1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to an optical receiver implementing with a semiconductor optical amplifier (SOA) in the front end thereof, and a method to control the SOA.
2. Related Background Arts
As an explosive increase in a size of data transmitted on a network system, the speed of the network system continuously increases and devices installed in the system, such as an optical transceiver, are requested to operate faster and faster. The transmission speed of the network exceeds 10 Gbps and reaches 40 Gbps or 100 Gbps, which forces devices used therein unable to follow such a transmission speed as a single element. One solution is the wavelength division multiplexing system.
For instance, the transmission speed of 100 Gbps multiplexes four (4) signals each having a specific wavelength different from others in a wavelength band of 1300 nm and a speed of 25 Gbps; then the total transmission speed realizes 100 Gbps. In an optical receiver, an optical signal is de-multiplexed into four sub-signals depending on the wavelengths. Such an optical receiver often implements with an SOA in the front end thereof to compensate optical loss caused in the transmission medium, namely, an optical fiber coupling an optical transmitter with the optical receiver. However, an SOA in the optical gain thereof usually depends on a temperature and a bias current supplied thereto. In particular, in the start-up of the optical receiver accompanied with the SOA, the optical gain of the SOA is necessary to be controlled precisely.
An aspect of the present application relates to an optical receiver that includes an SOA in the front end thereof, an optical de-multiplexer, a plurality of optical devices, a signal processor, and a controller. The SOA receives an optical signal and outputs an amplified optical signal that contains a plurality of signals each of which has a wavelength different from others. The optical de-multiplexer de-multiplexes the amplified optical signal into de-multiplexed optical signals depending on the wavelength. Each of the optical devices converts the de-multiplexed optical signal into an electrical signal. The signal processor recovers data contained in the electrical signals and extracts a clock contained in at least one of electrical signals. A feature of the optical receiver is that the controller activates the optical devices and the signal processor after the SOA stabilizes a temperature thereof in a target temperature.
The controller of an embodiment decides the stabilization of the temperature of the SOA whether a time derivative of the temperature in an absolute thereof becomes less than the first reference. The controller further evaluates how the temperature of the SOA becomes close to the target temperature. When the temperature of the SOA becomes close to the target temperature, specifically, a difference between the current temperature of the SOA and the target temperature becomes less than the second reference.
Another aspect of the present application relates to a method to control an SOA installed on a thermo-electric-cooler (TEC). The method includes steps of: monitoring a current temperature of the SOA through a temperature sensor put on the TEC; calculating a time derivative of the temperature of the SOA by subtracting a previous temperature monitored previously from the current temperature; and supplying a bias current to eh SOA after the time derivative of the temperature of the SOA becomes less than a preset reference.
The foregoing and other purposes, aspects and advantages will be better understood from the following detailed description of a preferred embodiment of the invention with reference to the drawings, in which:
In a comparable arrangement of an optical receiver implemented with an SOA, the SOA and devices put in the downstream of the SOA starts the operation thereof substantially at the same time. The SOA is supplied with the bias current at the start-up and controlled in the temperature thereof also at the start-up. However, the SOA promptly responds to a change of the bias current, but the stabilization of the temperature thereof is usually delayed from the change of the bias current. When the un-stabilized temperature of the SOA is lower than the target temperature but the SOA is provided with the preset bias current, the optical gain of the SOA becomes enough high. On the other hand, the un-stabilized temperature is higher than the target one, the SOA does not show the preset optical gain and the optical output thereof becomes smaller than the designed one.
Accordingly, in the comparable arrangement of the optical receiver, the optical devices occasionally receives optical signals with excess power in the former occasion, or, the optical power becomes far less than the designed level in the latter case. Then, the signal processor put downstream of the optical devices is unable to recover data exactly and to extract the clock stably, both of which are contained in the optical signals.
Next, some preferred embodiments according to the present invention will be described as referring to drawings.
In the description of the drawings, numerals or symbols same or similar to each other will refer to elements same or similar to each other without overlapping explanations.
The optical receiver 20 of the embodiment shown in
Moreover, the embodiment shown in
The optical receiver 20, as previously described, includes the SOA 21 driven by a current source 22 and a thermo-electric cooler (hereafter denoted as TEC) 23 in the temperature thereof under a control of the SOA driver 24. The SOA 21, for instance, placed on the TEC 23 with a temperature sensor, not explicitly illustrated in
The SOA 21 compensates the optical loss caused in the transmission medium.
The SOA 21 is controlled in the optical gain thereof by adjusting the bias current supplied thereto from the current source 22. When the optical power output from the
SOA 21 is insufficient, the bias current is increased to enhance the optical gain of the SOA 21; while, the output power of the SOA 21 is excessive, the bias current is reduced.
The SOA 21 also varies the optical gain thereof depending on a temperature thereof. In the present embodiment, a thermo-electric cooler (TEC) 23 typically a Pelitier device controls the temperature of the SOA 21 to be substantially equal to, for instance, 25° C. The SOA driver 24 drives the current source 22 and the TEC 23 in the present embodiment; and this SOA driver 24 is controlled by the controller 30.
The optical de-multiplexer 25 receives the output of the SOA 21 to de-multiplex it into four (4) de-multiplexed signals, each of which are directed to respective optical devices, 26a to 26d. Each of optical devices, 26a to 26d, includes a light-receiving device, typically a photodiode, to convert respective de-multiplexed signals into electrical signals, Sa to Sd. The optical devices, 26a to 26d, also output monitoring signals, Va to Vd, each corresponding to an optical input power of respective de-multiplexed signals.
Each of electrical signals, Sa to Sd, enters the signal processor 27 that recovers respective data and extracts a clock from the electrical signals. The signal processor 27 of the present embodiment includes four (4) data recovery corresponding to respective optical devices, 26a to 26d, and at least one clock extractor. The recovered data, Da to Dd, are output from the signal processor 27 to process them further in the system set in the downstream of the optical receiver 20.
The first power supply 28 controls the SOA 21 and the periphery thereof, the second power supply 29a drives the optical devices, 26a to 26d, while, the third power supply 29b controls the signal processor 27. These power supplies, 28 to 29b, are controlled from the controller 30, in particular, the start-up thereof are instructed by the controller 30.
Next, an operation of the optical receiver 20 described above will be described. In particular, the start-up of the optical receiver 20 will be described in detail.
As the start-up of the optical receiver 20, a time becomes longer for the temperature of the SOA 21 to be set in a target temperature of, for instance, 25° C. in an example as a difference between an initial temperature and the target temperature above described is larger. On the other hand, the adjustment of the bias current for the SOA 21 is promptly completed to set the optical gain of the SOA 21 necessary to the optical receiver 20 compared with the adjustment of the temperature.
The optical device, 26a to 26d, receives the optical signal with the power of −18.5 dBm whose BER becomes only about 10−3 asshown in
For the SOA 21, referring to
For instance, the optical gain of an SOA is 19 dB at 10° C., while, it becomes 17 dB at 25° C., which is comparable to the gain at 10° C., under the bias current of 80 mA. In respective temperatures, the optical device, 26a to 26d, receives the de-multiplexed optical signal with the power of −5.5 dBm and −7.5 dBm for the temperature of 10° C. and 25° C., respectively, whne the optical signal with the minimum power of −23 dBm is input to the optical receiver 20. Then, both conditions exceed the necessary power of −13 dBm for the optical device. In such a case, the possibility to cause the miss-recovery of the data and miss-extraction of the cock becomes ignorable.
The optical receiver 20 of the present embodiment supplies the bias current to the SOA 21 after the temperature of the SOA 21 becomes stable. Specifically, when the temperature of the SOA 21 in the time derivative thereof becomes less than preset level, then the optical devices, 26a to 26d, and the signal processor 27 are activated. That is, respective units in the optical receiver 20, namely, the SOA 21, the optical devices, 26a to 26d, and the signal processor 27 are sequentially activated with a preset lag to start-up the optical receiver 20 promptly.
In
The second register 30b not only holds a data corresponding to the current temperature TSOA(t) of the SOA 21 but a temperature sensed previously TSOA (t-Δt). The arithmetical unit 30c calculates the time derivative of the temperature ΔTSOA of the SOA 21 based on two data, TSOA(t) and TSOA (t-Δt), each held in the second register 30b; that is:
ΔTSOA=TSOA (t)−TSOA (t−Δt),
where Δt denotes a sampling period of the temperature of the SOA 21 and typically set from several tenses to several hundreds of milli-seconds.
The time derivative thus calculated denotes how the temperature of the SOA 21 stabilizes. When the time derivative becomes less than the preset level, the controller 30 decides that the temperature of the SOA 21 stabilizes, and instructs the power supplies, 29a and 29b, to activate the optical devices, 26a to 26d, and the signal processor 27.
The operation of the optical receiver 20 will be described as referring to
The SOA 21 is controlled in the temperature thereof to be substantially equal to the target temperature by a feedback loop of the temperature sensor set on the TEC 23 immediately close to the SOA 21, the SOA driver 24 and the TEC 23, which is often called as the automatic temperature control (ATC). The output of the temperature sensor is concurrently sent to the controller 30 through the SCA driver 24 and stored in the second register 30b.
The second register 30b sequentially holds the current temperature TSOA(t) and that previous temperature TSOA(t−Δt). Next, the arithmetical unit 30c calculates the time derivative of the temperature by two data, TSOA(t) and TSOA(t−Δt). The comparator 30d compares thus calculated time derivative, |TSOA(t)-TSOA(t−Δt)|Δt, with the preset reference.
When the time derivative becomes less than the preset reference, the temperature of the SOA 21 is regarded to become close to the target temperature, or the optical gain of the SOA 21 substantially becomes independent of the temperature under the bias current presently supplied thereto as shown in
When the initial temperature is apart from the target temperature of the SOA 21, the control of the temperature of the SOA 21 often accompanies with the overshoots and undershoots, as shown in
Although the embodiment above described assumes that the temperature of the SOA 21 is sensed by a temperature sensor set immediately close to the SOA 21 on the TEC 23; the controller is able to decide the convergence or the stabilization of the temperature of the SOA 21 through the current provided from the SOA driver 24 to drive the TEC 23. That is, as the temperature of the TEC 23 approaches the target temperature, the driving current for the TEC 23 gradually becomes stable, namely, a time derivative thereof becomes small enough. Accordingly, the controller 30 acknowledges the stabilization of the temperature of the SOA 21 through the driving current of the TEC 23.
The optical receiver 20 thus described does not provide the electrical power to the optical devices, 26a to 26d, and the signal processor 27 until the temperature of the SOA 21 substantially stabilizes at the target temperature. Accordingly, the optical devices do not output signals, Sa to Sd, and the monitored levels, Va to Vd, and the signal processor 27 does not recover the data and extract the clock. The signal processor 27 starts to recover the data and extract the clock after the temperature of the SOA 21 stabilizes and the optical devices, 26a to 26d, receive de-multiplexed optical signals with enough power.
The temperature of the SOA 21 is occasionally in the target temperature in the start-up thereof to show the sufficient optical gain and the de-multiplexed optical signals with excess power enter the optical devices, 26a to 26d. Even in such a case, the optical devices, 26a to 26d, are not activated by the power supply 29a, which protects the optical devices, 26a to 26d.
In the foregoing detailed description, the method and apparatus of the present invention have been described with reference to specific exemplary embodiments thereof. It will, however, be evident that various modifications and changes may be made thereto without departing from the broader spirit and scope of the present invention. The present specification and figures are accordingly to be regarded as illustrative rather than restrictive.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2012-102050 | Apr 2012 | JP | national |