This application is based on and claims the benefit of the filing date of AU application no. 2007903198 filed 14 Jun. 2007, the content of which as filed is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.
The present invention relates to a method and apparatus for monitoring optical signal to noise, of particular but by no means exclusive application in measuring the signal to noise ratio of an optical signal.
Optical signal degradation occurs in optical communication systems, owing to factors such as amplified spontaneous emission (ASE) noise. This degradation is monitored and compensated for to improve system performance. For example, one approach involves providing real-time feedback of signal parameters (such as optical signal-to-noise ratio (OSNR)) to optical amplifiers in an effort to reduce the contributions of these optical amplifiers to the signal corruption [1].
However, in systems where bit-rates approach or exceed 40 Gb/s contemporary electronic monitoring techniques are limited in their response to the rapidly varying signal envelopes. Several all-optical noise-monitoring schemes have been suggested that are not restricted in this way, employing polarisation-nulling [2], [3], non-linear power transfer functions [4], [5], electrical carrier-to-noise monitoring [6] or semiconductor optical amplifiers [7]. These schemes make direct measurements of in-band noise which, unlike spectral techniques that interpolate out-of-band noise levels into the signal band, are not vulnerable to errors arising from the effects of routing and filtering.
However, such all-optical OSNR monitoring techniques can be limited in their sensitivity to changes in OSNR at levels greater than 20 dB [4], [5], and it is desirable to detect changes in OSNR in the region of 30 dB or higher so compensation can be made before noise corruption becomes significant. Furthermore these devices are often highly sensitive to variations in other signal parameters including chromatic dispersion [4], [5] and polarisation mode dispersion (PMD) [2], [4].
In a first broad aspect, the invention provides an optical noise monitor for monitoring noise in an optical signal, comprising:
Thus, when noise is present in the optical signal above the Brillouin threshold, the reduction in coherence of the pump wave results in a reduction in the efficiency of power being transferred to the Stokes wave. Hence, when the pulse train of the optical signal is clean (i.e. the OSNR is high), the SBS back-reflection is strong but when the pulses have noise (affecting amplitude and hence phase), the coherence in the SBS process is compromised and the back-reflected signal is much weaker. This difference can thus be used to identify the presence of noise.
In an embodiment, said photodetector comprises one or more photodiodes or Avalalanche photodetectors.
In an embodiment, said device comprises a beamsplitter, a circulator or a 50:50 fused fibre coupler.
In an embodiment, said optical element comprises one or more highly non-linear fibres or one or more non-linear planar integrated waveguides.
In an embodiment, said optical element comprises one or more chalcogenide waveguides.
In an embodiment, the monitor includes an amplifier to amplify said optical signal before admission to said optical element.
In an embodiment, said photodetector is calibrated so that a noise level of said noise in said optical signal can be determined.
In an embodiment, said optical signal comprises a portion of a monitored optical signal, and said monitor is configured to tap said monitored optical signal and split off said portion.
In a second broad aspect, the invention provides an optical noise monitor for monitoring noise in an optical signal, comprising:
In a third broad aspect, the invention provides a method of monitoring optical noise, comprising:
In an embodiment, the method includes directing said optical signal into said optical element with a circulator.
In an embodiment, the method includes monitoring said reflected optical signal with a photodetector.
As will be understood by those skilled in the art, each of the optional features of the above aspects of the invention may be employed where suitable in any combination with the other optional features and with any other aspect of the invention.
In order that the present invention may be more clearly ascertained, an embodiment will now be described, by way of example, with reference to the accompanying drawing, in which:
An optical signal-to-noise ratio (OSNR) monitor according to an embodiment of the invention is shown schematically at 10 in
The noisy optical signal source 12 comprises an optical signal source 20 and an ASE (Amplified Spontaneous Emission) source 22 (for adding noise), a 1 nm bandpass (BP) filter 24, a variable optical attenuator (VOA) 26, a 50:50 coupler 28 and an erbium-doped fibre amplifier (EDFA) 30.
The output of ASE source 22 is filtered with BP filter 24 and—after passing through VOA 26—is combined with the optical signal from source 20 by coupler 28. EDFA 30 receives the combined signal from coupler 28, and amplifies the combined signal above the Brillouin threshold (discussed below). The amplified, combined signal is then output to the monitor 10.
In use, the optical signal (which consists, depending on the modulation scheme used, of a pulse train of “1” and “0”) is thus directed through circulator 14 into HNLF 16. In practice this would generally comprise splitting a small portion of an optical signal from a transmission system and directing it into circulator 14 of monitor 10. The interaction between the pulse train and HNLF 16 drives a process called stimulated Brillouin scattering (SBS), which results in the partial back-reflection of the optical signal. SBS involves efficient transfer of power from a pump signal to a frequency shifted Stokes signal propagating in the reverse direction. The reverse scattering is a result of a grating structure formed by coherent interference of phonons arising from inelastic scattering of the pump wave in the fibre and only occurs significantly above a critical pump power known as the Brillouin threshold [8].
The present inventors have observed that when noise is present in the optical signal above this threshold the reduction in coherence of the pump wave results in a surprisingly dramatic reduction in the efficiency of power being transferred to the Stokes wave.
Hence, the SBS is separated in circulator 14 and measured with photodiode 18, which reads the time-averaged power of the back-reflected signal due to stimulated Brillouin scattering (SBS) in HNLF 16. When the pulse train is very ‘clean’ and the “1” and “0” pulses are well-defined (i.e. the OSNR is high), the SBS back-reflection is strong. However when the pulses have noise (affecting amplitude and phase), the coherence in the SBS process is compromised and the back-reflected signal is much weaker.
There is thus a correlation between the amplitude of the back-reflected signal and the OSNR, which the present inventors have found enables the resolution of changes in OSNR levels above 40 dB. Absolute measurements of OSNR can then be made following calibration of the system. It will thus be appreciated that as well as directing the optical signal into the HNLF 16, the circulator 14 provides a device for extracting the back-reflected signal from the HNLF 16. Further it will be appreciated that any appropriate optical element capable of producing Brillouin scattering can be employed instead of the HNLF 16, for example one or more non-linear planar integrated waveguides.
SBS is a spectral effect that is dependent on the spectrum of both the pump signal and Brillouin-gain profile of the fibre [8]. Typically the Brillouin-gain spectrum has a width of ˜20 MHz, with the most efficient SBS occurring for pump signals with narrower linewidths.
Although data encoded signals at 40 Gb/s have spectral widths broader than that of the Brillouin-gain spectrum, NRZ signals have a prominent spectral peak at the carrier wavelength that is sufficiently narrow to promote SBS albeit at higher powers. The present inventors have observed that, when incoherent ASE noise within the signal channel band copropagates with such a signal in HNLF 16, it reduces the efficiency of power transfer between the data signal and its associated Stokes signal. This is observed as a change in the power of the Stokes signal, which reduces with increasing noise power. This is illustrated in
Monitor 10 thus operates—in practice—by tapping an amplified signal (provided by the noisy source 12 of
Experimental results for a 40 Gb/s NRZ signal at 1541 nm are shown in
The experiments show that monitor 10 is highly sensitive to OSNR levels between 7 to 30 dB, where OSNR is defined as the ratio of the average signal power to the noise power over a spectrum width of 0.1 nm. Notably, when monitor 10 is operated closer to the Brillouin threshold its sensitivity to very low levels of noise is increased; provided that photodiode 18 can distinguish between 0.05 dB changes in the monitoring signal, monitor 10 is effective at OSNR levels greater than 40 dB.
Polarization mode dispersion (PMD) was then applied. Like dispersion, PMD is a time domain phenomenon that has little effect on the signal spectrum, and the resulting monitoring curves (for, respectively, an average differential group delay (DGD) of 10.0 ps and no PMD) are plotted in the upper register of
Further experimental results obtained with an OSNR monitor according to the above embodiment are as follows.
Monitor 10 should also operate with reasonable sensitivity with high bit-rate signals, though optimally—particularly at very, high bit-rates—when the spectrum of the associated signal is stable with time. Wide bandwidth spectra at high bit rates result in fewer modes containing large amounts of the total signal energy [9]. These intense modes initiate SBS with appreciable efficiency to be applied to this approach.
In conclusion, monitor 10 appears to provide an all-optical in-band OSNR monitor with a dynamic range exceeding 35 dB and significant sensitivity to extremely low noise; OSNR levels above 40 dB are resolvable. The technique is advantageous because it is insensitive to at least some time-domain signal phenomena, for example, group-velocity dispersion (referred to as dispersion above) and polarisation mode dispersion.
Modifications within the scope of the invention may be readily effected by those skilled in the art. It is to be understood, therefore, that this invention is not limited to the particular embodiments described by way of example hereinabove.
In the following claims and in the preceding description of the invention, except where the context requires otherwise owing to express language or necessary implication, the word “comprise” or variations such as “comprises” or “comprising” is used in an inclusive sense, that is, to specify the presence of the stated features but not to preclude the presence or addition of further features in various embodiments of the invention.
Further, any reference herein to prior art is not intended to imply that such prior art forms or formed a part of the common general knowledge.
[1] D. C. Kilper, R. Bach, D. J. Blumenthal, D. Einstein, T. Landolsi, L. Ostar, M. Preiss, and A. E. Willner, “Optical performance monitoring,” Journal of Lightwave Technology, 22(1) (2004) 294-304.
[2] J. H. Lee, D. K. Jung, C. H. Kim, and Y. C. Chung, “OSNR Monitoring Technique Using Polarization-Nulling Method,” IEEE Photonics Technology Letters, 13(1) (2001) 88-90.
[3] J. H. Lee and Y. C. Chung, “Improved OSNR monitoring technique based on polarisation-nulling method,” Electronics Letters, 37(15) (2001).
[4] R. Adams, M. Rochette, T. T. Ng, and B. J. Eggleton, “All-Optical In-Band OSNR Monitoring at 40 Gb/s Using a Nonlinear Optical Loop Mirror,” IEEE Photonics Technology Letters, 18(3) (2006) 469-471.
[5] T. T. Ng, J. L. Blows, M. Rochette, J. A. Bolger, I. Littler, and B. J. Eggleton, “In-band OSNR and chromatic dispersion monitoring using a fibre optical parametric amplifier,” Optics Express, vol. 13(14) (2005) 5542-5552.
[6] G. Rossi, T. E. Dimmick, and D. J. Blumenthal, “Optical Performance Monitoring in Reconfigurable WDM Optical Networks Using Subcarrier Multiplexing”, Journal of Lightwave Technology, 18(12) (2000) 1639-1648.
[7] P. Vorreau, D. C. Kilper, and J. Leuthold, “Optical noise and dispersion monitoring with SOA-based optical 2R regenerator,” IEEE Photonics Technology. Letters, 17(1) (2005) 244-246.
[8] G. P. Agrawal, Nonlinear Fiber Optics, Academic Press, 2001.
[9] T. Hirooka, S. Ono, K. Hagiuda, and M. Nakazawa, “Stimulated Brillouin scattering in dispersion-decreasing fiber with ultrahigh-speed femtosecond soliton pulse compression”, Optics Letters, 30(4) (2005).
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2007903198 | Jun 2007 | AU | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/AU08/00858 | 6/13/2008 | WO | 00 | 12/11/2009 |