Modulation Formats Using Direct-Detection Receivers: Outline
Modulation Formats Using Direct-Detection Receivers: Outline
Modulation Formats Using Direct-Detection Receivers: Outline
Outline
Direct Modulation (only amplitude modulation!!)
External Modulation
Amplitude Modulator
Mach-Zehnder Modulator
Phase Modulator
Polarization Modulator
Intensity Modulation
NRZ
RZ
CRZ
CSRZ
Optical Phase Modulation
DPSK
DQPSK
Line-Coding
Duobinary
Polarization Multiplexing
2
1
Direct modulation: laser behavior
Popt
Optical
Current Power
i(t) Popt(t)
i
Threshold
current
3
Popt
0 1 1 0 1 0
time
0 1 0 1 1 0
time
4
2
Direct modulation
40 GHz
Pros
Easier implementation
Cheaper components and set-up
Cons
Poor performance in terms of:
spectral occupancy
noise (RIN)
chirp
Direct modulation is used for low-cost systems
implemented for Local Area Networks
6
3
External Modulation
Data
Continuous
Driver Modulated
Wave (CW)
Optical
Bias Optical
Signal
current Power
External
Modulator
ib Popt E(t)
Amplitude Modulator
Phase Modulator
Polarization Modulator
Phase modulator
Ein Eout
Vin
4
Intensity Modulator
Intensity
Modulator
Pin Pout
Vin
Extinction Ratio:
T Pout Pin Tmax
ER ˆ
Tmin
Tmax
Electro-Optic
Tmin transfer
Voff Von Vin function
9
GROUND
VB
10
5
Splitter
E A,in
Ein
E B,in
E A,in 1 1
E j Ein
B , in 2
11
A and B arms
12
6
Combiner
E A,out
Eout
E B,out
Eout
1
E A,out jEB,out
2
13
MZ modulator: ideal
Defining V A VB VA VB
VS VD
2 2
Vs
Eout j VD
e 2 V sin
Ein 2 V
2
Pout Eout VD
sin 2
Pin Ein 2 V
14
7
MZ modulator: electro-optical transfer function
V
Eout j S
VD Voff 1 VD Voff
e 2 V
sin j cos
Ein 2 V
ER 2 V
2 VD Voff 1 VD Voff
2
Pout Eout
sin cos 2
Pin Ein 2 V ER 2 V
15
ReTFA ImTFA V
Von
Voff Von Voff
Vin Vin
V
16
8
MZ modulator: electro-optical transfer function
Eout
VD Voff 1 VD Voff
sin j cos
Ein
2 V ER
2 V
2
ER
Vin Voff
17
2 VD Voff 1 VD Voff
2
Pout Eout
sin cos 2
Pin Ein
2 V ER 2 V
Pout
Pin
V
1
ER Vin
Voff Von
18
9
MZ Modulator: IMDD working-point
V Pout
Pout
Pin
0 1 0 1 1 0
Voff Vbias Von
Vin time
0 1 0 1 1 0
time
19
Vin, 2
20
10
Parameters of Mach-Zehnder Modulator
21
Bias-control configuration
In the case of the LN modulator, the bias point control is vital as the bias point
will shift long term. To compensate for the drift, it is necessary to monitor the
output signals and feed it back into the bias control circuits to adjust the DC
voltage so that operating points stay at the same point (i.e., quadrature
point). It is the manufacturer responsibility to reduce DC drift so that DC
voltage is not beyond the limit throughout the life time of device.
22
11
Electro-Absorption Modulator (EAM)
24
12
EAM vs MZ modulator
25
Continuous Intensity
Wave (CW) Modulated
Bias Optical Optical
current Power Signal
Amplitude
Popt Modulator
ib PTX(t)
Vin(t) Voltage swinging
Bit Modulator from Voff and Von
Generator 1/0 Driver
26
13
Intensity Modulation: Direct-Detection Receiver
Optical Matched
Filter
1/0
Photo Threshold
pe
Detector Decision
1 0.98OSNR
e
Optimal IM H o f
2
Receiver
27
-8
10
This is valid for all the
-10
10 direct-detected formats
based on the
-12
10 Intensity Modulation
-14
10 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14
OSNR [dB]
28
14
Realistic optical filters
15
Supergaussian filter: linear scale
2m
1 f
2 0
m=4 H( f ) e
m=1 B 2 2 m ln 2 0
|H(f)|2
f/B
31
m=4 1 f
2m
2 0
H( f ) e
m=1
|H(f)|2 [dB]
B 2 2 m ln 2 0
f/B
32
16
Post detection electric filter
33
Electrical
Optical filter amplifier Sampling
Decision
34
17
OSNR Penalty for practical receivers
It is difficult to exactly estimate the OSNR penalty
It is possible to estimate it as a function of the ratio between the –
3dB bandwith of the optical filter and the bit-rate given the shpes
of the filters(assuming the post detection filter optimized)
Bopt
r
RB
Following graphs are related to a 2nd order Supergaussian optical
filter and to a 5 pole Bessel electric filter
The electric filter bandwidth must be optimized as a function of r:
Beyond r=2.5 it tends to 0.65 RB
Below r=2.5 it progressively enlarges
For an optical filter that tends to be matched to the tranmitted pulse
(r → 1), the electrical filter must be removed (its optimal bandwidth
tends to infinity)
35
Penalty as a function of r
4.5
4
OSNR penalty [dB]
3.5
2.5
1.5
1
5 10 15 20 25 30
Bopt
r
RB
36
18
Optimal electric filter bandwidth as a function of r
Bpost-detection
RB
Bopt
r
RB
37
19
Intensity Modulation: NRZ and RZ
Driver Von
Voltage
Voff
Driver Von
Voltage V
off
39
0 0 1 0 1 0 00 0 0 1 1 1011 0
Optical Spectrum
2 Rb
40
20
RZ: pulse shape and spectrum
Decision Signal Eye-Diagram on Decision Signal
0 1 1 0 0 1 0 1 1
Optical Spectrum
2 Rb
Depends on
pulse shape > 2 Rb
41
NRZ vs. RZ
NRZ RZ
Pros Pros
Easy implementation Low impact of fiber
Narrow spectral nonlinearities
occupancy Easier clock recovery
It is the standard Cons
Cons Wider spectra
Higher impact of fiber occupancy
nonlinearities More difficult
implementation
42
21
How to get RZ pulses
NRZ RZ
(or other formats) Pulse
transmission
Transmiter Carver 50% RZ
MZM
MZ
Modulator 67% CSRZ
Modulator
33% RZ
Drive
voltage
Clock
Data
Rs or Rs/2
43
v v
Ein Popt E out
MZ vin t
Modulator
vin
vin
2Tb
Po u t
R
v(t ) V sin 2 b t 0 0
2 t
1
Tb
t
Rb
44
22
Carrier-Suppressed Return-to-Zero (CSRZ)
The Transmitter
Continuos
Wave (CW)
Bias Optical
current Power MZ MZ PTX(t)
Modulator Modulator
ib Popt
Vin(t)
Modulator
Driver Voltage swinging
R
v(t ) 2 V sin 2 b t from Voff to Von
2 1/0
Bit
Generator
45
No carrier
Rb
0 0 > 2 Rb
Decision Signal
Eye-Diagram on Decision Signal
1 1 0 0 0 1 0 1
46
23
Benefit of the use of CSRZ
47
Intensity
Continuos Intensity and phase
Wave (CW) Modulated modulated
Bias Optical Optical Optical
Power Signal Signal
current Intensity Phase
ib Popt Modulator Modulator
E (t ) E (t ) e j(t )
VIM (t ) VPM (t )
Intensity
Pattern Data
Modulator
Generator Phase
Driver Modulator
Clock
Driver
48
24
Alternate Phase transmitter
49
50
25
DPSK transmitter
ETX ETX
1 1
51
Bit
Generator
Driver
Phase
Modulator
26
DPSK: transmitters
Laser Phase
Modulator
Laser MZ Amplitude
Modulator
53
driving voltage V
54
27
DPSK: pulse-shape and spectrum
Using Phase modulator
DPSK Receiver
optical
amplifier RX filter Asymmetric MZ interferometer
delay is equal
to 1 bit 3 dB coupler
1 bit delay line
0.5 cm at 40 Gbit
Balanced receiver
56
28
The MZ interferometer
57
58
29
DPSK: Receiver
RX filter Asymmetric MZ interferometer
RX amplifier
+
-
delay is equal
to 1 bit
1 bit delay line 3 dB coupler
(~2 cm in fiber at 10 Gbit/s) Balanced receiver
Eye-Diagram Using Phase modulator Eye-Diagram Using MZ amplitude modulator
59
Assumption:
MZ amplitude subtracting
modulator the two ports
60
30
The two MZ ports are different!
61
DPSK: performance
18 1e-16
QdB [dB] p(e)
17 7.e-13
2.7 dB
16 1.e-10
15 9.e-9
14 3.e-7
13 4.e-6
12 3.e-5
11 2.e-4
10 8.e-4
9 2.e-3
8 6.e-3
6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15
OSNR [dB]
62
31
DPSK: pros and Cons
Pros
~3 dB better sensitivity
Reduced impact of fiber nonlinearities
Cons
Technological overhead
Precoder at transmitter side
Interferometer at receiver
Expensive balanced receiver
63
Asymmetric MZ interferometer
In Out1
Out2
Both are of the form:
H ( f ) cos f f 0 / RB
but have a 90 degree phase shift between them
64
32
Mach-Zehnder Transfer Functions
Green: Out1
Red: Out2
Balanced Photo-Detector
66
33
DPSK implementation impairments
67
2.5
tuning accuracy within 2 dB
±4 GHz at 40 Gbit/s
2
OSNR penalty [dB]
0.5
0
-10
-7.5 -5 0
f/Rb [%]
5
7.5 10
-10.0 10.0
68
34
BPD amplitude imbalance
3 dB imbalance k= ± 0.33
3.5
R R2
k 1 0, [-1,1]
R1 R2 3 Responsivities ratio Single-ended
OSNR penalty [dB] equal to 5.4 dB receiver
2.5
1.5
0.5
0
-1 -0.5 0 0.5 1
-0.95 -0.55 k 0.55 0.95
69
Tolerances
70
35
The I/Q modulator
71
Nested MZM
72
36
Layout
v p t
Ein, p t E p t Eout t
Combiner
2->1
MZMp Eq t
Ein t
Splitter
1->2
PM
E q t
'
Ein,q t v
MZMq
vq t
73
Splitter
E1
Ein
E2
E1 1 1
E j Ein
2 2
74
37
MZM
vin t
Ein t Eout t
MZM
vin vin
Eout t Ein t sin
j
cos
2 V ER 2 V
75
Phase modulator
PM
Ein t Eout t
v
V
j
Eout t Ein t e V
Eout t jEin t
V
V
2
76
38
Combiner
Ein,1
Eout
Ein, 2
Eout
1
E1 jE2
2
77
v p j v p
sin
cos
1 2 V ER 2 V
Eout t Ein t
2 vq j vq
j sin 2 V ER cos 2 V
1 vp vq
Eout t Ein t sin j sin
2 2 V 2 V
78
39
If En(t) is a CW
PL v p vq j L
Eout t sin j sin e
2 2 V 2 V
PL v p vq
Eout t sin j sin
2 2 V 2 V
79
Modulation space
Properly driving the I/Q mod with the signals vp(t) and vp(t), we can
generate an output optical field wherever in the following plane
ImEout t
Within this area
we can design a
PL
2
constellation of signals in
order to have transmit a
multilevel modulation
format
ReEout t
PL PL
2 2
PL
2
80
40
DQPSK
81
bit “10”
3 2
bits “00”
82
41
Signaling rate decreases
83
‘10’ ‘00’
+
‘0’
‘11’ ‘01’
‘1’
84
42
DQPSK precoding
EXOR EXOR
AND DI,n
AI,n
EXOR DI,n-1 T
AQ,n EXOR DQ,n
DQ,n-1 T
85
DQPSK transmitter
Driver
Shaping
filter
[-V,V]
{0,}
MZ
{0,/2,
Data A
Pre ,3/2}
coder
Data B
MZ /2 {/2,3/2}
Driver
Shaping
filter
[-V,V]
86
43
DQPSK receiver
E1 R1
E Bit A
Electric
4 filter
E2 R2
Optical Asymmetric
filter Balanced
Mach-Zehnder
Photodetectors
Interferometers
Electric
4 filter Bit B
87
Frequency detuning
Rb
8
H AMZ ( f ) 0.9
0.8
0.7
AMZI
transfer 0.6
function 0.5
0.4
0.3
0.2
0.1
0
-1 -0.8 -0.6 -0.4 -0.2 0 0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8 1
f/Rb
88
44
How does it work?
3 2
89
0
- -
3 2
90
45
DQPSK sensitivity
1 dB
18 1e-16
17 7.e-13
16 1.e-10
15 9.e-9
QBER BER
14 3.e-7
13 4.e-6
12 3.e-5
11 2.e-4
10 8.e-4
9 2.e-3
8 6.e-3
6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15
OSNR over RB [dB]
1.8 dB
91
Pros
~1.5 dB better sensitivity
Reduced bandwidth requirements
Reduced impact of chromatic dispersion and fiber
nonlinearities
Cons
Technological overhead
Complex pre-coder at transmitter side
2 × Asymmetric Mach-Zehnder Interferometers at receiver
2 × Expensive balanced receivers
92
46
AMZ frequency offset
3.5
System (1)
3 System (2)
OSNR penalty [dB]
System (3)
2.5
tuning accuracy within 2 dB
±560 MHz at 40 Gbit/s
2
tuning accuracy
1.5 within 1 dB
±320 MHz at 40 Gbit/s
1
0.5
0
-2 -1.5 -1 -0.5 0 0.5 1 1.5 2
-1.4 -0.8 0.8 1.4
f/Rb [%]
93
System (3)
2.5
Responsivities ratio
2
equal to 4.2 dB
1.5
0.5
0
-1 -0.5 0 0.5 1
47
DQPSK Tolerances
Up to 2.5 dB BPD amplitude imbalance in the detector is less
than 0.5 dB penalty ( DPSK was 3 dB imbalance)
95
Polarization Multiplexing
PBC PC PBS
x̂ x̂
TX #1 RX #1
ŷ ŷ
TX #2 RX #2
Transmitter Receiver
PBC: Polarization Beam Combiner
PBS: Polarization Beam Splitter
PC: Polarization controller
48
Line coding: Duobinary
97
Duobinary signaling
98
49
DPSK: structure of the signal
r (t )
1
0 T
99
1 0 1 1 0 1 0 0 1 1 1 0
EDPSK (t ) +1
-1
100
50
Duobinary: Structure of the signal
r(t )
1
0 T 2T
101
r(t ) 1
EDUO (t )
3T 4T
0 T 2T
r(t T )
0
102
51
A three-level signal
2T 3T 4T
3 levels
0 T
0
103
EDUO (t )
104
52
Duobinary: received bit sequence,
2
EDUO (t )
105
Precoder
T
bn cn
S Channel
T Duobinary
Encoder
Mod 2
an
an, bn {0,1} Decoder
Bit
sequence cn {0,1,2} an
106
53
Duobinary: MZ-modulator
107
54
Phase-Shaped Binary Transmission (PSBT)
MZ
Modulator
Precoder
pn 2V Bessel Vin optical
an NRZ LPF link
Driver VD B3dB¼Rb
T V if pn 1
VD optical
V if pn 0 filter
109
VD / V Vin / V
id
110
55
Duobinary vs NRZ: spectrum
Duobinary
Rb
NRZ
2 Rb
111
Bosco, G.; Carena, A.; Curri, V.; Gaudino, R.; Poggiolini, P.; “Quantum limit
of direct-detection receivers using duobinary transmission,” IEEE Photonics
Technology Letters , Volume: 15 Issue: 1 , Jan 2003. Page(s): 102-104
112
56
Duobinary performance
-2
10
-4
10
-6
10
BER
-8
10
-10
10
0.91 dB
-12
10
-14
10
6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14
OSNR[dB]
113
114
57
Alternative Duobinary TX structure
CW laser TX filter
modulator is biased
at maximum extinction
(as for DPSK)
CODER:
identical to
DPSK part of the bit “correlation”
is introduced here
115
116
58
Results for optimized duobinary
15
NRZ
14 DB
13
OSNR, [dB]
12
11
10
DPSK
9
6
65 140 230
Chromatic Dispersion, [ps/nm]
117
Optimized duobinary
118
59
Why is duobinary so tolerant to dispersion?
119
2T 3T 4T
0 T
0
zero level crossed on every transition
120
60
Zero forcing on zero level
2T 3T 4T
0 T
0
zero level crossed on every transition
even when pulses spread out
121
NRZ Duobinary
no dispersion no dispersion
65 ps/nm 65 ps/nm
122
61
There’s more to it
123
Experimental eye
124
62
Filter and pulse-shape optimization
Photo
TX Detector
Optical
Optical Electric
Channel
Filter Filter
125
63