14 research outputs found

    Electronic Photonic Integrated Circuits and Control Systems

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    Photonic systems can operate at frequencies several orders of magnitude higher than electronics, whereas electronics offers extremely high density and easily built memories. Integrated photonic-electronic systems promise to combine advantage of both, leading to advantages in accuracy, reconfigurability and energy efficiency. This work concerns of hybrid and monolithic electronic-photonic system design. First, a high resolution voltage supply to control the thermooptic photonic chip for time-bin entanglement is described, in which the electronics system controller can be scaled with more number of power channels and the ability to daisy-chain the devices. Second, a system identification technique embedded with feedback control for wavelength stabilization and control model in silicon nitride photonic integrated circuits is proposed. Using the system, the wavelength in thermooptic device can be stabilized in dynamic environment. Third, the generation of more deterministic photon sources with temporal multiplexing established using field programmable gate arrays (FPGAs) as controller photonic device is demonstrated for the first time. The result shows an enhancement to the single photon output probability without introducing additional multi-photon noise. Fourth, multiple-input and multiple-output (MIMO) control of a silicon nitride thermooptic photonic circuits incorporating Mach Zehnder interferometers (MZIs) is demonstrated for the first time using a dual proportional integral reference tracking technique. The system exhibits improved performance in term of control accuracy by reducing wavelength peak drift due to internal and external disturbances. Finally, a monolithically integrated complementary metal oxide semiconductor (CMOS) nanophotonic segmented transmitter is characterized. With segmented design, the monolithic Mach Zehnder modulator (MZM) shows a low link sensitivity and low insertion loss with driver flexibility

    Optical Transmission Systems based on the Nonlinear Fourier Transformation

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    Solitons are stable pulse shapes, which propagate linearly and maintain their shape despite the highly nonlinear fiber optical channel. A challenge in the use of these signal pulses in optical data transmission is to multiplex them with high efficiency. One way to multiplex many solitons is the nonlinear Fourier transform (NFT). With the help of the NFT, signal spectra can be calculated which propagate linearly through a nonlinear channel. Thus, in perspective, it is possible to perform linear transmissions even in highly nonlinear regions with high signal power levels. The NFT decomposes a signal into a dispersive and a solitonic part. The dispersive part is similar to spectra of the conventional linear Fourier transform and dominates especially at low signal powers. As soon as the total power of a signal exceeds a certain limit, solitons arise. A disadvantage of solitons generated digitally by the NFT is their complex shape due to, for example, high electrical bandwidths or a poor peak-to-average power ratio. In the course of this work, a scalable system architecture of a photonic integrated circuit based on a silicon chip was designed, which allows to multiplex several simple solitons tightly together to push the complex electrical generation of higher order solitons into the optical domain. This photonic integrated circuit was subsequently designed and fabricated by the Institute of Integrated Photonics at RWTH Aachen University. Using this novel system architecture and additional equalization concepts designed in this work, soliton transmissions with up to four channels could be successfully realized over more than 5000 km with a very high spectral efficiency of 0.5 b/s/Hz in the soliton range

    Wavelength reconfigurability for next generation optical access networks

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    Next generation optical access networks should not only increase the capacity but also be able to redistribute the capacity on the fly in order to manage larger variations in traffic patterns. Wavelength reconfigurability is the instrument to enable such capability of network-wide bandwidth redistribution since it allows dynamic sharing of both wavelengths and timeslots in WDM-TDM optical access networks. However, reconfigurability typically requires tunable lasers and tunable filters at the user side, resulting in cost-prohibitive optical network units (ONU). In this dissertation, I propose a novel concept named cyclic-linked flexibility to address the cost-prohibitive problem. By using the cyclic-linked flexibility, the ONU needs to switch only within a subset of two pre-planned wavelengths, however, the cyclic-linked structure of wavelengths allows free bandwidth to be shifted to any wavelength by a rearrangement process. Rearrangement algorithm are developed to demonstrate that the cyclic-linked flexibility performs close to the fully flexible network in terms of blocking probability, packet delay, and packet loss. Furthermore, the evaluation shows that the rearrangement process has a minimum impact to in-service ONUs. To realize the cyclic-linked flexibility, a family of four physical architectures is proposed. PRO-Access architecture is suitable for new deployments and disruptive upgrades in which the network reach is not longer than 20 km. WCL-Access architecture is suitable for metro-access merger with the reach up to 100 km. PSB-Access architecture is suitable to implement directly on power-splitter-based PON deployments, which allows coexistence with current technologies. The cyclically-linked protection architecture can be used with current and future PON standards when network protection is required

    An Optical Grooming Switch for High-Speed Traffic Aggregation in Time, Space and Wavelength

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    In this book a novel optical switch is designed, developed, and tested. The switch integrates optical switching, transparent traffic aggregation/grooming, and optical regener-ation. Innovative switch subsystems are developed that enable these functionalities, including all-optical OTDM-to-WDM converters. High capacity ring interconnection between metro-core rings, carrying 130 Gbit/s OTDM traffic, and metro-access rings carring 43 Gbit/s WDM traffic is experimentally demonstrated. The developed switch features flexibility in bandwidth provisioning, scalability to higher traffic volumes, and backward compatibility with existing network implementations in a future-proof way

    Control plane routing in photonic networks

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    The work described in the thesis investigates the features of control plane functionality for routing wavelength paths to serve a set of sub-wavelength demands. The work takes account of routing problems only found in physical network layers, notably analogue transmission impairments. Much work exists on routing connections for dynamic Wavelength-Routed Optical Networks (WRON) and to demonstrate their advantages over static photonic networks. However, the question of how agile the WRON should be has not been addressed quantitatively. A categorization of switching speeds is extended, and compared with the reasons for requiring network agility. The increase of effective network capacity achieved with increased agility is quantified through new simulations. It is demonstrated that this benefit only occurs within a certain window of network fill; achievement of significant gain from a more-agile network may be prevented by the operator’s chosen tolerable blocking probability. The Wavelength Path Sharing (WPS) scheme uses semi-static wavelengths to form unidirectional photonic shared buses, reducing the need for photonic agility. Making WPS more practical, novel improved routing algorithms are proposed and evaluated for both execution time and performance, offering significant benefit in speed at modest cost in efficiency. Photonic viability is the question of whether a path that the control plane can configure will work with an acceptable bit error rate (BER) despite the physical transmission impairments encountered. It is shown that, although there is no single approach that is simple, quick to execute and generally applicable at this time, under stated conditions approximations may be made to achieve a general solution that will be fast enough to enable some applications of agility. The presented algorithms, analysis of optimal network agility and viability assessment approaches can be applied in the analysis and design of future photonic control planes and network architectures

    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

    Three transducers for one photodetector: essays for optical communications

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    Dissertation presented to obtain the PhD degree in Electrical and Computer Engineering - ElectronicsOptical processing devices based on a- SiC:H multilayer architectures are expected to become reconfigurable to perform WDM optoelectronic logic functions and provide as well complex photonic functions such as signal amplification and switching. This thesis, entitled ”Three Transducers for One Photodetector: essays for optical communications”, reports the main work areas to design, control, validate and evaluate the research of a voltage-controllable wavelength selective optical switching based on shifting between positive and negative electrically bias and a photodetector, which enables the filtering function with the detector itself and has the potential to be rapidly optically biasing tuned: System Architecture – In this work area it is defined the basic requirements of the device: light-to-dark sensitivity, colour recognition, selective optical and electrical output response, amplification and opto-electronic conversion to transmit, receive, and/or process intelligence(data).The output multiplexed signals should have a strong nonlinear dependence on the light absorption profile, i.e., on the incident light wavelength, bit rate and intensity under unbalanced light generation of carriers. Experimental Design – This test activities work area allows the evaluation of the results. Multiple monochromatic pulsed communication channels were transmitted together, each one with a specific bit sequence. The combined optical signal was analyzed by reading out, under different applied voltages and optical bias, the generated photocurrent across the device. Depending on the wavelength of the external background and irradiation side, it acts either as a short- or a long- pass band filter or as a band-stop filter Optoelectronic Algorithm Interface – To help improve our understanding of the output multiplexed signal, computer models of monolithic photodetectors are developed. Following control theoretic methods we derive state-space representation and an equivalent circuit optoelectronic simulator. We validate each model and calibrate the spectral gain model by background–probe experiments and truth tables lookup that perform 8-to-1 multiplexer (MUX) and 1-to-8 demultiplexer (DEMUX) functions. Applications – The purpose of this work area is to present a new optical logic architecture that offers considerable improvements in reconfigurability. Tunable WDM converters based on amorphous SiC multilayer photonic active filters are used to build blocks to perform standard digital system operations. The transducers combine the simultaneous demultiplexing operation with the photodetection and self amplification. They are optimized for provide the high-sensitivity needed for low-light applications, such as medicine, lighting, sensing and measurement, and manufacturing. The migration to next generation packet based networks can be much easier and smoother than previously thought, using the emerging a-Si solutions and its integration with plastic optical fiber. It will push the limits of functionality, cost/performance and integration level

    Fibre and components induced limitations in high capacity optical networks

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