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1.IntroductionUltrawideband (UWB) is a promising technology for short-range wireless indoor communication due to many advantages, such as extremely wide bandwidth, low-power spectral density, and multipath immunity.1 The United States Federal Communications Commission (FCC) regulates the frequency band from 3.1 to for unlicensed use of UWB with a power spectral density emission limit of .2 As a development of FTTx, UWB-over-fiber combines UWB and fiber access networks for broadband indoor wireless access. In recent years, the generation of UWB signals directly in the optical domain has attracted research interests, and many schemes have been proposed, such as UWB pulse generation based on cross-gain modulation (XGM)3, 4 or gain saturation effect5 in a semiconductor optical amplifier (SOA); phase modulation to intensity modulation (PM–IM) conversion using an optical frequency discriminator6, 7, 8, 9; photonic microwave delay-line filter structures10; nonlinearly biased electro-optic intensity modulation11; spectral-shaping and dispersion-induced frequency-to-time conversion12; and optical polarization modulation with time delay.13, 14 In this work, we propose and demonstrate a simple approach to optically generate a UWB monocycle pulse based on a dual-output electro-optic intensity modulator and optical delay line. The fundamental principle is that a dual-output intensity modulator is applied by an electrical pulse, and then positive and negative pulses are obtained from two output ports, respectively, and coupled together through different time delays. Through adjusting the electrical pulse width and optical delay-line length, various UWB monocycle pulses can be generated. In our experimental demonstration, a UWB monocycle that has a 10-dB spectrum bandwidth of and central frequency of is acquired. 2.Principle and ExperimentThe experiment setup of our proposed scheme is shown in Fig. 1a. The dual-output electro-optic intensity modulator, which has been used for photonic analog-to-digital convertors15 and microwave photonic filters,16 has two complementary output ports, i.e., the intensity of output 1 and output 2 is where is the intensity of the distributed feedback (DFB) laser, is the applied electrical pulse, is the half-wave voltage of the modulator, and is the initial bias phase. Choosing the proper and amplitude of , the modulator could work in the linear modulated region. Thenwhich shows that a positive optical pulse and negative optical pulse can be obtained from the two output ports, respectively, while electrical pulses are applied to the modulator. The complementary pulses are coupled after a tunable delay line (TDL). The combined signal iswhere is the time delay between two complementary pulses. Then by choosing a proper , monocycle pulses can be detected by a photodetector (PD) at the coupler output.In our experiment, a polarization interferometer based on a phase modulator is used as a dual-output intensity modulator, whose principle is shown in Fig. 1b. Adjusted by the polarization controller (PC) 1, input light is launched to the and axes of the phase modulator, by which the phase difference between the and directions will linearly change with the voltage of the electric signal. Two polarizations are made to interfere through a polarizing beamsplitter (PBS) as an in-line analyzer whose transmission axis is to the and axes. Then the intensity of output 1 and output 2 is complementary with orthogonal polarizations. Due to orthogonal polarizations of the two outputs, they will not interfere at the output of the coupler. The phase modulator is driven by a fixed pattern with a repetition rate and 1:15 duty cycle, and the optical pulse from output 1 is a Gaussian-like shape with a full width at half-maximum (FWHM) of , as shown in Fig. 2. A waveform of the generated monocycle pulse is shown in Fig. 3, which has a pulse width of about . By controlling the TDL, a 0 or phase shift pulse can be generated. In Fig. 4, the RF spectrum, whose envelope represents the spectrum of the monocycle pulse, includes discrete frequency with an interval of , induced by the applied pattern signal. With the 10-dB bandwidth at , and the central frequency at , then the calculated fractional bandwidth is 175%. By adjusting the electrical pulse width and optical delay-line length, various UWB monocycle pulses can be generated. But the major disadvantage in our proposal is that the optical pulse width is limited by an applied electrical pulse, which restricts the frequency bandwidth of the UWB pulse. 3.ConclusionA novel and simple approach to generate UWB monocycle pulses is proposed and experimentally demonstrated, based on a dual-output intensity modulator and optical tunable time delay. In our experiment, only one optical source is required, and a polarization interferometer based on a phase modulator performs as a dual-output intensity modulator. By adjusting the optical tunable delay line, a monocycle pulse output can be realized by the combination of a positive optical pulse and a negative optical pulse. 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