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Design and Applications of Advanced Optical Modulation Formats for Optical Metro/Access Transmission Systems

Posted on:2013-01-19Degree:Ph.DType:Thesis
University:The Chinese University of Hong Kong (Hong Kong)Candidate:Liu, ZhixinFull Text:PDF
GTID:2458390008485286Subject:Engineering
Abstract/Summary:
The increasing demands for bandwidth have aroused a myriad of industry and academic activities in developing high-speed and cost-effective optical networks, among which optical broadband access networks was the main driving force for such growth in recent years. The most promising solution to optical broadband access network is the passive optical network (PON), which is a point-to-multipoint tree-topology network that connects optical line terminal (OLT) with many optical network units (ONUs) via a long fiber feeder and many short distribution fibers. Promising the concept it is, it raises many detailed technical challenges, such as colorless ONUs, burst mode transmission, bi-directional transmission with mitigated backscattering noise, long-reach PON, and integrating network functionalities. All of the technical requirements are motivated by the “original requirements” of telecommunication – faster, cheaper, and more robust.;To fulfill the technical requirements, different researchers take different angles to design system and to study the enabling technologies. For example, devices, system architectures, network protocols, etc. In this thesis research, we have tried to deal with one or multiple problems by employing advanced modulation formats for the optical signals. In particular, we have studied IRZ-duobinary, Manchester-duobinary, and Manchester formats, including the modulation/demodulation techniques, transmission properties, and system applications. The research topics are classified according to the type of modulation formats.;In the first topic, IRZ-duobinary format is proposed for optical signal transmission. It has desirable properties of large dispersion tolerance (as compared to conventional RZ/IRZ) and finite optical power in each bit. In this study, we firstly show the advantages of IRZ-duobinary and the corresponding modulation techniques. Then, we demonstrate a 10-Gb/s per channel optical multicast overlay scheme and an 80-km-reach system with re-modulated ONU, both in wavelength division multiplexing (WDM) PON.;In the second topic, Manchester-duobinary format, which has the advantages including easy clock/level recovery, compressed bandwidth, and zero DC component, is studied. We propose an efficient and cost-effective Manchester-duobinary transmitter by properly modulating a chirp managed laser (CML) with electrical Manchester signal. Then, a cost-effective CLS 70-km-Reach full-duplex WDM-PON with downstream 10-Gb/s Manchester-duobinary signal and upstream 1.25-Gb/s re-modulated NRZ-OOK signal is proposed and experimentally demonstrated. This design simultaneously solves the problems of colorless ONU, bi-directional transmission, and long-reach, using cost-effective system design and devices.;Finally, we investigate the performance of electronic dispersion compensation (EDC) technique on 10-Gb/s Manchester coded optical signal, so as to further improve its dispersion tolerance and may enables its applications in long-reach PON. In this study, feed forward equalizer (FFE), decision feedback equalizer (DFE), and maximum-likelihood sequence estimation (MLSE) are employed as the equalizers Utilizing off-line signal processing, the performance of different equalizers with different parameters (number of taps, sampling rates, number of states, etc.) under both cases of single-ended and balanced detection are studied and compared. Experimental results show that the transmission distance of Manchester coded signal can be increased by a factor of three with four-sample-per-symbol FFE-DFE.
Keywords/Search Tags:Optical, Transmission, Modulation formats, System, Signal, Applications, Manchester, Cost-effective
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