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1.IntroductionVestigial sideband (VSB) modulation is one important technique to realize high spectral efficiency transmission and improve the fiber dispersion tolerance.1, 2 There are many techniques to generate VSB or single-sideband (SSB) optical signals.3, 4, 5 All these techniques use complicated and expensive optical modulators and electrical signal processing devices. In optical systems, optical filtering can be used to generate the VSB signal at low cost for simplicity.6, 7 Because the optical filter reduces the redundant sideband of the optical signal, there are some distortions of the optical pulses. This paper experimentally shows the VSB filtering impacts on optical signals. Two kinds of bandpass optical filters are used to generate vestigial sideband carrier suppressed return-to-zero (VSB-CSRZ) format with pseudorandom bit sequence (PRBS) lengths of , , , , and , respectively. The back-to-back filtering performances are studied. There are bit error rate (BER) floors when the PRBS sequence length increases with both optical filters. The experiment results show that the filter ramp closed to carrier frequency dominates the filtering performance. So in VSB-CSRZ systems, the forward error correction (FEC) should be employed to decrease the BER floor. 2.Experiment and ResultsThe experiment setup is shown in Fig. 1. In this experiment, the optical signal from the continuous wave laser (CWL) at is modulated by a Mach-Zender modulator (MZM1) biased at to generate the non-return-to-zero (NRZ) code. And the second MZM is biased at the minimal intensity-output point and driven with a sine-clock signal. The phase deviation of the two modulator arms equals . Thus the output of MZM2 is the CSRZ code. Tunable optical filters are placed after the amplified signal to generate the VSB-CSRZ code. In order to test the performance, we use a BER tester with an optical preamplifier, after which there is an optical bandpass filter to block amplified spontaneous emission noise. Two kinds of tunable optical filters are employed to generate VSB-CSRZ signals. The bandwidth of filter 1 is . The transmission spectrum is shown in Fig. 2a and its shape is like a Gaussian function. The bandwidth of filter 2 is . The transmission spectrum is shown in Fig. 2b and its shape is like a rectangle with a much sharper ramp than filter 1. We tune the center frequency of the two filters in order to filter out one of the main tones of the CSRZ code and suppress the other as low as possible. The spectra of CSRZ and VSB-CSRZ after two separate filters are shown in Fig. 3. It’s shown that both of the filters suppress one tone of CSRZ below and keep the other dominating tone, which confirms that the VSB signal is more similar to an ideal SSB signal. In the experiment, we also change the PRBS pattern lengths to , , , , and , separately and test the received signal’s BER performance. Figure 4 shows the tested BER curves of VSB signals employing different filters. It’s obvious that there is a BER floor when the PRBS sequence length increases in both cases. When filter 1 is used, the BER floor rises when the PRBS length increases above and the BER floor is . With filter 2, the BER floor rises when the PRBS length increases above and the BER floor is only . The VSB filtering impacts can be mainly considered as optical pulse broadening.8 The sharper the filter ramp is, the more the optical pulse broadens. Since the ramp of filter 2 is much steeper than that of filter 1 in the close area of carrier frequency, filter 2 has worse BER performance than filter 1, as shown in Fig. 4. At the same receiver power, such as , the BER of filter 1 can be less than with PRBS order 7, compared to only about for filter 2. Also the filtering impacts will cause intersymbol interference (ISI) between optical pulses, and the worst case is the single bit “1” and “0” surrounded by different patterns. When the PRBS pattern length increases,the solitary bits are more than the short PRBS length case. Thus long PRBS suffer more distortions with optical filtering and get worse reception performance, which is also shown in Fig. 4a and 4b. 3.ConclusionThe influence of optical filtering in VSB-CSRZ systems is experimentally demonstrated and discussed. By changing the PRBS lengths and employing two kinds of optical filters, the reception performance is studied. The results show that the filter ramp at carrier frequency dominates the performance of different bit sequences. And long PRBS pattern length suffers more than the short ones. So in VSB-CSRZ systems, proper filter and FEC should be used to ensure the transmission performance. AcknowledgmentsThis work is supported by the National Nature Science Foundation of China (NSFC) under Grant No. 90104003 and the National High-tech R&D Program of China under Grant No. 2005AA103. ReferencesK. Yonenaga and
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