The present invention is related to optical signal transmitters and, more particularly, to transmitters which generate optical signals which counter chromatic dispersion in the optical fibers carrying the signals.
Optical transmitters typically receive digital electrical signals and generate corresponding optical signals for transmission onto an optical fiber. The transmitter modulates light so that the optical signals appear as a sequence of optical pulses, representing a sequence of bits, traveling through the optical fiber. However, chromatic dispersion in the optical fiber forces the wavelength components of an optical signal pulse to travel at slightly different velocities down the fiber. After some distance, the shape of the optical signal pulses is distorted and renders it difficult to determine the information of the optical signals, especially for signals being transmitted at high bit rates. The receiver of the deteriorated optical signals is unable to determine whether a pulse corresponds to a “1” or “0” bit.
To counter the chromatic dispersion, it is possible to inversely disperse the optical signal pulses at the transmitter and then send them onto the optical fiber. Then the pulses become non-dispersed pulses at the receiver. The inversely dispersed signals can theoretically be generated by carefully controlling the amplitude and the phase of the light. However, this technique requires complicated electrical control circuits. Dispersion compensator devices can also be used to generate the inversely dispersed signals optically. Well known dispersion compensators include dispersion compensation fibers, chirped fiber Bragg gratings, and optical interferometers. However, dispersion compensation fibers are costly and occupy a large volume. Chirped fiber Bragg gratings and optical interferometers have limited wavelength bandwidths for a given amount of dispersion.
Thus there is a need for a simple, effective and economical optical transmitter which can generate signals which retain their information even after transmission over long distances through optical fibers with chromatic dispersion. The present invention provides for a simple design of an optical transmitter which generates an equivalent of the inversely dispersed optical signal waveforms to counter virtually unlimited amounts of dispersion without the use of complicated electrical or optical circuits.
The present invention provides for an optical transmitter generating optical signals for an optical fiber transmission corresponding to electrical signals received at a first signal rate. The optical transmitter has a plurality of optical pulse generators generating in parallel inversely dispersed optical pulses corresponding to the received electrical signals at the first signal rate; and a coupler assembly combining the generated inversely dispersed optical pulses for transmission in the optical fiber. The combination of inversely dispersed optical pulses counter chromatic dispersion in the optical fiber because optical pulses independently arrive at a receiver as non-dispersed optical pulses corresponding to the received electrical signals at the first signal rate. Furthermore, each optical pulse generator is responsive to one of N subsets of the received electrical signals, each electrical signal of a subset separated by N−1 electrical signals of other subsets. Each optical pulse generator generates a subset of inversely dispersed optical signal pulses at 1/N of said first signal rate. The coupler assembly couples an output of each of the optical pulse generators and sends them to the optical fiber so that the inversely dispersed optical pulses of each subset travel independently in the optical fiber. Each generated inversely dispersed optical pulse has a duration no more than that of N received signal pulses at the first signal rate.
The present invention also provides for a method of operating an optical transmitter to generate optical signals in an optical fiber. The method has the steps of receiving electrical signals at a first signal rate; generating in parallel inversely dispersed optical pulses corresponding to the received electrical signals at the first signal rate; and combining the plurality of inversely dispersed optical pulses for transmission in the optical fiber. The combination of inversely dispersed optical pulses counter chromatic dispersion in the optical fiber because the optical pulses independently arrive at a receiver as non-dispersed optical pulses corresponding to the received electrical signals at the first signal rate. The inversely dispersed optical pulses are generated as N subsets of inversely dispersed optical pulses at a signal rate 1/N of the first signal rate with each subset corresponding to one of N subsets of the received electrical signals, and the N subsets of inversely dispersed optical pulses are combined so that inversely dispersed optical pulses of each subset are separated by N−1 inversely dispersed optical pulses of other subsets.
A better understanding of the present invention may be attained by a perusal of the following drawings and following textual description. Furthermore, it should be understood that in many drawings, the same reference numerals are used where elements are the same or have very similar functions.
When an isolated optical signal pulse with a uniform phase travels through a fiber which has chromatic dispersion, the pulse is broadened. When an inversely dispersed pulse, which is a pulse stretched by a dispersion compensator for example, travels through the transmission fiber, the pulse is compressed and a non-dispersed pulse is detected at the receiver, assuming there are no optical nonlinear effects in the fiber. The inversely dispersed pulse is a stretched pulse with an approximately parabolic phase, where the pulse duration is determined by the amount of the chromatic dispersion. In other words, the larger the dispersion, the longer the pulse duration. Regardless of the amount of dispersion, a correctly generated inversely dispersed pulse arrives at the receiver as a non-dispersed pulse that has the duration of about one bit. This is due to the compression of a chirped pulse with chromatic dispersion in the fiber. Of course, since the amount of chromatic dispersion is dependent upon the distance of travel along the optical fiber, the duration of the inversely dispersed pulse, which is to be transmitted, is determined by the distance between the receiver and the transmitter.
An inversely dispersed pulse can be produced directly by an optical pulse generator. There are simple designs of optical pulse generators, which produce an inversely dispersed pulse without using a dispersion compensator. One design uses a CW (continuous wave) light source, an intensity modulator, and a phase modulator in series. The intensity modulator shapes the CW light from a CW light source into a stretched pulse and the phase modulator gives the parabolic phase to it. A well known CW light source is a diode laser. Thus, an inversely dispersed pulse is produced. The intensity modulator and the phase modulator may be combined into one device, such as a conventional intensity modulator with frequency chirping. Another design to produce an inversely dispersed pulse uses a frequency chirping light source and an intensity modulator. The frequency of light can be chirped by directly modulating a diode laser, and thus light with a parabolic phase is produced. Then this light is shaped into a stretched pulse by the intensity modulator. This design is suitable when the chromatic dispersion is large, because the maximum optical phase in the pulse duration can be made large.
As explained previously, when inversely dispersed pulses are transmitted, the pulses arrive at the receiver as non-dispersed pulses. In the transmission of an isolated pulse, the inversely dispersed pulse can be produced as described above. However, in a train of data signals, there are more than one pulse and the non-dispersed pulses should arrive at the receiver with a time difference as short as a time span of one bit, as shown by the lower portion of
An equivalent of this complicated waveform can be generated through the interference of inversely dispersed pulses which are produced in parallel by a plurality of optical pulse generators. In accordance with one embodiment of the present invention, a transmitter design using two optical pulse generators is shown in
The combination of inversely dispersed optical pulses counter chromatic dispersion in the optical fiber because the optical pulses independently arrive at the receiver as non-dispersed optical pulses corresponding to the received electrical signals as long as no optical nonlinear effects are involved and the optical system is linear, or the nonlinear effects are small and can be effectively ignored.
It should be noted that the optical phases from two light paths do not need to be locked, because the pulses do not interfere at the receiver. In other words, the relative optical phase between isolated pulses at the receiver can be arbitrary. This means that the relative optical phase between inversely dispersed pulses at the transmitter can be arbitrary. Therefore, the resulting inversely dispersed waveform at the transmitter output does not need to be unique for the same received power waveform. The inversely dispersed waveform varies depending on the relative optical phase between two light paths, but all inversely dispersed waveforms result in the same receiving power waveform.
The design of optical pulse generators in multiple light paths can be created in many ways, according to the present invention. In
In
In
The optical transmitter of the present invention can easily be extended to more than two optical pulse generators, if the duration of the inversely dispersed pulse in each light path is longer than a time span of two bits. For example,
Thus using N parallel optical pulse generators, each optical pulse generator has a time span of N bits to produce an inversely dispersed pulse. The inversely dispersed pulse can have as long duration as a time span of N bits, and, in principle, there is no limit on the amount of chromatic dispersion. This waveform generation uses interference among the inversely dispersed pulses that overlap at the transmitter, and is not the conventional time division multiplexing.
As described above, the pulses can theoretically be formed at the receiver with no overlap for an unlimited amount of chromatic dispersion. However, the contiguous pulses partially overlap at the receiver if the system is designed so that optical signals with NRZ (Non-Return to Zero) coding are to be detected at the receiver. In this case, to avoid the phase dependent interference between contiguous pulses at the receiver, orthogonal polarization light coupling is used to combine the light paths in the
An exemplary optical waveguide transmitter which generates inversely dispersed pulses which are polarized orthogonally to each other as described above is shown in
If the duration of an inversely dispersed pulse is longer than a time span of two bits and more than two optical pulse generators are used, the orthogonal polarization light coupling is used along with same polarization light coupling. Contiguous pulses are still orthogonally polarized. As an example of the
Empirical results were found to match theoretical expectations obtained by a numerical analysis. In the numerical analysis of the compression of an inversely dispersed pulse through chromatic dispersion, the magnitude of the inversely dispersed pulse with a duration of T was assumed to be cos(πt/T), and therefore, the intensity of the pulse was cos2(πt/T) in the time range, −T/2<t<T/2. The pulse had a parabolic phase of Ct2, where C was adjusted to maximize the pulse compression effect.
For a transmitter with two optical pulse generators at 10 Gbit/s modulation, the pulse duration T was assumed to be 200 ps, a time span of two bits. The change of the pulse shape along the fiber is shown in
In these analyses for 100 km, 200 km, and 400 km distance transmissions, the duration of the pulse at the receiver is slightly longer than a time span of one bit. This does not cause a problem when the light is detected at the receiver as NRZ coded signals. It is noted that the pulse has almost no power at the center of the next bit, which is 100 ps away from the center of the pulse. This is the case when the signals at the receiver are ideal for NRZ coding. Since no phase dependent interference occurs between the contiguous pulses with orthogonal polarizations, the signal waveforms are not distorted and these transmission distances are achievable. Although the pulse for every other bit has the same polarization, phase dependent interference between these pulses is well suppressed, because no power is observed in that time range. More precisely, the maximum magnitude in that entire time range was calculated to be lower than 3.4%, corresponding to lower than 0.12% in power.
To verify the effectiveness of the transmitter design, a transmission experiment was carried out at 10 Gbit/s using a 100 km long standard single-mode fiber with a chromatic dispersion of 1700 ps/nm for light at a 1.55 μm wavelength. As can be seen in
The resulting eye pattern after the transmission, i.e., at the receiver, is shown in
Therefore, while the description above provides a full and complete disclosure of the preferred embodiments of the present invention, various modifications, alternate constructions, and equivalents will be obvious to those with skill in the art. For example, the different designs of the optical pulse generators can be used in optical transmitters with N parallel modulators, N>2, and/or optical transmitters generating orthogonally polarized, inversely dispersed pulses. Thus, the scope of the present invention is limited solely by the metes and bounds of the appended claims.
This application claims priority to U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 60/611,484, entitled “TIME DIVISION MULTIPLEXING FOR INVERSELY DISPERSED PULSES” and filed Sep. 20, 2004, which provisional patent application is hereby incorporated by reference herein.
Number | Date | Country | |
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60611484 | Sep 2004 | US |