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Tomoyuki KATO Hidenobu MURANAKA Yu TANAKA Yuichi AKIYAMA Takeshi HOSHIDA Shimpei SHIMIZU Takayuki KOBAYASHI Takushi KAZAMA Takeshi UMEKI Kei WATANABE Yutaka MIYAMOTO
Multi-band WDM transmission beyond the C+L-band is a promising technology for achieving larger capacity transmission by a limited number of installed fibers. In addition to the C- and L-band, we can expect to use the S-band as the next band. Although the development of optical components for new bands, particularly transceivers, entails resource dispersion, which is one of the barriers to the realization of multi-band systems, wavelength conversion by transparent all-optical signal processing enables new wavelength bandtransmission using existing components. Therefore, we proposed a transmission system including a new wavelength band such as the S-band and made it possible to use a transceiver for the existing band by performing the whole-band wavelength conversion without using a transceiver for the new band. As a preliminary verification to demonstrate multi-band WDM transmission including S-band, we investigated the application of a novel wavelength converter between C-band and S-band, which consists of periodically poled lithium niobate waveguide, to the proposed system. We first characterized the conversion efficiency and noise figure of the wavelength converter and estimated the transmission performance of the system through the wavelength converter. Using the evaluated wavelength converters and test signals of 64 channels arranged in the C-band at 75-GHz intervals, we constructed an experimental setup for S-band transmission through an 80-km standard single-mode fiber. We then demonstrated error-free transmission of real-time 400-Gb/s DP-16QAM signals after forward error correction decoding. From the experimental results, it was clarified that the wavelength converter which realizes the uniform lossless conversion covering the whole C-band effectively achieves the S-band WDM transmission, and it was verified that the capacity improvement of the multi-band WDM system including the S-band can be expected by applying it in combination with the C+L-band WDM system.
Hidenobu MURANAKA Tomoyuki KATO Shun OKADA Tokuharu KIMURA Yu TANAKA Tsuyoshi YAMAMOTO Isaac SACKEY Gregor RONNIGER Robert ELSCHNER Carsten SCHMIDT-LANGHORST Colja SCHUBERT Takeshi HOSHIDA
One of cost-effective ways to increase the transmission capacity of current standard wavelength division multiplexing (WDM) transmission systems is to use a wavelength band other than the C-band to transmit in multi-band. We proposed the concept of multi-band system using wavelength conversion, which can simultaneously process signals over a wide wavelength range. All-optical wavelength conversion could be used to convert C-band WDM signals into other bands in a highly nonlinear fiber (HNLF) by four-wave mixing and allow to simultaneously transmit multiple WDM signals including other than the C-band, with only C-band transceivers. Wavelength conversion has been reported for various nonlinear waveguide materials other than HNLF. In such nonlinear materials, we noticed the possibility of wideband transmission by dispersion-tailored silicon-on-insulator (SOI) waveguides. Based on the CMOS process has high accuracy, it is expected that the chromatic dispersion fluctuation could be reduced in mass production. As a first step in the investigation of the broadness of wavelength conversion using SOI-based waveguides, we designed and fabricated dispersion-tailored 12 strip waveguides provided with an edge coupler at both ends. Each of the 12 waveguides having different widths and lengths and is connected to fibers via lensed fibers or by lenses. In order to characterize each waveguide, the pump-probe experimental setup was constructed using a tunable light source as pump and an unmodulated 96-ch C-band WDM test signal. Using this setup, we evaluate insertion loss, input power dependence, conversion bandwidth and conversion efficiency. We confirmed C-band test signal was converted to the S-band and the L-band using the same silicon waveguide with 3dB conversion bandwidth over 100-nm. Furthermore, an increased design tolerance of at least 90nm was confirmed for C-to-S conversion by shortening the waveguide length. It is confirmed that the wavelength converters using the nonlinear waveguide has sufficiently wide conversion bandwidth to enhance the multi-band WDM transmission system.
Seiji OKAMOTO Kazushige YONENAGA Kengo HORIKOSHI Mitsuteru YOSHIDA Yutaka MIYAMOTO Masahito TOMIZAWA Takeshi OKAMOTO Hidemi NOGUCHI Jun-ichi ABE Junichiro MATSUI Hisao NAKASHIMA Yuichi AKIYAMA Takeshi HOSHIDA Hiroshi ONAKA Kenya SUGIHARA Soichiro KAMETANI Kazuo KUBO Takashi SUGIHARA
We describe a field experiment of flexible modulation format adaptation on a real-time 400Gbit/s/ch DSP-LSI. This real-time DSP-LSI features OSNR estimation, practical simplified back propagation, and high gain soft-decision forward error correction. With these techniques, we have successfully demonstrated modulation format allocation and transmission of 56-channel 400Gbit/s-2SC-PDM-16QAM and 200Gbit/s-2SC-PDM-QPSK signals in 216km and 3246km standard single mode fiber, respectively.
Shoichiro ODA Takahito TANIMURA Takeshi HOSHIDA Yuichi AKIYAMA Hisao NAKASHIMA Kyosuke SONE Zhenning TAO Jens C. RASMUSSEN
Nonlinearity compensation algorithm and soft-decision forward error correction (FEC) are considered as key technologies for future high-capacity and long-haul optical transmission system. In this report, we experimentally demonstrate the following three benefits brought by low complexity perturbation back-propagation nonlinear compensation algorithm in 224Gb/s DP-16QAM transmission over large-Aeff pure silica core fiber; (1) improvement of pre-FEC bit error ratio, (2) reshaping noise distribution to more Gaussian, and (3) reduction of cycle slip probability.
Keisuke KAYANO Yojiro MORI Hiroshi HASEGAWA Ken-ichi SATO Shoichiro ODA Setsuo YOSHIDA Takeshi HOSHIDA
The spectral efficiency of photonic networks can be enhanced by the use of higher modulation orders and narrower channel bandwidth. Unfortunately, these solutions are precluded by the margins required to offset uncertainties in system performance. Furthermore, as recently highlighted, the disaggregation of optical transport systems increases the required margin. We propose here highly spectrally efficient networks, whose margins are minimized by transmission-quality-aware adaptive modulation-order/channel-bandwidth assignment enabled by optical performance monitoring (OPM). Their effectiveness is confirmed by experiments on 400-Gbps dual-polarization quadrature phase shift keying (DP-QPSK) and 16-ary quadrature amplitude modulation (DP-16QAM) signals with the application of recently developed Q-factor-based OPM. Four-subcarrier 32-Gbaud DP-QPSK signals within 150/162.5/175GHz and two-subcarrier 32-Gbaud DP-16QAM signals within 75/87.5/100GHz are experimentally analyzed. Numerical network simulations in conjunction with the experimental results demonstrate that the proposed scheme can drastically improve network spectral efficiency.