Upon input of an electrical data signal for transmission, the DSP 15 performs error correction coding, maps the data onto the constellation according to the specified modulation scheme, and produces a signal representing the logic value of the data signal. The signal is subjected to digital-to-analog conversion and applied to the signal electrode of the optical modulator 13.
The light beam emitted from the light source 12 and incident on the optical modulator 13 from the light source 12 is modulated by an analog drive signal. The modulated light signal is output to the optical network.
The configuration of
As long as the modulation scheme is selected in accordance with the bit rate from the associated information 116, any appropriate configuration may be employed.
For instance, at a bit rate of 200 Gbps, 4D-2A8PSK is employed. In this case, signal transfer is carried out at an information amount of 6 bits per symbol and with a better data transfer performance (for example, with a higher tolerance to fiber optic nonlinearity).
When the bit rate is 400 Gbps or higher, DP-aQAM may be adopted. For example, at a bit rate of 400 Gbps, DP-16QAM is used. In this case, a data amount of 8 bits/symbol (4×2 bits per symbol) can be transmitted by one modulation. At the bit rate of 500 Gbps, DP-32QAM may be used, and at 600 Gbps, DP-64QAM may be used. Even when the bit rate increases to this extent, the distance between signal constellation points still has a margin, and the level in multilevel modulation can be raised until approaching the threshold limit. Besides, the amount of calculation for determining a constellation point is almost unchanged even though the level in multilevel modulation is increased. Accordingly, increase in power consumption can be suppressed.
At 300 Gbps, in order to carry out 7-bits/symbol modulation, hybrid modulation combining, for example, 4D-2A8PSK and DP-16QAM may be employed. Performing 6-bits/symbol 4D-2A8PSK and 8-bits/symbol DP-16QAM at a one-to-one ratio in a time sharing manner, 7-bits/symbol modulation is achieved on average.
In place of hybrid modulation, 7-bits/symbol 4D-2A8PSK scheme (abbreviated to “7b4D-2A8PSK”) may be used. In 7b4D-2A8PSK, bit B[0] to bit B[6] are modulation bits, bit B[7] is a parity bit with an inverted value of bit B[6], and these bits are distributed on the Poincare sphere. For more information about 7b4D-2A8PSK, please see Kojima et al, “S and 7 bit/symbol 4D Modulation Formats Based on 2A8 PSK”, Proceedings, ECOC 2016-42nd, Sep. 18, 2016.
The modulation scheme selector part 110 includes a bit rate input part 141, a modulation scheme determination part 142, and a modulation scheme instructing part 145. The modulation scheme determination part 142 includes a modulation scheme searching part 143 and an associated information saving part 146. The information saved in the associated information saving part 146 may be table information as illustrated in
Based upon the bit rate received at the bit rate input part 141, the modulation scheme searching part 143 searches in the associated information saving part 146 to specify the modulation scheme corresponding to the bit rate. The modulation scheme instructing part 145 outputs the specified modulation scheme to the DSP 15.
When a function is saved in the associated information saving part 146, the function may describe the relation to select DP-aQAM when the bit rate is equal to or greater than the first threshold value, and select 4D-mAnPSK when the bit rate is less than the second threshold value that is small than the first threshold value. The function may further describe so as to select a hybrid scheme of DP-aQAM and 4D-mAnPSK when the bit rate is between the first threshold value and the second threshold value.
In the optical transmitter 10, an appropriate modulation scheme is selected according to the bit rate, and the data transfer quality is maintained satisfactorily, while suppressing the power consumption from increasing.
The FPGA 21 includes a bit rate receiving circuit 121 and a modulation scheme determination circuit 122. The bit rate receiving circuit 121 receives bit rate configuration information via the I/O interface 24. The modulation scheme determination circuit 122 searches in the associated information 126 saved in the memory 26, of which the information describes the relationship between bit rate and modulation scheme, to determine a modulation scheme in accordance with the bit rate. The selected modulation scheme is supplied to the DSP 25.
As in the optical transmitter 10, the FPGA 21 and the memory 26 may form a functional block of the modulation scheme selector part 110. When the PPGA 21 has a built-in memory, the modulation scheme selector part 110 may be formed by the FPGA 21 solely.
The 90-degree optical hybrid circuit 22 detects a received light signal using a local oscillation light beam and outputs components of XI, XQ, YI, and YQ. Each of the XI, XQ, YI, and YQ components are detected as a photocurrent by the associated photodetector 23, and converted into an analog voltage by a transimpedance amplifier or the like. The analog signal is then digitally sampled, and input to the DSP 25.
The DSP 25 performs digital signal processing including compensation for chromatic dispersion and waveform distortion on the input digital signal. The DSP 25 then allocates the digitally compensated data onto the corresponding constellation points according to the selected modulation scheme, and demaps the constellation points to a bit sequence. When DP-aQAM has been selected, it is simply determined to which area on the constellation plane the coordinate point of the detected signal belongs, and the amount of calculation is small. When 4D-mAnPSK has been selected, a constellation point the closest from the coordinate point of the detected signal is determined in the three-dimensional space. Although, in this case, the amount of computation increases, the data transfer quality including tolerance to fiber optic nonlinearity is maintained at high quality. The acquired bit sequence is then subjected to error correction and decoding, and output as an electrical signal.
In the optical receiver 20, a modulation scheme is selected according to the currently configured bit rate. For the adaptive modulation, increase in power consumption can be suppressed, while maintaining the data transfer quality satisfactorily.
The optical transceiver 30 is an example of the optical communication apparatus, and it has an FPGA 31, an electrical to optical conversion circuit (denoted as “E/O” in the figure) 32, and an optical to electrical conversion circuit (denoted as “O/E” in the figure) 33, an input and output interface (denoted as “I/O” in the figure) 34, a DSP 35, a memory 36, and a light source 37.
The FPGA 31, the DSP 35, and the memory 36 may be shared between the transmission block and the reception block. The FPGA 31 has a bit rate receiving circuit 131 and a modulation scheme determination circuit 132. The bit rate receiving circuit 131 receives bit rate configuration information via the I/O 34. The modulation scheme determination circuit 132 searches for the associated field of the associated information 136 stored in the memory 36, and it determines a modulation scheme in accordance with the bit rate. The determined modulation scheme is supplied to the DSP 35.
The FPGA 31 and the memory 36 may form a functional block of the modulation scheme selector part 110. When the FPGA 31 has a built-in memory, the associated information 136 may be saved in the built-in memory of the FPGA 31. In the latter case, the modulation scheme selector part 110 may be implemented solely by the FPGA 31.
For the transmission block, the DSP 35 maps a data signal to be transmitted to the constellation points on the I-Q plane according to the configured modulation scheme, and generates digital signals according to the logical values of the data signal. At the E/O 32, the digital signals are converted into high-frequency analog drive signals and input to an optical modulator.
A light beam emitted from the light source 37 is incident on the optical modulator of the E/O 32, modulated by the analog drive signals, and then output as optical signals.
For the reception block, the DSP 35 performs digital signal processing such as compensation for chromatic dispersion and waveform distortion on the signal detected by the O/E 33 and digitally sampled. The received signal having been subjected to the digital compensation is distributed onto the constellation plane, and constellation points are determined according to the modulation scheme selected by the modulation scheme determination circuit 132. Then, data bits are recovered and output as electrical signals after error correction and decoding.
In the optical transceiver 30, a modulation scheme is selected adaptively according to the bit rate. For the adaptive modulation, increase in power consumption can be suppressed, while maintaining the data transfer quality satisfactorily.
The operation flow of
For example, when the bit rate is 400 Gbps, the table 113 is retrieved and the modulation scheme of DP-16QAM associated with 400 Gbps is selected. When the bit rate is 200 Gbps, the table 113 is retrieved and the modulation scheme of 4D-2A8PSK associated with 200 Gbps is selected.
The modulation scheme instructing part 145 instructs the DSP 35 to operate at the determined modulation scheme (S15). The DSP 35 maps the inputted data signal onto the constellation plane according to the modulation scheme to generate electrical modulation signals for data transmission. Also, the received optical signal is converted into electrical signals, and the electrical signals are distributed onto the constellation plane to estimate the constellation points for data recovery.
With this method, a modulation scheme is selected adaptively at the optical communication apparatus according to the bit rate. Increase of power consumption is suppressed for the adaptive modulation, while maintaining the data transfer quality satisfactory.
In this modulation scheme, constellations of the X and Y polarizations are controlled such that the radius of the constellation points of the Y polarization becomes r2 when the radius (i.e., the amplitude) of the constellation points of the X-polarization is r1, and such that the amplitude of the constellation points of the Y polarization becomes r1 when the amplitude of the constellation points of the X polarization is r2. Under this control, the power can be maintained constant during one modulation (i.e., for one symbol).
When the number of circles is three, the value “m” of 4D-mAnPSK becomes 3 and signal constellation points are distributed at three levels of amplitude. In this case, when a first circle is allocated to one polarization at the first radius (amplitude), then the second and third radii other that the first radius are allocated to the other polarization, and constellation points are controlled such that the power is maintained constant for one symbol.
First, bit rate configuration information is received at the bit rate input part 141 (S21). Then, the modulation scheme searching part 143 refers to the associated information 146 and determines whether the received bit rate is equal to or greater than the first threshold Th1 (S22). When the bit rate is equal to or greater than the first threshold Th1 (Yes in S22), DP-aQAM is selected (S23). When the bit rate is less than the first threshold Th1 (No in S22), 4D-mAnPSK is selected (S24). An instruction is supplied to the DSP to operate at the modulation scheme selected in step S23 or S24 (S25).
For instance, when the designated bit rate is equal to or greater than 400 Gbps, a DP-aQAM equal to or higher than DP-16QAM is selected. When the specified bit rate is less than the 400 Gbps, a 4D-mAnPSK scheme, such as 7b4D-2A8PSK, 4D-2ABPSK, etc. is selected. In place of the above-described function, another function that describes the relationship between the bit rate and the number of bits per symbol (or the amount of information of a symbol) may be used.
With this method of modulation scheme selection, optical communication apparatus can select adaptively a modulation scheme according to the bit rate, and increase of power consumption is suppressed for the adaptive modulation, while maintaining the data transfer quality satisfactory.
First, bit rate configuration information is received at the bit rate input part 141 (S31). The modulation scheme searching part 143 refers to the associated information 146 and determines whether the received bit rate is whether the received bit rate is equal to or greater than the first threshold Th1 (S32). When the bit rate is equal to or greater than the first threshold Th1 (Yes in S32), DP-aQAM is selected (S33).
When the bit rate is less than the first threshold Th1 (No in S32), it is further determined whether the received bit rate is equal to or less than the second threshold Th2 that is smaller than the first threshold Th1 (S34). When the bit rate is equal to or less than the second threshold Th2 (Yes in S23), 4D-mAnPSK scheme is selected (S35).
When the bit rate is between the second threshold Th2 and the first threshold Th1 (No in S34), a hybrid modulation scheme combining DP-aQAM and 4D-mAnPSK is selected (S36). An instruction is supplied to the DSP to have the DSP operate at the modulation scheme selected in S33, S35, or S36 (S37).
For instance, when the designated bit rate is equal to or greater than 400 Gbps, a DP-aQAM equal to or higher than DP-16QAM is selected. When the bit rate is equal to or less than the 200-Gbps, a 4D-mAnPSK scheme such as 4D-2A8PSK is selected depending on the bit rate value.
When the bit rate is between 200 Gbps and 400 Gbps, hybrid modulation combining DP-16QAM and 4D-2A8PSK may be selected.
With this method of modulation scheme selection, an optical communication apparatus can select a modulation scheme adaptively in accordance with the bit rate. Power consumption for adaptive modulation is suppressed from increasing, while maintaining the satisfactory data transfer quality.
The network management server 40 notifies the optical transceivers 30A and 30B of the bit rate configured in the network. The bit rate may be set by a network operator based upon the performances of optical transceivers 30A and 308, the states of the optical transmission paths 61 and 62, a required transmission speed, and so on.
The optical transceivers 30A and 30B select a modulation scheme in accordance with the bit rate, and operate according to the selected modulation scheme. In other words, based upon the selected modulation scheme, electrical signals are converted into optical signals which are output to the optical network, and optical signals received from the optical network are converted into electrical signals from which the data are recovered. The optical transceivers 30A and 30B may be a part of a transponder which is an example of the optical communication apparatus.
The client-side module 52 serves as an interface to a client device, and it converts an optical signal input from a fiber optic Ethernet (registered trademark) cable into an electrical signal and supplies the electrical signal to the framer/deframer 51. In the reverse process, the client-side module 52 receives an electrical signal from the framer/deframer 51, converts the electric signal into an optical signal, and outputs the optical signal toward the client side.
The framer/deframer 51 converts the electric signal of the client-side format into a frame format of the Optical Transport Network (OTN) format and inputs the converted signal to the DSP of the optical transceiver 30. In the reverse process, the OTN electrical signal output from the DSP of the optical transceiver 30 is converted into an electrical signal of the client-side format, and supplied to the client side module 52.
Two or more transponders 50 may be incorporated together with a wavelength multiplexer, a wavelength selective switch, or the like, into a wavelength division multiplexing (WDM) transport equipment. In this case, the optical transceiver 30 of each of the transponders 50 operates at the optimum modulation scheme for the bit rate configured according to the optical transmission path to be connected. Data transfer quality is maintained satisfactorily, while suppressing increase of power consumption.
The network management server 40 is formed of a processor and a memory, and it includes a bit rate input part 41, a modulation scheme determination part 42 and a modulation scheme transmission part 43, and it has associated information 46.
The bit rate input part 41 receives a bit rate inputted by, for example, a network operator. The modulation scheme determination part 42 refers to the associated information 46 to determine a modulation scheme according to the bit rate. The modulation scheme transmission part 43 transmits the determined modulation scheme as modulation scheme configuration information to the optical transceiver 30C.
The bit rate input part 41 may be implemented by an input interface such as a keyboard, a mouse, a touch panel, or the like. The modulation scheme determination part 42 is implemented by a logic device such as an FPGA or a microprocessor. The associated information 46 may be saved in the memory. The modulation scheme transmission part 43 may be implemented by a network interface that provides a connection to the optical transceiver 30C in the network.
The modulation scheme receiving circuit 135 of the optical transceiver 30C receives the modulation scheme configuration information from the network management server 40 and supplies it to the DSP 35. The DSP 35 is configured with the modulation scheme and it operates under this modulation scheme. The data signal to be transmitted is mapped on the constellation plane according to the modulation scheme to generate modulated optical signals. The DSP 35 also distributes the received signal detected by the PD23 onto the constellation plane and determines the signal constellation points according to the modulation scheme.
The operations of the light source 12, the optical modulator 13, the 90 degree optical hybrid circuit 22 and the photo detector (denoted as “PD” in the figure) 23 of the optical transceiver 30C are the same as those explained with reference to
With this configuration, the optical transceiver 30C simply operates according to the designated modulation scheme, and it can maintain the data transport quality satisfactorily, while suppressing increase of power consumption.
Although the present invention has been described based upon particular embodiments, the present invention is not limited to these examples. The modulation scheme selector part 110 may be implemented by a DSP instead of an FPGA. The correspondence relation between bit rates and modulation schemes is not limited to the example of
The modulation scheme adaptively selected by the optical communication apparatus or the server apparatus is not limited to QAM and 4D-mAnPSK schemes. Any type of a first modulation scheme with a sufficient distance between signal constellation points and with the amount of calculation for signal point determination not changing significantly in spite of increase in the degree of multilevel modulation, or any type of a second modulation scheme with a higher transfer performance may be used, depending on the bit rate on the network side.
Either one or both of the network management server 40 and the optical communication apparatus (such as the transponder 50, the optical transceiver 30, or the like) connected to the optical network may determine a modulation scheme adaptively according to the currently configured bit rate. In this case, optical signals are transmitted and received between nodes according to the determined modulation scheme. The bit rate receiving circuit 111 of the optical transmitter 10, the bit rate receiving circuit 121 of the optical receiver 20, and the bit rate receiving circuit 131 of the optical transceiver 30 may be implemented by an I/O interface or any other suitable input interface that can acquire information about transfer conditions including channel spacing and bit rate.
All examples and conditional language recited herein are intended for pedagogical purposes to aid the reader in understanding the invention and the concepts contributed by the inventor to furthering the art, and are to be construed as being without limitation to such specifically recited examples and conditions, nor does the organization of such examples in the specification relate to a showing of superiority or inferiority of the invention. Although the embodiments of the present inventions have been described in detail, it should be understood that the various changes, substitutions, and alterations could be made hereto without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
2018-248337 | Dec 2018 | JP | national |