This application claims priority of European application No. 05022460.9 EP filed Oct. 14, 2005, which is incorporated by reference herein in its entirety.
The invention relates to an optical single sideband modulator.
Optical single sideband modulation OSSB has three important advantages in optical communications compared with double sideband modulation:
OSSB systems most obvious advantage is the reduction of spectral occupancy and therefore the increased number of transmission channels in a wavelength multiplex signal compared with conventional systems,
OSSB systems have higher tolerance to chromatic dispersion introduced by the optical transmission fiber,
OSSB systems allow electrical compensation and electrical precompensation.
The most common generation of OSSB signals is performed by an optical modulator generating a double sideband signal. The double sideband modulated signal is fed to an optical filter to suppress one sideband.
This arrangement is expensive and is unable to obtain a good suppression of one sideband without attenuating the optical carrier. Further it has the disadvantage that information can be lost if the filter or laser is detuned.
It is an object of the invention to provide a low cost optical single sideband modulator without wavelength stability problems.
According to the present invention the optical single sideband modulator includes an amplitude modulator and a semiconductor optical amplifier [SOA], using a chirp effect to convert an amplitude modulated optical signal into a single sideband signal without the help of a filter for eliminating one of the sidebands.
The optical single sideband generator can be easily adapted to different bit rates by controlling the power of a modulated optical signal, which is fed to the SOA, or the operating voltage.
The main advantage of the invention is that the carrier is not suppressed and no information loss according to detuning of a sideband suppression filter results in a loss of information.
A binary data signal DS is fed to a signal input 1 of the modulator device 2, which receives a CW (constant wavelength) signal from a laser 3 and outputs an optical amplitude modulated double sideband signal DSBS. This signal is combined with a pump signal PS generated by a pump source 5 in a coupler or a filter (wavelength multiplexer) 4 and passed to a signal input of a semiconductor optical amplifier (SOA) 6, which performs the ODSB-OSSB conversion. The pump signal PS is used to maintain the SOA in the saturated region.
The transfer function of the SOA can be described approximately by:
Where Ein is the optical field at the input, Eout is the optical field at the output, α is a parameter known as the linewidth enhancement factor, g is gain of the SOA, which is dependent on the input optical field, L is the length of the SOA, Γ is the optical confinement factor and αS describes the losses in the waveguide.
[According to Agrawal, G. P. Olsen; N. A. “Self-phase modulation and Spectral Broadening of Optical Pulses in Semiconductor Laser Amplifiers”; IEEE Journal of Quantum Electronics, Vol. 25, No. 11, November 1989]
According to the formula (1) a phase modulation occurs inside the SOA driven by the input signal. A positive chirp is caused by a “1” to “0” (on→off) transition and a negative chirp is the result of a “0” to “1” (off→on) transition. The negative chirp transfers some power from the upper sideband to the lower sideband and the positive chirp will transfer some power from the lower the upper sideband. Since the power of 1's is higher than the power of 0's and the negative chirp is higher than the positive chirp the power transition to the lower sideband is higher than the power transition to the higher sideband (due to the fact that gain depletion inn a SOA is faster than gain recovery). The result is an optical single sideband signal SSBS.
The pump signal PS is used to maintain the SOA in the saturation region, otherwise there would be an overshoot in the transitions, especially during 0 to 1 transitions. A band stop filter 7 connected with the output of SOA eliminates the Pump signal.
The signal SSBS is transmitted—usually after additional amplification; not shown)—from the converter output 8 over a fiber 10 to a receiver 11, 12. Of course, a plurality of OSSB signals can be combined to a (dense) wavelength division multiplex signal.
The received signal OSSB is fed to a signal input 10 of an amplifier 11 and an outputted amplified signal is then converted into the electrical data signal DS by an optical-electrical converter working as a demodulator 12. Of course, chromatic dispersion compensation and polarisation mode dispersion compensation can be used for further improving the signal quality of the received signal.
The improvement of single sideband modulation according to our invention becomes obvious from
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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05022460.9 | Oct 2005 | EP | regional |