• DocumentCode
    1140638
  • Title

    Demultiplexers for high-speed optical PCM

  • Author

    Chen, Fang-Shang

  • Author_Institution
    Bell Telephone Laboratories, Inc., Murray Hill, NJ, USA
  • Volume
    7
  • Issue
    1
  • fYear
    1971
  • fDate
    1/1/1971 12:00:00 AM
  • Firstpage
    24
  • Lastpage
    29
  • Abstract
    Optical demultiplexers have been developed for a time-division-multiplexed high-capacity optical pulse code modulation (PCM) terminal. The demultiplexing is accomplished by assigning two orthogonal linearly polarized states of light to adjacent pulses using an electrooptic modulator and then spatially separating them with a polarization selective prism. The process is repeated until all the channels are separated. In order to separate pulses 1.7 \\times 10^{-10} s apart, corresponding to pulse chains of a 24-channel 250 megabits per second per channel time-division-multiplexed PCM system, a voltage sufficient to vary the relative phase retardation by \\pm2\\pi/\\sqrt {3} rad at 1 GHz is necessary. The ability of the demultiplexer to separate the pulses depends on the residual strain in the crystal as well as on the temperature gradients introduced by the high-frequency voltage applied to the small volume of modulator crystal. The importance of these effects in determining the crosstalk ratio between adjacent channels is analyzed. A comparison of several ferroelectric crystals, which show a linear, transverse electrooptic effect, is made for potential demultiplexer applications. It is concluded that LiTaO3and Ba2NaNb5O15are about equivalent as crystals for demultiplexers, provided that crystals of the same size and optical quality are available. Measurements to evaluate the crosstalk ratio of demultiplexers using LiTaO3are described. A modulator with 1.5 W of applied power was sufficient to provide a crosstalk ratio of 19 at \\lambda = 0.63 \\mu whereas two modulators, each with 1 W of applied power, were needed at \\lambda = 1.06 \\mu to obtain the same crosstalk ratio. Together with the high-speed optical gates and schemes of multiplexing demonstrated in the past, the present measurements demonstrate the capability of existing electrooptic modulators to function in a high-bit-rate (6000 megabits/s) time-division-multiplexed optical PCM communication system.
  • Keywords
    Crystals; Electrooptic modulators; High speed optical techniques; Optical crosstalk; Optical modulation; Optical polarization; Optical pulses; Phase change materials; Pulse modulation; Voltage;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Journal_Title
    Quantum Electronics, IEEE Journal of
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • ISSN
    0018-9197
  • Type

    jour

  • DOI
    10.1109/JQE.1971.1076544
  • Filename
    1076544