• DocumentCode
    1763343
  • Title

    Multicore-Fiber-Enabled WSDM Optical Access Network With Centralized Carrier Delivery and RSOA-Based Adaptive Modulation

  • Author

    Zhenhua Feng ; Borui Li ; Ming Tang ; Lin Gan ; Ruoxu Wang ; Rui Lin ; Zhilin Xu ; Songnian Fu ; Lei Deng ; Weijun Tong ; Shengya Long ; Lei Zhang ; Hongyan Zhou ; Rui Zhang ; Shuang Liu ; Perry Ping Shum

  • Author_Institution
    Next Generation Internet Access Nat. Eng. Lab., Huazhong Univ. of Sci. & Technol., Wuhan, China
  • Volume
    7
  • Issue
    4
  • fYear
    2015
  • fDate
    Aug. 2015
  • Firstpage
    1
  • Lastpage
    9
  • Abstract
    We proposed and experimentally demonstrated a wavelength-space division multiplexing (WSDM) optical access network architecture with centralized optical carrier delivery utilizing multicore fibers (MCFs) and adaptive modulation based on reflective semiconductor amplifier (RSOA). In our experiment, five of the outer cores are used for undirectional downstream (DS) transmission only, whereas the remaining outer core is utilized as a dedicated channel to transmit upstream (US) signals. Optical carriers for US are delivered from the optical line terminal (OLT) to the optical network unit (ONU) via the inner core and then transmitted back to the OLT after amplification and modulation by the RSOA in the colorless ONU side. The mobile backhaul (MB) service is also supported by the inner core. Wavelengths used in US transmission should be different from that of the MB in order to avoid the Rayleigh backscattering effect in bidirectional transmission. With quadrature phase-shift keying--orthogonal frequency-division multiplexing (QPSK-OFDM) modulation format, the aggregation DS capacity reaches 250 Gb/s using five outer cores and ten wavelengths, and it can be further scaled to 1 Tb/s using 20 wavelengths modulated with 16 QAM-OFDM. For US transmission, 2.5 Gb/s QPSK-OFDM transmission can be achieved just using a low-bandwidth RSOA, and adaptive modulation is applied to the RSOA to further enhance the US data rate to 3.12 Gb/s. As an emulation of high-speed MB transmission, 48 Gb/s in-phase and quadrature (IQ) modulated popularization division multiplexing (PDM)-QPSK signal is transmitted in the inner core of MCF and coherently detected in the OLT side. Both DS and US optical signals exhibit acceptable performance with sufficient power budget.
  • Keywords
    OFDM modulation; adaptive modulation; optical fibre subscriber loops; quadrature amplitude modulation; quadrature phase shift keying; semiconductor optical amplifiers; space division multiplexing; wavelength division multiplexing; 16 QAM-OFDM; QPSK; RSOA-based adaptive modulation; Rayleigh backscattering effect; bidirectional transmission; bit rate 1 Tbit/s; bit rate 2.5 Gbit/s; bit rate 250 Gbit/s; bit rate 3.12 Gbit/s; bit rate 48 Gbit/s; centralized carrier delivery; centralized optical carrier delivery; mobile backhaul service; multicore fibers; multicore-fiber-enabled WSDM optical access network; optical carriers; optical line terminal; optical network unit; orthogonal frequency-division multiplexing; popularization division multiplexing; quadrature phase-shift keying; reflective semiconductor amplifier; undirectional downstream transmission; upstream signals; wavelength-space division multiplexing; Optical amplifiers; Optical attenuators; Optical fiber networks; Optical fibers; Optical modulation; MCF; Optical access network; WSDM; adaptive modulation; advanced modulation formats; multicore fiber (MCF); wavelength-space division multiplexing (WSDM);
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Journal_Title
    Photonics Journal, IEEE
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • ISSN
    1943-0655
  • Type

    jour

  • DOI
    10.1109/JPHOT.2015.2445103
  • Filename
    7123561