Title :
Limitations in 10 Gb/s WDM optical-fiber transmission when using a variety of fiber types to manage dispersion and nonlinearities
Author :
Zou, X.Y. ; Hayee, M. Imran ; Hwang, S.-M. ; Willner, Alan E.
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electr. Eng. Syst., Univ. of Southern California, Los Angeles, CA, USA
fDate :
6/1/1996 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
We analyze the system limitations of WDM transmission when using various types of optical fiber to manage dispersion and nonlinearities. In our model, from two to eight 10 Gb/s WDM channels are transmitted through a cascade of EDFA´s experiencing dispersion, stimulated Raman scattering, and self- and cross-phase modulation. The fiber types modeled include: conventional single-mode fiber, dispersion shifted fiber, and dispersion-compensating fiber. These fibers have different dispersion spectral profiles and are combined to manage dispersion to produce a total zero dispersion for a certain fiber span while eliminating four-wave mixing. We find that a system using dispersion-shifted fiber and conventional single-mode fiber exhibits the best performance, with the combination of dispersion and cross-phase modulation as the dominant effects. Furthermore, conventional single-mode fiber combined with dispersion-compensating fiber system exhibits the worst performance, with the combination of dispersion and self-phase modulation as the dominant effects
Keywords :
optical fibre communication; optical fibre dispersion; optical fibre theory; optical modulation; phase modulation; stimulated Raman scattering; wavelength division multiplexing; 10 Gbit/s; EDFA cascade; Gb/s WDM optical-fiber transmission; WDM channel; WDM transmission; cross-phase modulation; dispersion shifted fiber; dispersion spectral profiles; dispersion-compensating fiber; dominant effects; fiber dispersion; fiber nonlinearities; fiber span; four-wave mixing; manage dispersion; optical fiber; self-phase modulation; single-mode fiber; stimulated Raman scattering; system limitations; total zero dispersion; Fiber nonlinear optics; Four-wave mixing; Nonlinear optics; Optical fiber dispersion; Optical fibers; Optical mixing; Optical scattering; Raman scattering; Stimulated emission; Wavelength division multiplexing;
Journal_Title :
Lightwave Technology, Journal of