47 research outputs found

    Harnessing machine learning for fiber-induced nonlinearity mitigation in long-haul coherent optical OFDM

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    © 2018 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).Coherent optical orthogonal frequency division multiplexing (CO-OFDM) has attracted a lot of interest in optical fiber communications due to its simplified digital signal processing (DSP) units, high spectral-efficiency, flexibility, and tolerance to linear impairments. However, CO-OFDM’s high peak-to-average power ratio imposes high vulnerability to fiber-induced non-linearities. DSP-based machine learning has been considered as a promising approach for fiber non-linearity compensation without sacrificing computational complexity. In this paper, we review the existing machine learning approaches for CO-OFDM in a common framework and review the progress in this area with a focus on practical aspects and comparison with benchmark DSP solutions.Peer reviewe

    Fair comparison of complexity between a multi-band CAP and DMT for data center interconnects

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    We present the first known detailed analysis and fair comparison of complexity of 56-Gb/s Multi-band CAP and DMT over 80-km DCF-free SMF links based on intensity modulation and direct detection (IMDD) for data center interconnects. We show that the matched FIR filters and (I)FFT take the majority of the complexity of the Multi-band CAP and DMT, respectively. Choice of the multi-band CAP sub-band count and the DMT (I)FFT size makes significant impact to system complexity or performance and trade-off must be considered

    Complexity comparison of multi-band CAP and DMT for practical high speed data center interconnects

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    We analyze and compare the complexity of IMDD-based 56-Gb/s Multi-band CAP and DMT over 80-km DCF-free SMFs for data center interconnects. Multi-band CAP with small subband count has comparable complexity to DMT at similar OSNR performance

    DSP-based 40 Gb/s Lane Rate Next Generation Access Networks

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    To address the continuous growth in high-speed ubiquitous access required by residential users and enterprises, Telecommunication operators must upgrade their networks to higher data rates. For optical fiber access networks that directly connect end users to metro/regional network, capacity upgrade must be done in a cost- and energy-efficient manner. 40 Gb/s is the possible lane rate for the next generation passive optical networks (NG-PONs). Ideally, existing 10 G PON components could be reused to support 40 Gb/s lane-rate NG-PON transceiver, which requires efficient modulation format and digital signal processing (DSP) to alleviate the bandwidth limitation and fiber dispersion. The major contribution of this work is to offer insight performance comparisons of 40 Gb/s lane rate electrical three level Duobinary, optical Duobinary, and four-level pulse amplitude modulation (PAM-4) for incorporating low complex DSPs, including linear and nonlinear Volterra equalization, as well as maximum likelihood sequence estimation. Detailed analysis and comparison of the complexity of various DSP algorithms are performed. Transceiver bandwidth optimization is also undertaken. The results show that the choices of proper modulation format and DSP configuration depend on the transmission distances of interest

    Experimental demonstration of cost-Effective intensity-modulation and direct-detection optical fast-OFDM over 40km SMF transmission

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    We demonstrate the first experimental implementation of intensity-modulation and direct-detection 7.6Gb/s DBPSK-based DSB optical Fast-OFDM with a reduced subcarrier spacing equal to half of the symbol rate per subcarrier over 40km SMF

    Experimental demonstration of cost-Effective intensity-modulation and direct-detection optical fast-OFDM over 40km SMF transmission

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    We demonstrate the first experimental implementation of intensity-modulation and direct-detection 7.6Gb/s DBPSK-based DSB optical Fast-OFDM with a reduced subcarrier spacing equal to half of the symbol rate per subcarrier over 40km SMF
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