A wideband frequency comb ensures
that the crosstalk between multiple communication channels within the
same optical fiber is reversible.
Credit: UC San Diego Photonics Systems Group
Electrical engineers have broken key
barriers that limit the distance information can travel in fiber optic
cables and still be accurately deciphered by a receiver. Photonics
researchers at the University of California, San Diego have increased
the maximum power -- and therefore distance -- at which optical signals
can be sent through optical fibers. This advance has the potential to
increase the data transmission rates for the fiber optic cables that
serve as the backbone of the internet, cable, wireless and landline
networks. The research is published in the June 26 issue of the journal Science.
The new study presents a solution to a long-standing roadblock to
increasing data transmission rates in optical fiber: beyond a threshold
power level, additional power increases irreparably distort the
information travelling in the fiber optic cable.
"Today's fiber optic systems are a little like quicksand. With
quicksand, the more you struggle, the faster you sink. With fiber
optics, after a certain point, the more power you add to the signal, the
more distortion you get, in effect preventing a longer reach. Our
approach removes this power limit, which in turn extends how far signals
can travel in optical fiber without needing a repeater," said Nikola
Alic, a research scientist from the Qualcomm Institute, the
corresponding author on the Science paper and a principal of the
experimental effort.
In lab experiments, the researchers at UC San Diego successfully
deciphered information after it travelled a record-breaking 12,000
kilometers through fiber optic cables with standard amplifiers and no
repeaters, which are electronic regenerators.
The new findings effectively eliminate the need for electronic
regenerators placed periodically along the fiber link. These
regenerators are effectively supercomputers and must be applied to each
channel in the transmission. The electronic regeneration in modern
lightwave transmission that carries between 80 to 200 channels also
dictates the cost and, more importantly, prevents the construction of a
transparent optical network. As a result, eliminating periodic
electronic regeneration will drastically change the economy of the
network infrastructure, ultimately leading to cheaper and more efficient
transmission of information.
The breakthrough in this study relies on wideband "frequency combs"
that the researchers developed. The frequency comb described in this
paper ensures that the signal distortions -- called the "crosstalk" --
that arises between bundled streams of information travelling long
distances through the optical fiber are predictable, and therefore,
reversible at the receiving end of the fiber.
"Crosstalk between communication channels within a fiber optic cable
obeys fixed physical laws. It's not random. We now have a better
understanding of the physics of the crosstalk. In this study, we present
a method for leveraging the crosstalk to remove the power barrier for
optical fiber," explained Stojan Radic, a professor in the Department of
Electrical and Computer Engineering at UC San Diego and the senior
author on the Science paper. "Our approach conditions the information
before it is even sent, so the receiver is free of crosstalk caused by
the Kerr effect."
The photonics experiments were performed at UC San Diego's Qualcomm
Institute by researchers from the Photonics Systems Group led by Radic.
Pitch Perfect Data Transmission
The UC San Diego researchers' approach is akin to a concert master
who tunes multiple instruments in an orchestra to the same pitch at the
beginning of a concert. In an optical fiber, information is transmitted
through multiple communication channels that operate at different
frequencies. The electrical engineers used their frequency comb to
synchronize the frequency variations of the different streams of optical
information, called the "optical carriers" propagating through an
optical fiber. This approach compensates in advance for the crosstalk
that occurs between the multiple communication channels within the same
optical fiber. The frequency comb also ensures that the crosstalk
between the communication channels is reversible.
"After increasing the power of the optical signals we sent by 20
fold, we could still restore the original information when we used
frequency combs at the outset," said UC San Diego electrical engineering
Ph.D. student Eduardo Temprana, the first author on the paper. The
frequency comb ensured that the system did not accumulate the random
distortions that make it impossible to reassemble the original content
at the receiver.
The laboratory experiments involved setups with both three and five
optical channels, which interact with each other within the silica fiber
optic cables. The researchers note that this approach could be used in
systems with far more communication channels. Most of today's fiber
optic cables include more than 32 of these channels, which all interact
with one another.
In the Science paper, the researchers describe their
frequency referencing approach to pre-compensate for nonlinear effects
that occur between communication channels within the fiber optic cable.
The information is initially pre-distorted in a predictable and
reversible way when it is sent through the optical fiber. With the
frequency comb, the information can be unscrambled and fully restored at
the receiving end of the optical fiber.
"We are pre-empting the distortion effects that will happen in the
optical fiber," said Bill Kuo, a research scientist at the Qualcomm
Institute, who was responsible for the comb development in the group.
The same research group published a theoretical paper last year
outlining the fact that the experimental results they are now publishing
were theoretically possible.
Story Source:
The above post is reprinted from
materials provided by
University of California - San Diego. The original item was written by Liezel Labios.
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