1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to an electrical dispersion equalization applicable to an optical transceiver that receives and transmits optical signals, and to an optical transceiver implementing the same.
2. Related Background Art
An optical communication system, whose distance between the optical ports is less than a few kilo-meters and a transmission speed is less than a several hundreds of mega bit per second (Mbps) generally uses a multi-mode fiber for the transmission medium, a light-emitting diode (LED) for an optical signal source and a photodiode (PD) for a light-receiving device.
While, an optical communication system with the transmission speed of 2.5 Gbps, 10 Gbps or higher uses the single-mode fiber as a transmission medium and a laser diode (LD) as an optical signal source, which follows the international standard of, for instance, Synchronous Digital Hierarchy (SDH) and Synchronous Optical NETwork (SONET).
Recently, an optical communication system that combines a multimode fiber with an LD is directed to a higher transmission rate using a cost effective multi-mode fiber. However, because a core of the multimode fiber may propagate many modes each showing specific transmission speed, the optical signal to be transmitted in the multimode fiber is easily deformed, which makes it hard to transmit an optical signal in a higher transmission rate.
One solution has been suggested in the United State Patent Application published as US-2009/0041468A to compensate the signal deformation in the multimode fiber due to different transmission speed specific to the mode, in which the dispersion caused in the multimode fiber may be electrically compensated for an electrical signal converted from the received optical signal. This technique to compensate the dispersion electrically has been called as the Electronic Dispersion Compensator (EDC). The standard, IEEE 802.3aq, has ruled to use the EDC to realize the transmission rate of 10 Gbps for already installed multimode fiber.
The receiver unit 3 includes a photodiode (PD) 7, a trans-impedance amplifier (TIA) 8, an EDC 9 and another CDR 10. The PD receives an optical signal from an optical fiber and generates a photocurrent. The TIA 8, which operates as a pre-amplifier, converts the photocurrent into a voltage signal. The EDC 9 electrically compensates the voltage signal, and the CDR 10 extracts a data and a clock contained in the compensated voltage signal.
The EDC 9, as shown in
The IEEE 802.3aq only defines the transmission rate of 10 Gbps, but other standards, such as those called as the fiber channel, has ruled the multi-transmission rates. Specifically, the FC-PI-4 (Fiber Channel Physical Interface) has ruled three transmission rates of 8.5 Gbps, 4.25 Gbps, and 2.125 Gbps, but has ruled that the EDC is necessary to be implemented only for the transmission rate 8.5 Gbps.
Because the EDC is necessary to set the unit delay T as a reciprocal of the transmission rate, namely, T equal to 100 ps for the transmission rate of 10 Gbps and so on. When the EDC is operated for multiple transmission rates but the single and permanent unit delay T, the EDC tends to cause an incorrect operation or to diverge the tap coefficients. Moreover, the optical transceiver operable in multi transmission modes is necessary to implement with devices responsible to a high transmission rates, that is, the devices are operable in a higher frequency. When such devices are used in relatively lower frequency, the noises with higher frequency components are amplified and generated by the devices, which degrades the optical sensitivity of the transceiver. For instance, the PD and the TIA operable for the transmission rate of 8.25 Gbps are used for the transmission rate of 4.25 Gbps; the optical sensitivity degrades by 3 dB because the frequency bandwidth of the devices is twice.
An aspect of the present invention relates to an optical transceiver that comprises: a PD, a pre-amplifier, and an EDC. The optical transceiver of the invention may be operable for multi transmission rates. The PD receives an optical signal from a transmission optical fiber and generates a photocurrent corresponding to the optical signal. The pre-amplifier, which may be a type of trans-impedance amplifier, may convert the photocurrent into a voltage signal. The EDC receives the voltage signal provided from the pre-amplifier and generates a compensated signal. A feature of the present invention is that the EDC automatically adjusts the tap coefficients thereof for the first transmission rate, sets only one of the tap coefficients to be TRUE, while, the other of the tap coefficients to be FALSE for the second transmission rate slower than the first transmission rate, and fixes the tap coefficients to preset values for the third transmission rate slower than the second transmission rate.
The EDC of the present invention may operate as a transversal filter to compensate the input deformed signal for the first transmission rate, as a low-pass-filter to reduce noises with high frequency components generated in the PD and the pre-amplifier for the third transmission rate, and pass through the voltage signal provided from the pre-amplifier. Accordingly, the optical transceiver may be operable in multi transmission rate even the transceiver implements with the EDC.
The invention will be described in conjunction with the accompanying drawings, in which:
Next, preferred embodiments according to the present invention will be described as referring to accompanying drawings.
The receiver section 23 includes a semiconductor photodiode (PD) 27, a pre-amplifier 28, an electrical dispersion correction (EDC) 29, and another CDR 30. The PD 27 generates a photocurrent by receiving signal light provided from the optical fiber. The pre-amplifier 28, which may be an arrangement of a trans-impedance amplifier (TIA), converts the photocurrent into a voltage signal. The EDC 29 electrically compensates the dispersion superposed in the voltage signal provided from the TIA 28. The CDR 30 reshapes and recovers the signal compensated by the EDC 29 and outputs thus reshaped electrical signal. A feature of the optical transceiver 21 according to the present embodiment is that the EDC 29 may vary or adjust the tap co-efficient thereof in the multiplier unit depending on the transmission rate, for instance 5 Gbps, 10 Gbps or 20 Gbps, the information of which is externally provided.
The EDC 29 further includes sampler 34 which has a function of, what is called, the sample-and-hold for sampling the output provided from the sum unit 33 for a period T and holding the sampled output which is provided to the slicer 35. The slicer 35 has a function of the comparator where the input thereof, which is equivalent to the held output of the sampler 34, is compared with a preset reference and outputs a binary signal. The error detector 37 compares this binary output with the input of the slicer 35; namely, the analogue output of the slicer 34 and sends the compared results to the tap controller 36. The tap controller 36 adjusts the tap co-efficient provided to the multiplier 32 based on the output of the error detector 37 so as to minimize the output of the error detector 37.
A feature of the EDC 29 according to the present embodiment is that the tap controller 36 receives the RATE signal and adjusts the tap co-efficient depending on the RATE signal. Specifically, when the optical transceiver 21 is operated in a high speed mode, the EDC 29 adjusts the tap co-efficient by the feedback loop of the sum unit 33, the sampler 34, the slicer 35, the error detector 37 and the tap controller 36. While, the transceiver 21 operates in a relatively slow speed mode, the tap controller 36 switches the input thereof from the output of the error detector 37 to the preset 38 which provides the fixed tap coefficient. When the multiplier 32 is provided with the set of the fixed tap co-efficient, the EDC 29 operates as a transversal filter to pass only relatively lower frequency components. The EDC 29 operating as a transversal filter, noises of the PD 27 and the TIA 28, whose operable frequency bandwidths are set broader because they are necessary to respond higher frequencies and inevitably cause noises in high frequencies, may be reduced and the sensitivity of the receiver unit 23 may be enhanced.
Assuming cases where the transmission rates of the transceiver are 5 Gbps, 10 Gbps, and 20 Gbps, the delay time T of the delay unit 31 is 50 ps, and the frequency bandwidth of the PD 27 and that of the TIA 28 are 7.5 GHz applicable to the rate of 10 Gbps; the EDC 29 may compensate the deformation in the waveform due to not only the dispersion in the transmission line but the limited frequency bandwidth of the PD 27 and the TIA 28 by adjusting the tap coefficient. When the transmission speed is 10 Gbps where the PD 27 and the TIA 28 become adequately operable, the EDC 29 may set the tap coefficient such that only one of the tap coefficients is set to be TRUE “1”, while, the other tap coefficients are set to be FALSE “0”, which equivalently passes the EDC 29. Moreover, when the rate signal RATE indicates the transmission speed of 5 Gbps, the EDC 29 sets the tap coefficients such that the EDC 29 operates as an LPF (low-pass-filter) to eliminate the high frequency noise due to the PD 27 and the TIA 29.
A feature of the present invention shown in
Next, some results according to the present invention will be described, in which the results assumes the following: three transmission rates, 5 Gbps, 10 Gbps, and 20 Gbps, are selected, the total bandwidth of the optical fiber, the PD and the TIA is 6 GHz, the EDC 29 has the configuration of only the feedforward arrangement without any feedback arrangement with seven (C0˜C6) controllable taps and the unit delay T of 50 ps.
When such deformed signal for the transmission rate of 20 Gbps is input to the EDC 29, the EDC 29 automatically adjusts the tap coefficients, CO to C6, thereof to be −0.014, 0.08, −0.487, 2.98, −0.729, 0.216 and −0.06, respectively. For the transmission rate of 10 Gbps, the EDC 29 sets TRUE only for the tap coefficient C3, while, sets FALSE for the other tap coefficients. Under such tap coefficients, the EDC 29 passes through the input signal only with a delay of 100 ps. Finally, for the transmission rate of 5 Gbps, the fixed tap coefficients of, C2=0.25, C3=0.5, C4=0.25, and the other coefficients, C0, C1, C5 and C6, are set to be zero (0), under which the EDC 29 operates as an LPF because the components multiplied by 0.25 superposed with the primary component multiplied with 0.5 by the unit delay of 50 ps.
Thus, the EDC according to the present invention may vary the tap control mode depending on the transmission rate; accordingly, the EDC may compensate the deformation appeared in the input signal for relatively higher transmission rate, while, the EDC may reduce the noise caused by the excess frequency bandwidth of the PD and the TIA for relatively lower transmission rate. The optical transceiver implementing with the EDC of the invention may enhance the optical sensitivity for the lower transmission rate, and may securely recover the transmitted optical signal for the higher transmission rate.
Although the present invention has been fully described in conjunction with the preferred embodiment thereof with reference to the accompanying drawings, it is to be understood that various changes and modifications may be apparent to those skilled in the art. Such changes and modifications are to be understood as included within the scope of the present invention as defined by the appended claims, unless they depart therefrom.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2009-219352 | Sep 2009 | JP | national |