The explosive growth of mobile applications, e.g., ultra-high definition video streaming, virtual reality/augmented reality (VR/AR) wearables, incurs lots of changes in 5G network of its reliability, coverage, transmission throughput and received quality of service (QoS). Therefore, to make 5G a reality, Fiber-Wireless Integration and Networking (FiWIN) is the key architecture in serving such diverse user scenarios, which provides a comprehensive network design for signal delivery. In this paper, some of the great challenges in 5G mobile fronthaul and the possible solutions will be discussed. In particular, we will review the recent breakthroughs in the FiWIN research center of the digitally spreading OFDM, polarization division multiplexing (PDM) radio-over-fiber (RoF), and beamforming enhanced mobile fronthaul. From the network perspective, by employing the 5G new radio and dense small cells deployment, the 5G wireless environment could become sophisticated, and the unexpected interference would cause a significant received performance declination. In this case, a spreading OFDM exhibit a superior received performance over the typical OFDM is considering as a promising signal format. While, the photonic-aided RoF system greatly simplified the 5G small cell hardware design. In order to maintain that beneficial feature, a self-polarization PDM scheme may be applied in mobile fronthaul for increasing the channel capacity and network coverage. The narrow beam-width property of 5G new radio reduces the tolerance of antenna misalignment. To address such issue, we will present the future-proof experiment of the fiber-wireless integration network with a 1-by-4 beamforming receiver with full reception angles (±90o) and signal waveforms transparency.
We experimentally demonstrated a novel structure for generating an optical frequency comb source for multicarrier modulation in an optical transmission system. In the proposed scheme, the integration of an electroabsorption-modulated laser cascaded with a phase modulator is employed, both of which are driven and synchronized via a common sinusoidal radio frequency signal. The optimal operating range defined as a spectral flatness with less than 3-dB power fluctuation can be obtained through numerical simulation. Using the proposed scheme, we can achieve 10 flat-topped and frequency-locked optical carriers with a 12.5-GHz frequency spacing. On–off-keying intensity-modulated signals with 3.125 and 12.5 Gb / s are transmitted error-free over 20 km standard single-mode fiber utilizing the proposed optical frequency comb source for an optical wavelength-division multiplexing transmission system.
KEYWORDS: Extremely high frequency, Radio over Fiber, Analog electronics, Receivers, Modulation, Radio optics, Orthogonal frequency division multiplexing, Network architectures, Signal detection, Signal generators
Fifth-generation (5G) wireless access network promises to support higher access data rate with more than 1,000 times capacity with respect to current long-term evolution (LTE) systems. New radio-access-technologies (RATs) based on higher carrier frequencies to millimeter-wave (MMW) radio-over-fiber, and carrier-aggregation (CA) using multi-band resources are intensively studied to support the high data rate access and effectively use of frequency resources in heterogeneous mobile network (Het-Net). In this paper, we investigate several enabling technologies for MMW RoF systems in 5G Het-Net. Efficient mobile fronthaul (MFH) solutions for 5G centralized radio access network (C-RAN) and beyond are proposed, analyzed and experimentally demonstrated based on the analog scheme. Digital predistortion based on memory polynomial for analog MFH linearization are presented with improved EVM performances and receiver sensitivity. We also propose and experimentally demonstrate a novel inter-/intra- RAT CA scheme for 5G Het- Net. The real-time standard 4G-LTE signal is carrier-aggregated with three broadband 60GHz MMW signals based on proposed optical-domain band-mapping method. RATs based on new waveforms have also been studied here to achieve higher spectral-efficiency (SE) in asynchronous environments. Full-duplex asynchronous quasi-gapless carrier aggregation scheme for MMW ROF inter-/intra-RAT based on the FBMC is also presented with 4G-LTE signals. Compared with OFDM-based signals with large guard-bands, FBMC achieves higher spectral-efficiency with better EVM performance at less received power and smaller guard-bands.
By applying recirculating frequency shifter technology to generate optical comb as neighboring channels, we have experimentally investigated the interchannel nonlinear tolerance of 256-Gbit/s polarization-division multiplexing return-to-zero 16-ary quadrature amplitude modulation (PDM-RZ-16QAM) in a co-propagation with 32-Gbaud on-off keying, binary phase-shift keying, quadrature phase-shift keying (QPSK) signals in 792-km large-area fiber transmission system. The results show that the experimental back-to-back optical signal-to-noise ratio requirement of 256-Gbit/s (32-GBaud) PDM-RZ-16QAM signal is shifted by 4.8-dB penalty in comparison with the theoretical limits. The cross-phase modulation (XPM) tolerance for 256-Gbit/s PDM-RZ-16QAM in 32-Gbaud phase-modulated neighboring channels is better than in 32-Gbaud intensity-modulated neighbors. Moreover, the performance of XPM tolerance for 256-Gbit/s PDM-RZ-16QAM in 32-Gbaud QPSK neighboring channels is the best among other kinds of modulation neighboring formats.
Based on recirculating frequency shifter, we generate 20 high-quality multicarrier optical combs with a tone-to-noise ratio >25 dB . We also experimentally demonstrate 2.56-Tb/s , polarization division multiplexing return-to-zero 16-ary quadrature amplitude modulation, coherent optical wavelength division multiplexing transmission over 800 km standard single-mode fiber with 25-GHz channel spacing, and the spectrum efficiency is 5.1 b/s/Hz .
KEYWORDS: Antennas, Transceivers, Analog electronics, Multiplexing, Receivers, Digital signal processing, Extremely high frequency, Signal to noise ratio, Chemical mechanical planarization, Copper
Millimeter-wave wireless interconnects is an emerging technology for ultra-short-reach off-chip transmission, providing
spatial flexibility and power-efficient high-speed data transportation. Integrated with carrier-over-fiber technology, we
propose a low-phase-noise multi-wireless-transceiver architecture to improve the bit-error-rate performance of
conventional wireless interconnects. Multiplexing schemes, including frequency division multiplexing, spatial
multiplexing, and beam isolation, can be facilitated by carrier-over-fiber techniques. We introduce a potential application
of the multi-input-multi-output high-speed analog multiplexing with open-loop analog circuits and digital feedback.
As the demand for higher capacity and longer reach of optical access networks is garnering momentum in recent years,
coherent access technology attracts renewed interests in high-capacity optical networking. In this paper, designs of
various coherent access networks are investigated and compared. From our results, it may be the most promising solution with high capacity at optimized cost. When coherent detection is employed in access network, the laser linewidth is a key design issue for optimized performance and cost as laser phase noise is larger with lower bit rate. One of our objectives is to examine the feasibility of employing a conventional DFB as carrier sources. We evaluated the
performance of ultra-dense WDM access networking system. Experimental results show that 2.5GB/s QPSK data can be
transmitted over 35-km SMF-28 with 6.5GHz channel spacing using DFB lasers.
Recently efforts have been focused on ultra-high speed optical communication systems which can support 1Tb/s per
channel transmission. However, 1Tb/s over a single carrier requires either or both very high-level modulation format (i.e.
PDM-1024QAM) and high baud rate. Therefore, grouping a number of tightly spaced "sub-carriers", to form a terabit
channel has been considered and this has been refered to as a superchannel. Nyquist-WDM and Coherent Optical-
OFDM (CO-OFDM) are the two approaches to achieve ultra-high spectral efficiency in superchannel coherent optical
systems. In Nyquist-WDM systems, optical subcarriers are tightly packed at channel spacing near or equal to the baud
rate, potentially inducing strong inter-channel interference (ICI). The traditional way to mitigate the impact of ICI is by
applying aggressive optical filters to each channel; however this typically induces severe inter-symbol interference (ISI).
In this paper, we investigate receiver architectures for Nyquist-WDM superchannel coherent systems, and propose a new
"super receiver" architecture, which jointly detects and demodulates multiple channels simultaneously. Several joint
DSP algorithms are developed and tested through experimental and simulated data. The simulation results showed that
more than 5 dB ONSR gain was achieved comparing to conventional method at narrow channel spacing conditions.
We experimentally investigate the performance of WDM coherent polarization-division multiplexed-return to zero-quadrature
phase shift keying (PDM-RZ-QPSK) network in nonlinear transport regimes. Seven, 28 or 32-Gbaud PDM-RZ-
QPSK channels are employed on a 50-GHz grid and transmitted over 1600-km fiber on an all-EDFA recirculating
loop without any dispersion compensation module (DCM). The transmission link is configured entirely of either
standard single-mode fiber (AllWave), medium dispersion fiber (TrueWave REACH), or ultra-large area fiber (ULAF).
We sweep the launch power of the center channel and side channels together to measure the nonlinear effects of self-phase
modulation (SPM), cross-phase modulation (XPM), and cross-polarization modulation (XPolM) on the center
channel's BER performance. Furthermore, for all link configurations, we employ three different carrier phase recovery
methods in the demodulation routine - Viterbi-Viterbi, Viterbi-Viterbi with a minimum mean-squared error (MMSE)
filter, and the Optametra/Tektronix Weiner filter - to ascertain their relative performance in the presence of nonlinear
effects.
An efficient bit-to-symbol mapping method for star 16-quadrature amplitude modulation (16-QAM) is proposed in this
paper, which is similar to Gray coding for square 16-QAM. With the consideration of optimal ring ratio of constellation,
our simulation results show that a linewidth of 3MHz per laser can be tolerated for star 16-QAM optical coherent
systems with SNR penalty of 1dB at BER of 10-3, which is much better than that of square 16-QAM. Further
optimization possibility with variable number of points on each of the rings for star 16-QAM constellation is also
discussed.
Nonlinearities are a performance limitation in coherent optical links, and efforts have been made to understand the
tradeoffs between launch power and the penalties related to nonlinearities. Using both simulation and experimental
results from our 100G testbed we investigate the use of a nonlinear phase criterion that quantifies the total nonlinear
phase accumulation within a 112 Gb/s PDM-QPSK link. We examine the nonlinear effects of self-phase (SPM) and
cross-phase modulation (XPM) on a 112 Gb/s PM-QPSK channel propagating between four 10 Gb/s OOK aggressor
channels on a 50 GHz grid and quantify the launch power and span count scaling behavior. In order to assess the
applicability of a nonlinear phase criterion on real-world links, we determine the launch power that yields a 1.5 dB
OSNR penalty at a BER of 10-3 for each configuration. This launch power then allows the identification of a Nonlinear
Threshold Power (number of spans times launch power) that fully incorporates the increasing nonlinear penalties with
further transmission distance. This metric allows for the determination of a set of engineering rules for deployment of
100 Gb/s PDM-QPSK in linear links with arbitrary number of spans and span distances. We find that this nonlinear
threshold is constant in dispersion-compensated links. These experimental results are validated with simulations.
Reliable simulations of high-speed fiber optic links are necessary to understand, design, and deploy fiber networks.
Laboratory experiments cannot explore all possible component variations and fiber environments that are found in
today's deployed systems. Simulations typically depict relative penalties compared to a reference link. However,
absolute performance metrics are required to assess actual deployment configurations. Here we detail the efforts within
the Georgia Tech 100G Consortium towards achieving high absolute accuracy between simulation and experimental
performance with a goal of ±0.25 dB for back-to-back configuration, and ±0.5 dB for transmission over multiple spans
with different dispersion maps. We measure all possible component parameters including fiber length, loss, and
dispersion for use in simulation. We also validate experimental methods of performance evaluation including OSNR
assessment and DSP-based demodulation. We investigate a wide range of parameters including modulator chirp,
polarization state, polarization dependent loss, transmit spectrum, laser linewidth, and fiber nonlinearity. We evaluate 56
Gb/s (single-polarization) and 112 Gb/s (dual-polarization) DQPSK and coherent QPSK within a 50 GHz DWDM
environment with 10 Gb/s OOK adjacent channels for worst-case XPM effects. We demonstrate good simulation
accuracy within linear and some nonlinear regimes for a wide range of OSNR in both back-to-back configuration and up
to eight spans, over a range of launch powers. This allows us to explore a wide range of environments not available in
the lab, including different fiber types, ROADM passbands, and levels of crosstalk. Continued exploration is required to
validate robustness over various demodulation algorithms.
This paper presents an energy-efficient Medium Access Control (MAC) protocol for very-high-throughput millimeter-wave
(mm-wave) wireless sensor communication networks (VHT-MSCNs) based on hybrid multiple access techniques
of frequency division multiplexing access (FDMA) and time division multiplexing access (TDMA). An energy-efficient
Superframe for wireless sensor communication network employing directional mm-wave wireless access technologies is
proposed for systems that require very high throughput, such as high definition video signals, for sensing, processing,
transmitting, and actuating functions. Energy consumption modeling for each network element and comparisons among
various multi-access technologies in term of power and MAC layer operations are investigated for evaluating the energy-efficient
improvement of proposed MAC protocol.
This paper investigates DQPSK transport using both simulation and experimental results from our 100G testbed. We
examine 56 Gb/s single polarization (single-pol) RZ-DQPSK and 112 Gb/s polarization multiplexing (POL-MUX) RZDQPSK
with 12 Gb/s OOK aggressor channels and a variety of dispersion management maps using AllWave® zero
water peak (ZWP) fiber. Although a number of studies of 40 Gb/s line rates within 10 Gb/s networks have been reported,
there has been little with respect to 28 Gbaud DQPSK formats. We quantify the OSNR penalty due to nonlinearities of
these hybrid optical links. Using a nominal span loss of 22 dB and different span lengths while keeping the dispersion
compensation per span constant and the loss per span constant allows a direct examination of the impact of the residual
dispersion per span (RDPS) on the nonlinear penalty in the DQPSK channel. We vary compensation from 90% - 110%
(of total dispersion) across 8 spans (-119 ps/nm - +153 ps/nm). We report the required OSNR to achieve a non-FEC
BER of 10-4 versus RDPS for both single- and dual-polarization (dual-pol) RZ-DQPSK. Experimental data is validated
against RSoft OptSim simulations.
This paper describes convergence of optical and wireless access networks for delivering high-bandwidth integrated
services over optical fiber and air links. Several key system technologies are proposed and experimentally demonstrated.
We report here, for the first ever, a campus-wide field trial demonstration of radio-over-fiber (RoF) system transmitting
uncompressed standard-definition (SD) high-definition (HD) real-time video contents, carried by 2.4-GHz radio and 60-
GHz millimeter-wave signals, respectively, over 2.5-km standard single mode fiber (SMF-28) through the campus fiber
network at Georgia Institute of Technology (GT). In addition, subsystem technologies of Base Station and wireless
tranceivers operated at 60 GHz for real-time video distribution have been developed and tested.
We proposed a novel optical coupling technology for short-reach interconnection (<10m) on flexible polymer
waveguides. In order to decrease time and cost of fabrication and assembly, edge-emitting lasers and edge-viewing
photodetectors are embedded directly into flexible polymer waveguide in a parallel lithography process. This avoids
lenses or angle-reflected components, such as 45° mirrors or volume gratings, which are widely used for VCSEL
coupling. Multi-channel optical interconnection can be implemented by passive alignment in a one-time optical
lithography process, and no additional expensive components are needed to achieve high coupling efficiency.
We present a reliable, nondestructive, and real-time technique for characterization of propagation properties of planar optical waveguides based on accurately imaging the scattered light from the optical waveguide using a sensitive charge-coupled device (CCD) camera with built-in integration functionality. This technique can be used for real-time investigation of the propagation properties (loss, mode profile, bending properties, etc.) as well as the fabrication quality of planar optical waveguides. With this technique, we evaluate high-definition polymer optical waveguides on printed circuit board (PCB) substrates with a very low loss of 0.065 dB/cm at a wavelength of 850 nm, and measurement accuracy is less than 0.01 dB/cm. We expect this technique with the given CCD camera to be suitable for reliably measuring loss coefficients well below 0.1 dB/cm.
We have experimentally demonstrated how to generate, transmission and switching 100Gbit/s packet signals. The
performance of transmission, switching, and label erasure has also been evaluated.
We have designed and experimentally demonstrated optical networking technologies for generating, transmitting
and switching 100Gbit/s packet signals in optical networks. The performance of 100Gb/s packet transmission over
cascaded ROADM nodes with WSSs and over label switched metro networks are discussed.
Multimode interference (MMI) devices operating at high data rates are important for integrated optics and optical networks. Their 1×N splitting provides a basic functionality in these applications. Ultra-high speed data transmission at 40Gb/s per channel with a total bandwidth of 320Gb/s for all 8 output ports is demonstrated for the first time on a 1 × 8 photo-definable polymer-based MMI power splitter. The transmission integrity is confirmed by the bit-error-rate (BER) testing. To further determine the speed limitations of MMI devices, ultra-short pulse response of these devices is quantified. For example, for 20fs Gaussian input pulses into a 1×8 polymer-based MMI splitter, the output pulses are severely degraded in coupling efficiency (47%) and completely broken up in time and in space primarily due to inter-modal and intra-modal (waveguide) dispersions.
The combination of broadband optical access and core networks is considered to be one of the most promising solutions for end-to-end transportation of high bit-rate data, video, and voice signals across optical networks of the future. Optical label switching technology (OLS) is an important aspect of optical packet switching and it involves the extraction and processing of the labels so that the packets can be routed to their destinations. OLS enables the routing and forwarding of the ultra-high bit rate payloads from source to destination entirely in the optical domain, thus alleviating the need for expensive optical-to-electrical conversions for processing. We have developed key enabling technologies for merged core and access networks including optical label generation, label swapping, optical buffering, clock recovery and wavelength conversion. We have experimentally demonstrated that these enabling techniques that can provide efficient broadband services in the future access and core networks.
Recent progress toward implementing high-density, optical-digital building blocks necessary to accomplish efficient, end-to-end optical interconnect architecture on low cost FR-4 boards has been demonstrated. The optical interconnect system consists of fabricating an optical buffer layer separating board metallurgy from the optical lightwave circuit layer, and implementing optical links between embedded lasers and detectors. We will show an example of 1310 nm light from an edge emitting distributed-feedback or Fabry-Perot laser operating at 10 Gb/s being guided to the photo-detector by a polymer waveguide. Both lasers and detector are embedded in the waveguide and all construction is built on a low-cost FR-4 board with 3 levels of metallurgy.
We have experimentally demonstrated some key techniques in label switching optical networks. These techniques include optical label generation, optical label swapping and preamble free clock recovery. The label generation using optical carrier suppression and separation (OCSS) technique has these advantages of high bit rate operation, low cross-talk and narrow bandwidth occupancy. The label swapping is realized by combining OCSS and wavelength conversion. The payload can be simultaneously regenerated after wavelength conversion; hence this technique is very useful for cascaded label swapping in label switched optical networks. We have also demonstrated how to realize preamble free clock recovery for burst mode label and payload generated by OCSS technique.
We will review the recent progress of high-speed photonic devices for next generation optical networks. We will concentrate on optical devices for 10Gb/s SONET/SDH and 10Gb/s Ethernet transponders as examples. Other phonic devices needed for next generation 1P over dynamically reconfigurable WDM networks to enable low-latency and highly efficient network connections will also be discussed here
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