Dispersion compensation in fibre optical transmission
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Transcript Dispersion compensation in fibre optical transmission
New functionalities for advanced optical
interfaces (Dispersion compensation)
Kazuo Yamane
Photonic systems development dept.
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Outline
Chromatic dispersion effect
Dispersion compensating techniques
Optimization of residual dispersion or its map
PMD compensation
Conclusions
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Signal distortion due to chromatic dispersion
Spectrum broadening
Optical spectrum
Δλ
Difference in group velocity
Wavelength
Pulse broadening
(Waveform distortion)
Transmitter output
Original signal
1
0
1
3
Time
Group velocity
Time
Receiver input
Optical fiber
Time
Regenerated signal
1
Δλ
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1
1
Wavelength
Time
Waveform distortion due to fiber non-linearity
High power
intensity
Refractive
index change
Frequency
chirp
Spectrum
broadening
Waveform distortion
due to chromatic
dispersion
Optical fiber
Low optical power
Received waveform
Transmitter out
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High optical power
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Dispersion compensation example
Dispersion compensating fiber (DCF)
Transmission fiber
Positive dispersion
(Negative dispersion)
+
Negative dispersion
(Positive dispersion)
Longer wavelength
Slow (Fast)
Longer wavelength
Fast (Slow)
Shorter wavelength
Fast (Slow)
Shorter wavelength
Slow (Fast)
40 Gb/s optical signal
25 ps
Transmitter output
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After fiber transmission
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After dispersion comp.
DC allocations and dispersion maps
Fiber#1
+
Fiber#2
DC
DC
R.D. [ps/nm]
Postcomp.
Fiber#1
DC
6
R.D. [ps/nm]
Distance
[km]
+
Fiber#2
DC
0
-
DC
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R.D. [ps/nm]
Post- &
Precomp.
+
Fiber#2
DC
DC
Distance
[km]
-
Pre-comp.
Fiber#1
0
0
-
Distance
[km]
Residual dispersion and tolerance of receiver
Allowable
penalty
R.D. [ps/nm]
Longer wavelength
Center wavelength
0
Shorter wavelength
Dispersion
tolerance
of receiver
R.D. [ps/nm]
+
+
-
Distance [km]
Penalty [dB]
Need to consider the variation of
tolerance due to characteristics of
transmitter, fibre non-linear effects and
dispersion map.
Even if residual dispersion values are
same, the received waveforms are
different, affected by these parameters.
Parameters affecting to the tolerance
- Signal bit rate
- Channel counts and spacing
- Distance or number of spans
- Fibre type
- Fibre input power
- Pre-chirping of transmitter
- Modulation scheme of transmitter
- DC allocation / value
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Comparison of 40Gbit/s modulation schemes
Optical power (dBm)
NRZ
RZ
0
CS-RZ
0
Optical duobinary
0
0
108 GHz
180 GHz
165 GHz
-20
-20
-20
-20
-40
-40
-40
-40
1542
1545
1548
Wavelength (nm)
1542
1545
1548
Wavelength (nm)
1542
1545
Wavelength (nm)
1548
70 GHz
1542
Wavelength (nm)
Now evaluating transmission performance
Chromatic dispersion tolerance
Fibre non-linear tolerance (Maximum input power)
Spectral tolerance (Degradation due to filter narrowing)
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1545
1548
A past field experiment example
10Gbit/s 750km WDM field trial between Berlin and Darmstadt (Ref.:
OFC/IOOC’99, Technical Digest TuQ2, A. Ehrhardt, et.al.)
Berlin
Link for field trial
Darmstadt
Before Optimization
E/O
O/E
Post-amplifier
Pre-amplifier
After optimization
+900 ps/nm
-400 ps/nm
O/E
E/O
Post-amplifier
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Pre-amplifier
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Dispersion (ps/nm)
Dispersion maps and waveforms in the trial
Before optimization
2000
1500
1000
500
0
-500
Channel 1
Channel 2
-1000
-1500
Channel 3
Channel 4
-2000
0
200
400
600
800
Dispersion (ps/nm)
Distance (km)
After optimization
2000
1500
1000
500
0
-500
-1000
Channel 1
Channel 1
-1500
(Before)
(After)
-2000
0
200
400
600
800
Distance (km)
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Automatic dispersion compensation example
l1 Tx #1
l2
Tx #2
Provisioning
&
Tracking
Provisioning
Rx #2
VDC
VDC
l40 Tx #40
Rx #1
Rx #40
DC
DC
li
Dispersion compensator
(fixed or variable)
Dispersion
Monitor
VIPA variable dispersion compensator
DC > 0
Line-focusing
lens
Optical circulator
Variable
x-axis
DC < 0
Collimating lens
Glass
plate
Focusing
lens
3-Dimensional Mirror
VIPA : Virtually Imaged Phased Array
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Dispersion compensation trend
NE
NE
Photonic network
Manage dispersion or
residual dispersion
(dispersion map) !!
NE
NE
Transmitter / Receiver
Adjust parameters
including residual
dispersion to optimum!!
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NE
Polarization Mode Dispersion (PMD)
Cross-section of optical fiber
Cladding
Practical
Ideal
Fast axis
Core
Slow axis
1st-order PMD
Fast
Dt
Dt
Slow
D t : Differential Group Delay (DGD)
- Well defined, frequency independent eigenstates
- Deterministic, frequency independent Differential Group Delay (DGD)
- DGD scales linearity with fiber length
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Higher-order PMD
D t1
D t2
D t3
D t4
…
D tn
-Frequency dependence of DGD
-Statistically varying due to
environmental fluctuations
-Fiber PMD unit: ps/
km
Frequency of occurrence
Mode-coupling at random locations with random strength
Maxwellian distribution
of the instantaneous DGD
Prob.(DGD>3xPMD)
= 4x10-5 = 21 min/year
Prob.(DGD>3.5xPMD)
=10-6 = 32 sec/year
PMD
3.5PMD
Instantaneous DGD (ps)
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Automatic PMD compensation
PMD compensation scheme in receiver
40Gb/s waveforms
Before PMD comp.
PMD
comp.
device #1
PMD
comp.
device #2
PMD
comp.
device #3
Control
algorithm
O/E
module
Distortion
analyzer
PMD characteristic changes slowly due to
“normal” environmental fluctuations (e.g. temperature)
But, fast change due to e.g. fiber touching
High-speed PMD compensation device
& Intelligent control algorithm
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After PMD comp.
Conclusions
In fibre optical high bit rate (such as 10G or 40G bit/s)
long-haul transmission systems, dispersion
compensation is one of the most important items to be
considered for design.
Management or optimization of residual dispersion are
required for photonic networks, i.e., for fibres, repeaters
and optical interfaces.
PMD compensation is also required especially for
40Gbit/s or higher bit rate long-haul systems.
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