Optical node including three-stage optical amplifier with automatic gain and level control

Information

  • Patent Grant
  • 6621625
  • Patent Number
    6,621,625
  • Date Filed
    Wednesday, December 13, 2000
    23 years ago
  • Date Issued
    Tuesday, September 16, 2003
    21 years ago
Abstract
An optical node and method for operation in an ultra long haul backbone network that provides DWDM optical transmission and wavelength networking functionalities are disclosed. The optical node is designed with capabilities for amplification, dispersion compensation, and add/drop functionalities. In one embodiment, three erbium-doped fiber amplifier (EDFA) are cascaded using low nonlinearity and low loss dispersion compensating module (DCM).
Description




FIELD OF THE INVENTION




The present invention relates to the field of optical networks, and particularly to constructing an optical node in ultra long haul backbone networks.




DESCRIPTION OF RELATED ART




Next generation of backbone networks may interconnect optical nodes by using dense wavelength division multiplexer (DWDM), ultra long haul regeneration free transmission, optical cross connect (OXC), or optical add drop multiplexer (OADM) technologies. The drive is less for the sheer capacity boost but more for the fundamental shift in replacing the voice-centric, hard-to-scale, and slow-to-provision digital network with a data-centric, scalable, and easy-to-provision optical network.




An optical node typically performs the following basic functions. The first function is optical 2R (regenerate and reshape), including high-power and low-noise optical amplifications and dispersion management. The second function is DWDM maintenances, including gain equalization and dispersion slope control. The third function is 100% wavelength processing, including 100% wavelength manipulation such as OADM or OXC. OXC must have all optical bypassing to ensure the full transparency of the optical layer. The fourth function is wavelength monitoring, which comprises monitoring of channel wavelength, optical signal-to-noise ratio (OSNR), and all other optical intelligence. Power consumption and channel density are also significant [figure-of-merit] figures-of-merit. A shortcoming in a conventional optical node is the lack of capabilities to deal with high-power and low-noise optical amplifications, dispersion slope control, gain equalization, OADM, and OXC all the same time.




Accordingly, it is desirable to have an optical node that has the functional power, features, and performance for operation in ultra long haul networks.




SUMMARY




The invention discloses an optical node for operation in an ultra long haul backbone network that provides DWDM optical transmission and wavelength networking functionalities. The optical node is designed with capabilities for amplification, dispersion compensation, and add/drop functionalities. In one embodiment, three erbium-doped fiber amplifiers (EDFA) are cascaded using low nonlinearity and low loss dispersion compensating module (DCM).




Advantageously, the optical node in the present invention produces a more efficient power consumption and channel density. The present invention also advantageously does not rely on, but is complementary to, other ultra long haul technologies, e.g. Raman amplification, EDFA band splitting, and return-to-zero (RZ) coding.




Other structures and methods are disclosed in the detailed description below. This summary does not purport to define the invention. The invention is defined by the claims.











BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS





FIG. 1

is an architectural diagram illustrating an optical node configuration for ultra long haul backbone networks in accordance with the present invention.





FIG. 2

is an architectural diagram illustrating a recirculating loop for verifying the integrated long haul processor in accordance with the present invention.





FIG. 3

is a flow diagram illustrating the process for operating an optical node in an ultra long haul network in accordance with the present invention.





FIG. 4A

is a graphical diagram illustrating a measurement of the optical signal-to-noise ratio for six channels at 3000 km in accordance with the present invention;

FIG. 4B

is a graphical diagram illustrating an eye diagram of six channels at 3000 km in accordance with the present invention.











DETAILED DESCRIPTION





FIG. 1

is an architectural diagram illustrating an optical node configuration


10


for ultra long haul backbone networks. The optical node


10


includes three stages of optical amplifier gain block: a G


1


amplifier


12


, a G


2


amplifier


15


, and a G


3


amplifier


17


. Apart from the optical amplification blocks there are control loops that are required to construct an optical node. Automatic gain control/automatic level control AGC/ALC blocks are control loops to ensure that a node is operating properly. Each G


1


and G


2


has its own ALC. Three loops are defined in the optical node


10


. First, automatic gain control/automatic level control (AGC/ALC)


19




a


provision takes the input and the output levels and uses the error to control the total gain and output level of the whole optical node by adjusting the third stage G


3




17


via pump control input


19




c


. The other two loops are local loops. ALC


13


controls the output level of the first stage G


1




12


via an input


13




a


. In one embodiment of the invention, the first stage G


1




12


is an optical fiber amplifier OFA) such as an erbium-doped fiber amplifier (EDFA), and input


13




a


is a pump control input used to control the power output of the laser pump in the OFA. ALC


16


controls the output level of the second stage G


2




15


via a pump control input


16




a


. In one embodiment of the invention, the second stage G


2




15


is an optical fiber amplifier (OFA) such as an erbium-doped fiber amplifier (EDFA), and input


16




a


is a pump control input used to control the power output of the laser pump in the OFA.




An OADM/OXC has an access of 15 dB loss budget between G


2




15


and G


3




17


. A dispersion compensation module (DCM) and a dynamic gain equalizer (DGE)


14


is an element between G


1




12


and G


2




15


that operates with the following features features: tunable DCM, dispersion slope compensation (DSC), dynamic gain equalization (DGE), optical performance monitoring (OPM), and low nonlinearity. Preferably, the nonlinearity and insertion loss of the passive elements (DCM, DSC, DGE, OPM, and OADM/OXC) are very low, for the optical node architecture to operate effectively. Low nonlinearity implies that very high optical output power from G


1




12


can be launched into DCM portion


14


, without invoking optical nonlinearities that may cause unwanted signal distortion. This, in turn, allows the first stage G


1




12


to impose very high gain on an incoming optical signal via pin


11




a


. In tandem amplification such as this three-stage chain, high-gain first stage in G


1




12


ensures that the overall noise of the chain is dominated by first stages G


1




12


. To characterize this in another way, once the G


1




12


operates at very high gain with a low-noise figure, the overall noise figure of the G


1


/G


2


/G


3


chain is similar to that of the G


1




12


, with little noise degradation resulting from signal propagation through the G


2




15


and the G


3




17


. Fiber-based DCM reaches nonlinearities at about 0 dBm power per channel. One may not put a conventional DCF in between the G


1




12


and the G


2




15


without suffering severe degradation in the overall noise figure, because the G


1




12


can operate only at moderate gain. If a DCM product is not fiber based, it can tolerate very high optical power without invoking nonlinearities. For the same reason, insertion losses of all the passive components should not be large compared to available gains from the G


1




12


and the G


2




15


. A suitable DCM has loss <10 dB and 100% 32 channel OADM with loss for express channels 5 dB. A suitable commercial product for implementing a DCM is a PowerShaper™, made by Avanex Corporation™.




The optical node


10


, with OADM/OXC access and built-in DCM/DSC/DGE/OPM, is designed to offer all the functionalities required by an ultra long haul backbone network, instead of focusing only on transport functionalities, as is the case for most conventional optical line amplifiers. The optical node


10


expands current two-stage line amplifier to three-stage, with functional characteristics of having low nonlinearity and low loss DCM. The resultant extra 15 dB access for OADM/OXC is necessary for wavelength networking, and it costs less than the 15 dB gain available from distributed Raman amplification, which has a newer deployment stage than EDFA technology, and has intrinsically poorer energy conversion efficiency than EDFA technology.





FIG. 2

is an architectural diagram illustrating a recirculating loop


20


for verifying the integrated long haul processor. The recirculating loop


20


has three optical nodes, a first node


21


, a second node


22


, and a third node


23


. The third node


23


has both a DCM and +15 dB


26


, while the first node


21


and the second node


22


do not have a DCM, but a 15 dB loss adjustment


24


in the first node


21


and a 15 dB adjustment


25


in the second node


22


. The 15 dB represents the equivalent of inserting an add/drop multiplexer. A loss equivalent of 15 dB is inserted in placed of an actual add/drop multiplexer. A suitable DCM is a PowerShaper™, which has −5000 ps/nm dispersion at every ITU grid with 50 GHz channel spacing, made by Avanex™. Six channels spaced 50 GHz apart are combined and modulated with 2


31


−1 PRBS data at 2.5 Bg/s using a LiNbO


3


modulator. The composite DWDM signal is boosted launched into the 3-span recirculating loop. The signal is tapped out of the loop, demultiplexed and detected using eye analyzer.




The recirculating loop


20


contains three spans


27


,


28


, and


29


of 100 km Allwave™ fiber. The first node


21


is placed between the first span


27


and the second span


28


, while the second node


22


is placed between the second span


28


and the third span


29


. A suitable commercial product for implementing the first node


21


and the second node


22


is PowerExpress™, a two-stage optical line amplifier, made by Avanex Corporation™. A 15 dB variable optical attenuator


30


is inserted between the first stage


21


and the second stage


22


, which is equivalent the loss of 32 channel 100% OADM. A three-stage optical amplifier in the third node


23


is inserted between the third span


29


and a loop switch


34


. Variable optical attenuators (VOA)


31


,


32


, and


33


are used to adjust launching power into a fiber for optimizing overall system performance.




Input signals are feed into a transmitter


35


and


36


for transmitting the input signals to a mux


37


. In one embodiment, the mux


37


has 6 channels of inputs. A modulator


38


modules with electric signals. A load switch


39


is constructed in a reverse manner from the loop switch


34


. Initially, the load switch


39


opens, and the loop switch


34


closes, so the input signal is passed into the loop. A 3 dB coupler


40


couples between the load switch


39


, the recirculating loop, and a 3 dB coupler


41


, which further couples to a demux


44


folowed by a receiver


42


and a receiver


43


and an optical spectrum analyzer (OSA)


45


. The signal continues to pass through the load switch


39


for τ amount of time, representing the time duration for the light to travel 300 km. By the time that the first signal reaches 300 km, the loop switch


34


opens, and the load switch


39


closes, having already circulated one full loop. For example, at time


0


, the load switch


39


opens, and the loop switch


34


closes. At time τ, or the amount of time for a signal to travel 300 km; the loop switch


34


opens, and the load switch


39


closes. In this illustration, a signal runs through the recirculating loop


20


ten times, or 3000 km in total distance. At the end of 3000 km, it is determined whether the signal strength still recovers.





FIG. 3

is a flow diagram illustrating the process


50


for operating an optical node in an ultra long haul network. The G


1


amplifier


12


receives


51


an input optical signal and amplifies


52


the input optical signal with a G


1


gain. The ALC


13


controls


53


the optical level of the input optical signal. The DCM/DGE


14


compensates


54


the dispersion of the optical signal from the G


1




12


amplifier, and equalizes


55


the gain G


1


. The G


2




15


amplifies


56


the optical signal received from the DCM/DGE


14


with an amplification gain of G


2


. The ALC


16


couples to the G


2


amplifier


14


for controlling


58


the level of the optical signal generated form the G


2


amplifier


15


. The process


60


then drops or adds to the optical signal from the G


2


amplifier


15


. At a third stage, or last stage in this embodiment, the G


3


amplifier


17


amplifies


59


the optical signal after add/drop operation has been performed. An optical performance monitor


18


monitors


60


the optical performance. The AGC/ALC


19


adjusts


61


control gain/level between the G


3


amplifier


17


and the G


1


amplifier


12


. Finally, the process


60


generates


62


an amplified output optical signal.





FIG. 4A

shows the measured better than 18 dB/0.1 nm optical signal-to-noise ratio (OSNR) of all 6 channels at 3000 km. The 50 GHz spaced humps in the noise floor are due to the cyclic bandpassing characteristics of a PowerShaper™.





FIG. 4B

shows the eye diagram of these channels at 3000 km. The input power into each span is about 1 dBm/channel, achieved by using fixed attenuator at the output of each PowerExpress™. An 80-channel system would need 19 dBm total output power from PowerExpress™ output EDFA, which is available form commercial DWDM EDFAs. This indicates that 80 wavelengths can be processed fully using only three commercial DWDM EDFAs.




The above embodiments are only illustrative of the principles of this invention and are not intended to limit the invention to the particular embodiments described. Although the optical node described in the present invention is in the context of an ultra long haul network, the optical node is applicable to other networks including along haul network, a metropolitan network, and an access network. Accordingly, various modifications, adaptations, and combinations of various features of the described embodiments can be practices without departing form the scope of the invention as set forth in the appended claims.



Claims
  • 1. An optical node, comprising:a first optical amplifier, having an optical input, a pump control input, and an optical output, for providing low noise and high amplification gain; a first automatic level control, having an input coupled to the optical output of the first optical amplifier, and an output coupled to the pump control input of the first optical amplifier, for automatic optical level control; a second optical amplifier, having an optical input coupled to the output of first optical amplifier, a pump control input, and an optical output, for providing low noise and high amplification gain; a second automatic level control, having an input coupled to the output of the second optical amplifier, and an output coupled to the pump control input of the second optical amplifier, for automatic optical level control of the second optical amplifier; a third optical amplifier, having an input coupled to the output of the second optical amplifier, a pump control input, and an optical output, for providing high output power; and a third automatic gain and level control having a first input coupled to the input of the first optical amplifier, a second input coupled to the output of the third optical amplifier, and an output coupled to the pump control input of the third amplifier, for maintaining the gain level and output power level for the whole optical node.
  • 2. The optical node of claim 1, further comprising a dispersion control module (DCM) and a dynamic gain equalizer (DGE) coupled between the optical output of the first optical amplifier and the input of the second optical amplifier.
  • 3. The optical node of claim 2, further comprising an optical performance monitor (OPM) coupled between the optical output of the third amplifier and the dynamic gain equalizer.
  • 4. The optical node of claim 1, further comprising an input port coupled to the input of the first optical amplifier.
  • 5. The optical node of claim 1, further comprising an output port coupled to the optical output of the third optical amplifier.
  • 6. The optical node of claim 5, wherein the output port is coupled to an ultra long haul backbone network.
  • 7. The optical node of claim 5, wherein the output port is coupled to a long haul backbone network.
  • 8. The optical node of claim 5, wherein the output port is coupled to a metro network.
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