Title :
Coherent Optical OFDM Transmission Up to 1 Tb/s per Channel
Author :
Tang, Yan ; Shieh, William
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electr. & Electron. Eng., Univ. of Melbourne, Melbourne, VIC, Australia
Abstract :
Coherent optical frequency-division multiplexing (CO-OFDM) is one of the promising pathways toward future ultrahigh capacity transparent optical networks. In this paper, numerical simulation is carried out to investigate the feasibility of 1 Tb/s per channel CO-OFDM transmission. We find that, for 1 Tb/s CO-OFDM signal, the performance difference between single channel and wavelength division multiplexing (WDM) transmission is small. The maximum Q is 13.8 and 13.2 dB respectively for single channel and WDM transmission. We also investigate the CO-OFDM performance on the upgrade of 10-Gb/s to 100-Gb/s based DWDM systems with 50-GHz channel spacing to 100-Gb/s systems. It is shown that due to the high spectral efficiency and resilience to dispersion, for 100-Gb/s CO-OFDM signals, only 1.3 dB Q penalty is observed for 10 GHz laser frequency detuning. A comparison of CO-OFDM system performance under different data rate of 10.7 Gb/s, 42.8 Gb/s, 107 Gb/s and 1.07 Tb/s with and without the impact of dispersion compensation fiber is also presented. We find that the optimum fiber launch power increases almost linearly with the increase of data rate. 7 dB optimum launch power difference is observed between 107 Gb/s and 1.07 Tb/s CO-OFDM systems.
Keywords :
OFDM modulation; channel capacity; channel spacing; electro-optical modulation; laser tuning; optical fibre dispersion; optical fibre networks; wavelength division multiplexing; CO-OFDM performance; DWDM system; bit rate 10 Gbit/s to 100 Gbit/s; bit rate 10.7 Gbit/s; bit rate 107 Gbit/s to 1.07 Tbit/s; bit rate 42.8 Gbit/s; channel spacing; coherent optical OFDM transmission; dispersion compensation fiber; frequency 50 GHz; laser frequency detuning; optical frequency-division multiplexing; single channel transmission; spectral efficiency; ultrahigh capacity transparent optical networks; wavelength division multiplexing; Coherent communication; dense wavelength-division multiplexing (DWDM); optical fiber nonlinearity; orthogonal frequency-division multiplexing (OFDM); reconfigurable optical add-drop multiplexing (ROADM);
Journal_Title :
Lightwave Technology, Journal of
DOI :
10.1109/JLT.2009.2025055