69 research outputs found

    Fiber amplifiers, directly modulated transmitters and a ring network structure for optical communications

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    The three technologies that are considered the key elements in building a metropolitan area optical network are studied in this thesis. They are optical amplification, high-speed low cost transmitters and ring network structures. These studies concentrate on cost reduction of these three technologies thus enabling the use of optical networks in small customer base metropolitan areas. The research on optical amplification concentrated first on the solution doping process, at present the most used method for producing erbium doped fiber. It was found that separationing the soot growth and the sintering improved the uniformity of the porous layer. This made the homogeneity of the doping concentration in the fiber core better. The effects of index profile variations that arise from the non-ideal solution doping process were also simulated. In the search for a better doping method a new nanoparticle glass-forming process, the direct nanoparticle deposition, was developed. In this process the doping is done simultaneously with glass formation. Utilizing this new process it was possible to improve the uniformity of the doping resulting in higher usable doping levels and shorter erbium doped fiber lengths in the amplifiers. There were fewer limitations in the amplifier caused by optical non-linearities and polarization mode dispersion since shorter fiber lengths were needed. The double cladding fiber, which avoids the costly coupling of the pump laser into a single mode waveguide, was also studied. This pumping scheme was found to improve the inversion uniformity in the erbium doped fiber core thereby enhancing the power conversion efficiency for the long wavelength band amplifier. In characterizing the erbium doped fiber amplifier the gain and noise figure was measured with a temporal filter setup. It was made of simple, low cost components but yielded accurate measurements since the noise originating from the amplified spontaneous emission was measured at the signal wavelength. In the study of fiber amplifier controlling schemes the input power of the fiber amplifier was successfully used to regulate the pump laser. This feed-forward control scheme provides a simple, low cost control and managment system for the erbium doped fiber amplifier in metropolitan area network applications that require flexible adding and dropping of wavelength channels. The transmitter research focused on the DFB laser due to its simplicity and low cost structure. A solid state Fabry-Perot etalon made from double polished silicon chip was used as a frequency discriminator in the chirp analyser developed for the DFB lasers. This wavelength discriminator did not require repeated calibration or active stabilisation and was controled electrically enabling automatic measurements. The silicon Fabry-Perot etalon was also used for simultaneous spectral filtering and wavelength control of the laser. The usable dispersion limited transmission length was increased when the filter was used in conjunction with the directly modulated distributed feedback laser transmitter. The combination of spatial multiplexing and dense wavelength division multiplexing in ring topology was investigated in the course of the research on the ring network as the feeder part of the metropolitan network. A new way to organize different wavelengths and fibers was developed. This ring network structure was simulated and an experimental ring network built. The results of the studies demonstrated that the same limitations effecting uni-directional ring structures also are the main limitations on the scalability of the spatial and wavelength division multiplexed ring networks based on bi-directional transmission when the node spacing is short. The developed ring network structure demonstrated major cost reductions when compared with the heavy use of wavelength division multiplexing. The node structure was also greatly simplified resulting in less need for different wavelength transmitters in each node. Furthermore the node generated only minor losses for the passing signals thus reducing the need for optical amplification.reviewe

    Advances in Optical Amplifiers

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    Optical amplifiers play a central role in all categories of fibre communications systems and networks. By compensating for the losses exerted by the transmission medium and the components through which the signals pass, they reduce the need for expensive and slow optical-electrical-optical conversion. The photonic gain media, which are normally based on glass- or semiconductor-based waveguides, can amplify many high speed wavelength division multiplexed channels simultaneously. Recent research has also concentrated on wavelength conversion, switching, demultiplexing in the time domain and other enhanced functions. Advances in Optical Amplifiers presents up to date results on amplifier performance, along with explanations of their relevance, from leading researchers in the field. Its chapters cover amplifiers based on rare earth doped fibres and waveguides, stimulated Raman scattering, nonlinear parametric processes and semiconductor media. Wavelength conversion and other enhanced signal processing functions are also considered in depth. This book is targeted at research, development and design engineers from teams in manufacturing industry, academia and telecommunications service operators

    Investigation of in-situ parameter control in novel semiconductor optical amplifiers

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    Fibre optic networks form the backbone of modern communications systems. As demand for ever increasing bandwidth continues to grow, technologies that enable the expansion of optical networks will be the key to future development. The semiconductor optical amplifier (SOA) is a technology that may be crucial in future optical networks, as a low cost in-line amplifier or as a functional element. As fibre networks extend closer to the end user, economical ways of improving the reach of these networks are important. SOAs are small, relatively inexpensive and can be readily integrated in photonic circuits. Problems persist with the development of SOAs, however, in the form of a relatively high noise figure and low saturation output power, which limits their use in many circumstances. The aim of this thesis is to outline a concept for control of these parameters such that the SOA can achieve the performance required. The concept relies on the control of the carrier density distribution in the SOA. The basic characteristics of the SOA and how they are affected by changes in the carrier density are studied. The performance of the SOA in linear and high power transmission of CW and pulsed signals is determined. Finally, the wavelength conversion characteristics of the SOA are outlined. The role of the carrier density control in shaping all of these characteristics will be explained

    Advanced raman amplification techniques for high capacity and broadband coherent optical transmission systems

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    This thesis presents a detailed study of different advanced Raman fibre laser (RFL) based amplification schemes and the development of novel broadband distributed and discrete Raman amplifiers in order to improve the transmission performance of modern high capacity, long-haul coherent optical systems. The numerical modelling of different Raman amplifier techniques including power distribution of signal, pump and noise components, RIN transfer from pump to signal, broadband gain optimization and so on have been described in details.The RIN and noise performances of RFL based distributed Raman amplifiers (DRAs) with different span lengths, forward pump powers and input reflection levels have been characterized experimentally. It has been shown through coherent transmission experiment that, in order to improve pump power efficiency, a low level of input reflection up to ~10% can be allowed without increasing the Q factor penalty > 1dB due to additional signal RIN penalty.A novel broadband (>10nm) first order Raman pump is developed for use as a forward pump in long-haul transmission experiment. Significant signal RIN mitigation up to 10dB compared with conventional low RIN, narrowband sources was obtained for bidirectional DRA schemes. Long-haul coherent transmission experiments with 10×120Gb/s DP-QPSK system were carried out in are circulating loop setup using the proposed broadband pump in bidirectional and backward only pumping configurations. The maximum transmission reach up to ~8330km was reported with first order broadband pumped bidirectional DRA, with transmission reach extensions of 1250km and1667km compared with conventional backward only and first order semiconductor pumped bidirectional pumping scheme respectively.Finally, a novel design of bidirectional broadband distributed DRA is proposed to reduce the noise figure tilt and improve the WDM transmission performances. Furthermore, broadband discrete Raman amplifier schemes in dual stage configuration are also shown for high gain, high output power, low noise and low nonlinear performance

    Microwave Photonics for Distributed Sensing

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    In the past few years, microwave-photonics technologies have been investigated for optical fiber sensing. By introducing microwave modulation into the optical system, the optical detection is synchronized with the microwave modulation frequency. As a result, the system has a high SNR and thus an improved detection limit. In addition, the phase of the microwave-modulated light can be obtained and Fourier transformed to find the time-of-arrival information for distributed sensing. Recently, an incoherent optical-carrier-based microwave interferometry (OCMI) technique has been demonstrated for fully distributed sensing with high spatial resolution and large measurement range. Since the modal interference has little influence on the OCMI signal, the OCMI is insensitive to the types of optical waveguide. Motivated by the needs of distributed measurement in the harsh environment, in the first part of this paper, several OCMI-based sensing systems were built by using special multimode waveguides to perform sensing for heavy duty applications. Driven by an interest on the high-resolution sensing, in the second part of the paper, I propose a coherence-gated microwave photonics interferometry (CMPI) technique, which uses a coherent light source to obtain the optical interference signal from cascaded weak reflectors. The coherence length of the light source is carefully chosen or controlled to gate the signal so that distributed sensing can be achieved. The experimental results indicate that the strain resolution can be better than 0.6 ”Δ using a Fabry-Perot interferometer (FPI) with a cavity length of 1.5 cm. Further improvement of the strain resolution to the 1 nΔ level is achievable by increasing the cavity length of the FPI to over 1m. The CMPI has also been utilized for distributed dynamic measurement of vibration by using a new signal processing method. The fast time-varying optical interference intensity change induced by the sub-scan rate vibration is recorded in the frequency domain. After Fourier transform, distinctive features are shown at the vibration location in the time domain signal, where the vibration frequency and intensity can be retrieved. The signal processing method supports vibration measurement of multiple points with the measurable frequency of up to 20 kHz

    Analysis and optimisation of semiconductor reflective modulators for optical networks

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    Reflective modulators based on the combination of an electroabsorption modulator (EAM) and semiconductor optical amplifier (SOA) are attractive devices for applications in long reach carrier distributed passive optical networks (PONs) due to the gain provided by the SOA and the high speed and low chirp modulation of the EAM. Integrated R-EAM-SOAs have experimentally shown two unexpected and unintuitive characteristics which are not observed in a single pass transmission SOA: the clamping of the output power of the device around a maximum value and low patterning distortion despite the SOA being in a regime of gain saturation. In this thesis a detailed analysis is carried out using both experimental measurements and modelling in order to understand these phenomena. For the first time it is shown that both the internal loss between SOA and R-EAM and the SOA gain play an integral role in the behaviour of gain saturated R-EAM-SOAs. Internal loss and SOA gain are also optimised for use in a carrier distributed PONs in order to access both the positive effect of output power clamping, and hence upstream dynamic range reduction, combined with low patterning operation of the SOA Reflective concepts are also gaining interest for metro transport networks and short reach, high bit rate, inter-datacentre links. Moving the optical carrier generation away from the transmitter also has potential advantages for these applications as it avoids the need for cooled photonics being placed directly on hot router line-cards. A detailed analysis is carried out in this thesis on a novel colourless reflective duobinary modulator, which would enable wavelength flexibility in a power-efficient reflective metro node

    Design and simulation for the fabrication of integrated semiconductor optical logic gates

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    Thesis (Ph. D.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, February 2006.This electronic version was submitted by the student author. The certified thesis is available in the Institute Archives and Special Collections.Includes bibliographical references.Development of ultrafast all-optical logic requires accurate and efficient modeling of optical components and interfaces. In this research, we present an all-optical logic unit cell with complete Boolean functionality as a representative circuit for modeling and optimization of monolithically integrated components. Proposed optical logic unit cell is based on an integrated balanced Mach-Zehnder interferometer (MZI) with semiconductor optical amplifiers (SOAs) in each arm and includes straight ridge waveguides, ridge waveguide bends, and multimode interference (MMI) devices. We use beam propagation method (BPM) to model, design and optimize dilute ridge waveguides, MMIs, and asymmetric twin waveguide (ATG) adiabatic taper couplers. We assess device robustness with respect to variations in fabrication, including lateral pattern transfer and etching. Bending losses in curved waveguides are evaluated using complex-frequency leaky mode computations with perfectly matched layer (PML) boundary conditions. Finite difference time domain (FDTD) method with PML is utilized in calculating reflections produced by abrupt interfaces, including a tip of an adiabatic taper coupler.(cont.) We demonstrate that evaluating reflections based on local effective indices on two sides of the junction offers a simple, accurate, and time-efficient alternative to FDTD. We show a strategy for development of SOAs for linear amplification and phase shifting using the same layered semiconductor structure. Our model of optical pulse propagation in SOA is based on rate equations for carrier density and photon density and using a wavelength-dependent parametric model for gain. We demonstrate a tradeoff between injection current density and device length for both linear and non-linear SOAs.by Aleksandra Markina.Ph.D

    Injection locking characteristics of indium arsenide quantum dash lasers

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    The study of injection locking characteristics was performed on an InAs Quantum Dash (QDash) semiconductor laser for the first time. The linewidth enhancement factor(α-parameter) of a QDash laser was measured using an injection locking technique that takes advantage of the asymmetry of the injection range. Studies were performed as functions of injecesed photon density, wavelength, and output power. To understand the behavior of the α-parameter versus wavelength, the Hakki-Paoli method, a technique that utilized the below threshold amplified spontaneous emission spectrum, was used to measure the modal gain over 1550 nm to 1573 nm. The α-parameter was found to have changed dramatically with power, indicating a large nonlinear gain coefficient, Δ. Using a curve fit of the α versus power curve taken from the injection locking data, Δ was measured to be 1.4*10-14 cm3, 1000 times larger than the typical Δ of quantum well lasers, changing the dynamics of the laser. The small α-parameter and giant Δ dramatically change the dynamics of the laser. To study the effects of the small α-parameter and giant Δ further, an operational map was created using an Agilent Technologies High Resolution Spectrometer (HRS) with a resolution of 1 MHz. The new operational map of the InAs QDash laser has features never before seen with other devices, such as the avoidance of coherence collapse with optical feedback

    Optical pulse processing towards Tb/s high-speed photonic systems

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    Due to the continued growth of high-bandwidth services provided by the internet, there is a requirement to operate individual line rates in excess of 100 Gb/s in next generation optical communications systems. Thus, to implement these high-speed optical networks all-optical processing techniques are necessary for pulse shaping and pulse routing. Two sub-systems (pulse generation and wavelength conversion), which exploit optical processing techniques are explored within this thesis. Future systems will require high-quality pulse sources and this thesis develops the pulse generation technique of gain switching to provide simple and cost efficient pulse sources. The poor pulse quality typically associated with gain switching is enhanced by developing all-optical methods. The main attribute of the first pulse generation scheme presented is its wavelength tunability over 50 nm. The novelty of the second scheme lies in the ability to design a grating which has a nonlinear chirp profile exactly opposite to the gain-switched pulses. This grating used in conjunction with the gain-switched laser generates transform limited pulses suitable for 80 Gb/s systems. Furthermore the use of a vertical microcavity-based saturable absorber to suppress detrimental temporal pulse pedestals of a pulse source is investigated. Next generation networks will require routing of data in the optical domain, which can be accomplished by high-speed all-optical wavelength converters. A semiconductor optical amplifier (SOA) is an ideal device to carry out wavelength conversion. In this thesis pulses following propagation through an SOA are experimentally characterised to examine the temporal and spectral dynamics due to the nonlinear response of the SOA. High-speed wavelength conversion is presented using SOA-based shifted filtering. For the first time 80 Gb/s error-free performance was obtained using cross phase modulation in conjunction with blue spectral shifted filtering. In addition an important attribute of this work experimentally examines the temporal profile and phase of the SOA-based shifted filtering wavelength converted signals. Thus the contribution and effect of ultrafast carrier dynamics associated with SOAs is presented

    Performance improvement of SS-WDM passive optical networks using semiconductor optical amplifiers: Modeling and experiment

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    Les sources incohĂ©rentes sont proposĂ©es comme alternatives aux lasers stabilisĂ©s en longueur d'onde pour rĂ©duire le coĂ»t des rĂ©seaux optiques passifs utilisant le multiplexage par longueur d'onde dĂ©coupĂ©e dans le spectre (SS-WDM PONs). À cause de leur nature incohĂ©rente, ces sources gĂ©nĂšrent au rĂ©cepteur un large bruit d'intensitĂ©. Ce bruit limite l'efficacitĂ© spectrale et/ou le taux binaire pouvant ĂȘtre achevĂ©. Cette thĂšse Ă©tudie l'utilisation des amplificateurs optique Ă  semi-conducteur SOAs pour nettoyer le bruit d'intensitĂ©. De plus, lors de cette thĂšse, nous explorons les outils numĂ©riques et expĂ©rimentaux qui nous permettent d'analyser les performances des SOAs dans le cadre de systĂšmes de communication multi-canaux, incluant le SS-WDM. Nous prĂ©sentons des modĂšles mathĂ©matiques pour le bruit d'intensitĂ©, ce bruit Ă©tant celui qui limite les performances des systĂšmes de communication utilisant des sources incohĂ©rentes. Nous discutons les dynamiques complexes des SOAs et prĂ©sentons les Ă©quations qui gouvernent l'Ă©volution des porteurs de charges dans ces amplificateurs. Nous identifions et soulignons l'effet des paramĂštres les plus importants, qui affectent le processus ainsi que la dynamique de nettoyage du bruit d'intensitĂ©. Nous passons en revue, les diffĂ©rentes techniques de nettoyage de bruit avec les SOAs, qui ont dĂ©montrĂ© les meilleurs rĂ©sultats connus. De plus, nous effectuons une revue de littĂ©rature poussĂ©e pour ce qui a attrait au problĂšme de post-filtrage lorsque le SOA est placĂ© au transmetteur, avant la modulation. Notre premiĂšre contribution pendant ce travail de recherche est de dĂ©montrer, en utilisant l'intermodulation de gain d'un SOA au rĂ©cepteur pour convertir le signal incohĂ©rent en laser cohĂ©rent, une amĂ©lioration significative du taux d'erreur binaire BER. Cette mĂ©thode est spectralement efficace, d'autant plus qu'elle ne souffre point la limitation occasionnĂ©e par le post-filtrage au rĂ©cepteur. En contre partie elle nĂ©cessite un ample budget de puissance qui doit assurer une saturation suffisante de l'amplificateur au rĂ©cepteur. Une source laser est aussi nĂ©cessaire au rĂ©cepteur. Ceci est un inconvĂ©nient, mĂȘme si une telle source n'ait pas besoin d'une quelconque stabilisation. Pour contourner le problĂšme causĂ© par le post-filtrage quand le SOA est au transmetteur, nous proposons un nouveau rĂ©cepteur pour les systĂšmes de communication WDM, qui permet de mieux garder le nettoyage de bruit, et ce malgrĂ© le filtrage optique au rĂ©cepteur. La nouvelle mĂ©thode consiste en un dĂ©tecteur balancĂ© utilisĂ© au rĂ©cepteur: d'un bord, tous les canaux sont dĂ©tectĂ©s sans distinction. De l'autre, le signal dĂ©sirĂ© est bloquĂ© pendant que tous les autres canaux sont dĂ©tectĂ©s. Avec cette mĂ©thode, il est facile de saturer l'amplificateur pour une meilleure suppression de bruit tout en Ă©vitant en grande partie la dĂ©gradation causĂ© par le post-filtrage. Nous avons expĂ©rimentalement dĂ©montrĂ© un systĂšme WDM dense de 8 x 10 Gbps avec une source incohĂ©rente et un SOA en saturation. Une autre contribution originale de ce travail est le dĂ©veloppement d'un outil de simulation pour les SOAs qui est numĂ©riquement plus efficace et lĂ©ger que les modĂšles connus Ă  ce jour. Nous avons donc dĂ©veloppĂ© un modĂšle thĂ©orique simple, pouvant ĂȘtre implĂ©mentĂ© par diagramme block, dans le but de simuler les performances des hens de communications WDM. Notre modĂšle dĂ©montre une bonne concordance avec les rĂ©sultats expĂ©rimentaux ainsi qu'une diminution de temps de calcul de l'ordre de 20 fois. Finalement, lors de la derniĂšre partie de ces travaux, nous nous sommes occupĂ©s de mesurer, de façon prĂ©cise, le temps de recouvrement du gain dans un SOA. Le temps de recouvrement des porteurs dans un SOA est un des paramĂštres les plus importants qui sont Ă  l'origine du phĂ©nomĂšne de nettoyage de bruit et qui rĂ©gissent le comportement ainsi que les dynamiques de l'amplificateur. Nous avons Ă©tudiĂ© en particulier, la dĂ©pendance de ce temps de recouvrement r de la longueur d'onde. Pour le SOA utilisĂ© lors de notre Ă©tude expĂ©rimentale, nous avons dĂ©montrĂ© que r dĂ©pendait de la longueur d'onde de façon similaire au spectre de gain. Ces mesures ont Ă©tĂ© possibles grĂące au dĂ©veloppement d'un nouveau dispositif de mesure pompe/sonde, qui permettait de mesurer le recouvrement du gain pour une pompe et une sonde Ă  la mĂȘme longueur d'onde et ayant le mĂȘme Ă©tat de polarisation
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