DocumentCode
1517335
Title
Precluding nonlinear ISI in direct detection long-haul fiber optic systems
Author
Swenson, Norman L. ; Shoop, Barry L. ; Cioffi, John M.
Author_Institution
Inf. Syst. Lab., Stanford Univ., CA, USA
Volume
3
Issue
2
fYear
1991
Firstpage
182
Lastpage
184
Abstract
Long-distance, high-rate fiber optic systems employing directly modulated 1.55- mu m single-mode lasers and conventional single-mode fiber suffer severe intersymbol interference (ISI) with a large nonlinear component. A method of reducing the nonlinearity of the ISI, thereby making linear equalization more viable, is investigated. It is shown that the degree of nonlinearity is highly dependent on the choice of laser bias current, and that in some cases the ISI nonlinearity can be significantly reduced by biasing the laser substantially above threshold. Simulation results predict that an increase in signal-to-nonlinear-distortion ratio as high as 25 dB can be achieved for synchronously spaced samples at an optimal sampling phase by increasing the bias current from 1.2 times threshold to 3.5 times threshold. The high SDR indicates that a linear tapped delay line equalizer could be used to mitigate ISI. Furthermore, the shape of the pulse response suggests that partial response precoding and digital feedback equalization would be particularly effective for this channel.<>
Keywords
intersymbol interference; optical links; 1.55 micron; digital feedback equalization; direct detection long-haul fiber optic systems; directly modulated single mode lasers; high-rate fiber optic systems; laser bias current; linear equalization; linear tapped delay line equalizer; nonlinear ISI; optimal sampling phase; partial response precoding; pulse response; signal-to-nonlinear-distortion ratio; single-mode fiber; synchronously spaced samples; Delay lines; Equalizers; Fiber lasers; Intersymbol interference; Optical detectors; Optical fibers; Predictive models; Pulse shaping methods; Sampling methods; Shape;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Photonics Technology Letters, IEEE
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
1041-1135
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/68.76883
Filename
76883
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