Lecture: 10 New Trends in Optical Networks

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Lecture: 10 New Trends in Optical Networks Ajmal Muhammad, Robert Forchheimer Information Coding Group ISY Department

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Lecture: 10 New Trends in Optical Networks. Ajmal Muhammad, Robert Forchheimer Information Coding Group ISY Department. Outline. Challenges Multiplexing Techniques Routes to Longer Reach Distributed amplification Hollow core f ibers Routes to Higher Transmission Capacity - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Lecture: 10 New Trends in Optical Networks

Page 1: Lecture: 10 New Trends in Optical Networks

Lecture: 10 New Trends in Optical Networks

Ajmal Muhammad, Robert ForchheimerInformation Coding Group

ISY Department

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Outline

Challenges Multiplexing Techniques Routes to Longer Reach

Distributed amplification

Hollow core fibers

Routes to Higher Transmission Capacity

Space division multiplexing (SDM)

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The Challenge

Traffic grows exponentially at approximately 40% per year Optical system capacity growth has been approximately 20%

per year In less than 10 years, current approaches to keep up will not

be sufficient

Main physical barriers:

Channel capacity (Shannon) + available optical bandwidthTransmission fiber nonlinearities (Kerr)

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Capacity Limits

Signal launch power [dBm]

Ref:IEEE, vol.100, No.5May 2012

Noise

Fiber nonlinearity

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… Moore’s Law for Ever… ?

Courtesy ofPer O. Andersson

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Multiplexing Techniques

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100G Fiber Optic Transmission :: DP-QPSK

DP-QPSK: Dual Polarization Quadrature Phase Shift Keying

DP-QPSK is a digital modulation technique which uses two orthogonal polarization of a laser beam, with QPSK digital modulation on each polarization

QPSK can transmit 2 bits of data per symbol rate, DP-QPSK doubles that capacity

For 100Gbps, DP-QPSK needs 25G to 28G symbols per second. Electronics have to work at 25 to 28 GHz

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BPSK- Binary Phase Shift Keying

BPSK transmits 1 bit of data per symbol rate, either 1 or 0

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QPSK- Quadrature Phase Shift Keying

Use quadrature concept, i.e., both sine and cosine waves to represent digital data

Two BPSK used in parallel

Cosine wave

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DP-QPSK in Fiber Optic Transmission

DP-QPSK transmits 4-bits of data per symbol rate

Laser source is linearly polarized

Cosine wave

Sine wave

Vertical polarized

Horizontal polarized

Assume horizontal polarized laser source

Data stream

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Outline

Challenges Multiplexing Techniques Routes to Longer Reach

Distributed Amplification

Hollow Core Fibers

Routes to Higher Transmission Capacity

Space Division Multiplexing (SDM)

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Routes to Longer Reach

Deal with low SNR Advance FEC More power efficient modulations format

Maintain a high SNR Ultralow noise amplifiers Distributed amplification

Deal with more nonlinearities Digital back-propagation

Reduce the nonlinearity Install new large-area or hollow-core fibers

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Distributed Amplification

Raman pump power= 700 mWEDFA gain=20 dB, NF=3 dB

High SNR but will excite nonlinearities

SNR degrades due to shot noiseno issues of nonlinearity

Ideal distributed amplification (constant average signal power in the entire span)

PSA: Phase sensitive amplifierwith noise free gain medium

Courtesy:Peter Andrekson, Chalmers Uni.

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New Telecom Window at 2000 nmHollow-Core Fibers

Guiding by Photonic Bandgap Effect

Key potential attributes:Ultra-low loss predicted near 2000nm (not single mode operation) (~ 0.05 dB/km predicted opt. Express, Vol.13, page 236, 2005)Very wide operating wavelength range (700 nm)Very small non-linearity: 0.001 x standard SMFLowest possible latencyDistributed Raman amplification may be challenging, however.

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Hollow-Core Fiber :: SNR

Comparison of ultralow loss (0.05 dB/km) hollow-core fiber and EDFAIn conventional fiber (0.2 dB/km)

Courtesy:Peter Andrekson, Chalmers Uni.

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Hollow-Core Fiber :: SNR

Comparison of ultralow loss (0.05 dB/km) hollow-core fiber, EDFA and distributed Raman amplification in conventional fiber (0.2 dB/km)

Span loss: 20 dB Backward Raman (100 km)Bidirectional Raman (100 km) (10 + 10 dB)

A low-loss hollow core fiber with EDFA spacing of 400 km performs similar to backward pumped Raman system with 100 km pump spacing

Courtesy:Peter Andrekson, Chalmers Uni.

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Spectral Efficiency Impact of Nonlinear Coefficient

+ 2.2 b/s/HZ for each X 10Gamma reduction

Ref: R-J. Essiambre proc. IEEEvol. 100, p. 1035, 2012

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Thulium-Doped Silica Fiber Amplifiers (TDFA)at 1800-2050 nm

• Suitable with low-loss hollow core transmission fiber• Very wide operation range (> 200nm)• Noise figure ~ 5 dB• Laser diode pumping at 1550 nm• 100 mW saturated output signal power

ECOC 2013 Paper Tu.1.A.2

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Outline

Challenges Multiplexing Techniques Routes to Longer Reach

Distributed Amplification

Hollow Core Fibers

Routes to Higher Transmission Capacity

Space Division Multiplexing (SDM)

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Routes to Higher Transmission Capacity

CLB= N * B * log2(1+SNR)

Overall transmission capacity:

Available optical bandwidth (B) New amplifiers Extend low-loss window

X

Spectral efficiency (bit/sec/Hertz) Electronics signal processing Low nonlinearity

X

Number of channels (N) Install new multi-core/multi- mode fibers

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Typical Attenuation Spectrum for Silica Fiber

Only 8-10 % is utilized in C bandWith SE of 10 per polarization a fiber can support well over a Pb/s

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Space Division Multiplexing (SDM)

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Inter-Core Crosstalk (XT)

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Inter-Core Crosstalk (XT)

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From WDM Systems to SDM & WDM Systems

Flexible upgrade:Add transponder in lambda and M

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State of the Art Systems

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