Title :
High-performance phase locking of wide linewidth semiconductor lasers by combined use of optical injection locking and optical phase-lock loop
Author :
Bordonalli, A.C. ; Walton, C. ; Seeds, Alwyn J.
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electron. & Electr. Eng., Univ. Coll. London, UK
fDate :
2/1/1999 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
The requirement for narrow linewidth lasers or short-loop propagation delay makes the realization of optical phase-lock loops using semiconductor lasers difficult. Although optical injection locking can provide low phase error variance for wide linewidth lasers, the locking range is restricted by stability considerations. Theoretical and experimental results for a system which combines both techniques so as to overcome these limitations, the optical injection phase-lock loop (OIPLL), are reported. Phase error variance values as low as 0.006 rad 2 (500 MHz bandwidth) and locking ranges exceeding 26 GHz were achieved in homodyne OIPLL systems using DFB lasers of summed linewidth 36 MHz, loop propagation delay of 15 ns and injection ratio less than -30 dB. Phase error variance values as low as 0.003 rad2 in a bandwidth of 100 MHz, a mean time to cycle slip of 3×1010 s and SSB noise density of -94 dBc/Hz at 10 kHz offset were obtained for the same lasers in an heterodyne OIPLL configuration with loop propagation delay of 20 ns and injection ratio of -30 dB
Keywords :
laser mode locking; laser stability; laser theory; optical phase locked loops; optical transmitters; semiconductor device models; semiconductor lasers; spectral line breadth; 15 ns; 20 ns; DFB lasers; dyne OIPLL systems; heterodyne OIPLL configuration; high-performance laser phase locking; injection ratio; loop propagation delay; low phase error variance; optical injection locking; optical injection phase-lock loop; optical phase-lock loop; phase error variance; short-loop propagation delay; stability considerations; wide linewidth lasers; wide linewidth semiconductor laser; Amplitude modulation; Bandwidth; Injection-locked oscillators; Laser stability; Laser theory; Optical mixing; Phase noise; Propagation delay; Semiconductor lasers; Signal to noise ratio;
Journal_Title :
Lightwave Technology, Journal of