Enhanced 10 Gb/s operations of directly modulated reflective semiconductor optical amplifiers without electronic equalization

Similar documents
Characterization of uncooled RSOA for upstream transmission in WDM reflective PONs

Colorless Amplified WDM-PON Employing Broadband Light Source Seeded Optical Sources and Channel-by-Channel Dispersion Compensators for >100 km Reach

Novel Design of Long Reach WDM-PON by using Directly Modulated RSOA

Downstream Transmission in a WDM-PON System Using a Multiwavelength SOA-Based Fiber Ring Laser Source

Optical Fiber Technology

A WDM passive optical network enabling multicasting with color-free ONUs

An Amplified WDM-PON Using Broadband Light Source Seeded Optical Sources and a Novel Bidirectional Reach Extender

70km external cavity DWDM sources based on O-band Self Seeded RSOAs for transmissions at 2.5Gbit/s

PERFORMANCE ANALYSIS OF WDM PONS BASED ON FP-LD USING RZ-OOK AND NRZ-OOK

PERFORMANCE EVALUATION OF GB/S BIDIRECTIONAL DWDM PASSIVE OPTICAL NETWORK BASED ON CYCLIC AWG

Wavelength Division Multiplexing Passive Optical Network (WDM-PON) technologies for future access networks

A HIGH SPEED WDM PON FOR DOWNSTREAM DPSK ASK SIGNALS AND UPSTREAM OOK SIGNAL WITH BROADCAST CAPABILTY

WDM-PON Delivering 5-Gbps Downstream/2.5-Gbps Upstream Data

Mahendra Kumar1 Navneet Agrawal2

Gigabit Transmission in 60-GHz-Band Using Optical Frequency Up-Conversion by Semiconductor Optical Amplifier and Photodiode Configuration

All-VCSEL based digital coherent detection link for multi Gbit/s WDM passive optical networks

80 GBPS DOWNSTREAM TRANSMISSION USING DQPSK AND 40 GBPS UPSTREAM TRANSMISSION USING IRZ/OOK MODULATION IN BIDIRECTIONAL WDM-PON

Design and Performance Evaluation of 20 GB/s Bidirectional DWDM Passive Optical Network Based on Array Waveguide Gratings

Utilizing Self-Seeding RSOA with Faraday Rotator Mirror for Colorless Access Network

Performance Analysis of Dwdm System With Different Modulation Techique And Photodiode

Dynamic gain-tilt compensation using electronic variable optical attenuators and a thin film filter spectral tilt monitor

Optimisation of DSF and SOA based Phase Conjugators. by Incorporating Noise-Suppressing Fibre Gratings

Spectrally Compact Optical Subcarrier Multiplexing with 42.6 Gbit/s AM-PSK Payload and 2.5Gbit/s NRZ Labels

Microwave and Optical Technology Letters. Minhui Yan, Qing-Yang Xu 1, Chih-Hung Chen, Wei-Ping Huang, and Xiaobin Hong

Optimization of uncooled RSOA parameters in WDM reflective PONs based on self-coherent or direct detection OLT receivers

Public Progress Report 2

SIMULATIVE INVESTIGATION OF SINGLE-TONE ROF SYSTEM USING VARIOUS DUOBINARY MODULATION FORMATS

Optical Fiber Technology. Using 10 Gb/s remodulation DPSK signal in self-restored colorless WDM-PON system

11.1 Gbit/s Pluggable Small Form Factor DWDM Optical Transceiver Module

Optimization of self-coherent reflective PON to achieve a new record 42 db ODN power budget after 100 km at 1.25 Gbps

RADIO-OVER-FIBER TRANSPORT SYSTEMS BASED ON DFB LD WITH MAIN AND 1 SIDE MODES INJECTION-LOCKED TECHNIQUE

Emerging Subsea Networks

Semiconductor Optical Amplifiers (SOAs) as Power Boosters. Applications Note No. 0001

Implementation of Dense Wavelength Division Multiplexing FBG

Bit error rate and cross talk performance in optical cross connect with wavelength converter

NG-PON2 Optical Components Update. Hal Roberts System Architect

Performance Analysis of Chromatic Dispersion Compensation of a Chirped Fiber Grating on a Differential Phase-shift-keyed Transmission

Interoperability of CWDM-routed reflective PONs. This chapter presents a complete multi-pon access network infrastructure by means of

UNIVERSITY OF TORONTO FACULTY OF APPLIED SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING. FINAL EXAMINATION, April 2017 DURATION: 2.5 hours

WWDM Transceiver Module for 10-Gb/s Ethernet

Emerging Subsea Networks

Ultra-dense WDM-PON 6.25 GHz spaced 8x1 Gb/s based on a simplified coherent-detection scheme

Performance Limitations of WDM Optical Transmission System Due to Cross-Phase Modulation in Presence of Chromatic Dispersion

Bandwidth efficient bidirectional 5 Gb/s overlapped-scm WDM PON with electronic equalization and forward-error correction

SOA-BASED NOISE SUPPRESSION IN SPECTRUM-SLICED PONs: IMPACT OF BIT-RATE AND SOA GAIN RECOVERY TIME

Vol. 6, No. 9 / September 2007 / JOURNAL OF OPTICAL NETWORKING 1105

Technical Feasibility of 4x25 Gb/s PMD for 40km at 1310nm using SOAs

High bit-rate combined FSK/IM modulated optical signal generation by using GCSR tunable laser sources

Study of All-Optical Wavelength Conversion and Regeneration Subsystems for use in Wavelength Division Multiplexing (WDM) Telecommunication Networks.

Polarization Optimized PMD Source Applications

Visible to infrared high-speed WDM transmission over PCF

Lecture 7 Fiber Optical Communication Lecture 7, Slide 1

ECEN689: Special Topics in Optical Interconnects Circuits and Systems Spring 2016

The Reduction of FWM effects using Duobinary Modulation in a Two-Channel D-WDM System

100G EPON Downstream wavelength plan

Intra-Cavity Chromatic Dispersion Impacts on 10-Gb/s Optical OFDM Transmissions Over 25-km Dual-RSOA-Based Self-Seeded PON Systems

25G TDM PON overview. Ed Harstead, member Fixed Networks CTO Dora van Veen, Vincent Houtsma, and Peter Vetter, Bell Labs

Coexistence of 10G-PON and GPON Reach Extension to 50-Km with Entirely Passive Fiber Plant

Life Science Journal 2013;10(4)

SOA pre-amplified upstream signal power in 100G EPON

High Speed VCSEL Transmission at 1310 nm and 1550 nm Transmission Wavelengths

Improved Analysis of Hybrid Optical Amplifier in CWDM System

Chirped Bragg Grating Dispersion Compensation in Dense Wavelength Division Multiplexing Optical Long-Haul Networks

Advances in Widely Tunable Lasers Richard Schatz Laboratory of Photonics Royal Institute of Technology

Lecture 8 Fiber Optical Communication Lecture 8, Slide 1

Compensation of Dispersion in 10 Gbps WDM System by Using Fiber Bragg Grating

REDUCTION OF CROSSTALK IN WAVELENGTH DIVISION MULTIPLEXED FIBER OPTIC COMMUNICATION SYSTEMS

Single channel and WDM transmission of 28 Gbaud zero-guard-interval CO-OFDM

S-band gain-clamped grating-based erbiumdoped fiber amplifier by forward optical feedback technique

Performance Comparison of Pre-, Post-, and Symmetrical Dispersion Compensation for 96 x 40 Gb/s DWDM System using DCF

Mitigation of Mode Partition Noise in Quantum-dash Fabry-Perot Mode-locked Lasers using Manchester Encoding

Evolution from TDM-PONs to Next-Generation PONs

Novel OBI noise reduction technique by using similar-obi estimation in optical multiple access uplink

Consideration about wavelength allocation in O-band

Analysis of four channel CWDM Transceiver Modules based on Extinction Ratio and with the use of EDFA

A Full-duplex OSSB Modulated ROF System with Centralized Light Source by Optical Sideband Reuse

Spectrum Sliced WDM-PON System as Energy Efficient Solution for Optical Access Systems

RZ-DPSK 10GB/S SLTE AND ITS TRANSMISSION PERFORMANCE ASSESSMENTFOR APPLICATION TO TRANS-PACIFIC SUBMARINE CABLE SYSTEMS

ANALYSIS OF BIDIRECTIONAL LONG REACH WDM PON

Gigabit-class optical wireless communication system at indoor distances (1.5-4 m)

SEMICONDUCTOR lasers and amplifiers are important

SUBMARINE SYSTEM UPGRADES WITH 25 GHZ CHANNEL SPACING USING DRZ AND RZ-DPSK MODULATION FORMATS

Optical Communications and Networks - Review and Evolution (OPTI 500) Massoud Karbassian

All-optical NRZ to RZ format and wavelength converter by dual-wavelength injection locking

Performance Analysis of Multi-format WDM-RoF Links Based on Low Cost Laser and SOA

Fiber-Optic Communication Systems

Mitigation of Chromatic Dispersion using Different Compensation Methods in Optical Fiber Communication: A Review

1.25 Gb/s Broadcast Signal Transmission in WDM-PON Based on Mutually Injected Fabry-Perot Laser Diodes

Presentation Overview

Four-wave mixing in O-band for 100G EPON John Johnson

PERFORMANCE ENHANCEMENT OF 32 CHANNEL LONG HAUL DWDM SOLITON LINK USING ELECTRONIC DISPERSION COMPENSATION

Full duplex 60-GHz RoF link employing tandem single sideband modulation scheme and high spectral efficiency modulation format

Optical Add-Drop Multiplexer Based on Fiber Bragg Gratings for Dense Wavelength Division Multiplexing Networks

Unit-5. Lecture -4. Power Penalties,

Optical Communications and Networks - Review and Evolution (OPTI 500) Massoud Karbassian

Temporal phase mask encrypted optical steganography carried by amplified spontaneous emission noise

Eye-Diagram-Based Evaluation of RZ and NRZ Modulation Methods in a 10-Gb/s Single-Channel and a 160-Gb/s WDM Optical Networks

Provision of IR-UWB wireless and baseband wired services over a WDM-PON

Agilent 83430A Lightwave Digital Source Product Overview

20-Gb/s Transmission Over 25-km in Wavelength Division Multiplexing Passive Optical Network with Centralized Light Source

Transcription:

Enhanced Gb/s operations of directly modulated reflective semiconductor optical amplifiers without electronic equalization M. Presi, 1, A. Chiuchiarelli, 1 R. Corsini, 1 P. Choudury, 1 F. Bottoni, 1, L. Giorgi 3 and E. Ciaramella 1 1 Institute of Communications, Information and Perception Technologies, Scuola Superiore Sant Anna di Pisa, Via G. Moruzzi, 1-51 - Pisa (ITALY) CNIT, Laboratorio Nazionale di Reti Fotoniche, Via G. Moruzzi, 1-51 - Pisa (ITALY) 3 Ericsson Ltd., Via G. Moruzzi, 1-51 - Pisa (ITALY) marco.presi@sssup.it Abstract: We report enhanced Gb/s operation of directly modulated bandwidth-limited reflective semiconductor optical amplifiers. By using a single suitable arrayed waveguide grating we achieve simultaneously WDM demultiplexing and optical equalization. Compared to previous approaches, the proposed system results significantly more tolerant to seeding wavelength drifts. This removes the need for wavelength lockers, additional electronic equalization or complex digital signal processing. Uniform C-band operations are obtained experimentally with < db power penalty within a wavelength drift of GHz (which doubles the ITU-T standard recommendations). 01 Optical Society of America OCIS codes: (00.5) Optical Communications; (00.00) Modulation. References and links 1. K. Cho, Y. Takushima, and Y. Chung, Enhanced operating range of wdm pon implemented by using uncooled rsoas, IEEE Photonics Technol. Lett. 0, 153 153 (00).. K. Cho, Y. Takushima, and Y. Chung, -Gb/s operation of RSOA for WDM PON, IEEE Photonics Technol. Lett. 0, 1533 1535 (00). 3. A. Agata and Y. Horiuchi, RSOA-Based Gb/s WDM PON using FEC and MLSE equalizers, in Optical Fiber Communication Conference, (Optical Society of America, 0).. B. Schrenk, G. de Valicourt, M. Omella, J. Lazaro, R. Brenot, and J. Prat, Direct -Gb/s modulation of a single-section RSOA in PONs with high optical budget, IEEE Photonics Technol. Lett., 39 39 (0). 5. T. Duong, N. Genay, P. Chanclou, B. Charbonnier, A. Pizzinat, and R. Brenot, Experimental demonstration of Gbit/s upstream transmission by remote modulation of 1 GHz RSOA using adaptively modulated optical OFDM for WDM-PON single fiber architecture, in Optical Communication, 00. ECOC 00. 3th European Conference on, (IEEE, 00), pp. 1.. M. Omella, V. Polo, J. Lazaro, B. Schrenk, and J. Prat, Gb/s RSOA transmission by direct duobinary modulation, in Optical Communication, 00. ECOC 00. 3th European Conference on, (IEEE, 00), pp. 1. 7. I. Papagiannakis, M. Omella, D. Klonidis, A. Birbas, J. Kikidis, I. Tomkos, and J. Prat, Investigation of -Gb/s RSOA-based upstream transmission in WDM-PONs utilizing optical filtering and electronic equalization, IEEE Photonics Technol. Lett. 0, 1 170 (00).. H. Kim, -Gb/s Operation of RSOA esing a delay interferometer, IEEE Photonics Technol. Lett., 1379 131 (0).

9. H. Kim, Transmission of -Gbps directly modulated RSOA signals in single-fiber loopback WDM PONs, IEEE Photonics Technol. Lett. pp. 1 1 (011).. M. Presi, A. Chiuchiarelli, R. Corsini, P. Choudhury, and E. Ciaramella, Enhanced -gb/s operation of bandwidth-limited r-soas without electronic equalization, in European Conference and Exhibition on Optical Communication, (Optical Society of America, 01). 11. S. Jung, Y. Takushima, and Y. Chung, Generation of 5-gbps qpsk signal using directly modulated rsoa for 0- km coherent wdm pon, in Optical Fiber Communication Conference, (Optical Society of America, 011). 1. Q. Guo, A. Tran, and C. Chae, 0 Gb/s WDM-PON system with 1 GHz RSOA using partial response equalization and optical filter detuning, in National Fiber Optic Engineers Conference, (Optical Society of America, 011). 13. M. Matsuura, N. Iwatsu, K. Kitamura, and N. Kishi, Time-resolved chirp properties of soas measured with an optical bandpass filter, IEEE Photonics Technol. Lett. 0, 001 003 (00). 1. Introduction The wavelength-division-multiplexed passive optical network (WDM-PON) is considered to be the next evolutionary solution for a simplified and future-proofed access system that can accommodate exponential traffic growth and bandwidth-hungry new applications. WDM-PON mitigates the complicated time-sharing and power budget issues in time-division-multiplexed PON (TDM-PON) by providing virtual point-to-point optical connectivity to multiple end users. Cost efficiency in WDM PON can be achieved by adopting colorless transmitters at the Optical Network Units (ONU) that remove the need for stock spare wavelength-defined transmitters. R-SOAs fulfill most of the requirements to realize a low-cost colorless transceiver for WDM- PONs: they can be operated at any wavelength supplied by the Optical Line Terminal (OLT) across the C and L-bands, exhibit very low polarization dependency and can be directly modulated. Uncooled operation of those devices has been also demonstrated [1]. A major drawback of R-SOAs is their limited modulation bandwidth, which typically allows operations up to.5 Gb/s. However Gb/s operation of bandwidth-limited R-SOAs can still be achieved by various means, such as electronic equalization and Forward Error Correction (FEC) [ ], multilevel signaling, e.g. OFDM or duobinary coding [5, ]. Furthermore equalization achieved by optical off-set filtering could also be exploited to obtain Gb/s. Demonstrations of this technique have been reported either aided by electronic equalization [7] or by detuned suitable delay interferometers [,9]. However, in all previous off-set filtering demonstrations electronic equalization or FEC were anyway needed to achieve error-free operations or to increase the system tolerance to wavelength drifts. In [] we presented an improved off-set filtering technique suitable for WDM-PON applications. It is highly tolerant to the wavelength detuning (no wavelength locker is required) and does not require any pre-emphasis (adaptation of the R-SOA bandwidth) nor any post-detection equalization. Furthermore the proposed off-set filtering is realized directly by a common WDM demultiplexer with a suitable bandwidth. Thus, a single network element provides simultaneously WDM demultiplexing and bandwidth enhancement by off-set filtering for all the channels. System is greatly simplified and Gb/s direct detection is feasible, yet providing superior performance. Here we present an extended characterization of this technique, including assessment of WDM performance and a study on the optimal filter bandwidth.. Operating principle Direct modulation of a R-SOA produces optical signals modulated both in amplitude and phase [11]. The amplitude modulation is received by direct detection. In this case the effective modulation bandwidth is limited by the frequency response of the R-SOA which typically does not exceed GHz. On the other hand, phase modulation can be converted in amplitude modulation by using suitable optical filters. As explained in [7], an optical filter of a suitable

Fig. 1. WDM-PON architecture. A single Arrayed Waveguide Grating (AWG-) operates simultaneously as off-set filter and WDM demultiplexer. AWG- has a 1 GHz bandwidth in order to relax constraints due to the chirp and the wavelength drift. Inset shows the relative position of on-grid AWG1 and AWG, offset AWG- and optical signal slope provides such phase-to-amplitude conversion. This is realized by using an optical filter detuned respect the carrier frequency of the optical signal (off-set filtering). Furthermore the off-set filter behaves like an high-pass filter. This therefore compensates for the low modulation bandwidth associated to the amplitude modulation and effectively extends the overall frequency response of the system. In a typical WDM-PON architecture (see figure 1), the proposed offset filtering can be implemented at the receiver side by a commercially available Gaussian shaped Array Waveguide Grating (AWG, in figure) having an optimized channel bandwidth. Such device provides simultaneously two functionalities, i.e. off-set filtering and WDM demultiplexing. In previous off-set filtering demonstration, filters ranging from 1 to 30 GHz where used [7 9, 1]. In the proposed implementation the bandwidth of the AWG is chosen to be narrower (1 GHz). By this choice we obtain a steeper slope that, combined with the R-SOA chirp provides a wide tolerance to the wavelength detuning; this removes the need for electronic equalization required in [7]. At the same time, the 1 GHz bandwidth provides a good compromise between extra losses induced by the off-set filtering and the need for a steep slope. Error-free operation is observed without Forward Error Correction, which was needed in the previous off-set filtering demonstrations []. In a WDM-PON scenario, all other AWGs implemented at the transmitter and the remote node are not offset so that they perform MUX/DeMUX without introducing extra losses. 3. Experiments The experimental setup is reported in figure -a. We used a tunable laser (λ = 155 nm) to feed a R-SOA. The seeding light was coupled into the R-SOA by an optical circulator (OC) providing an injection power of dbm. An AWG (AWG-1) having 50 GHz bandwidth was placed in front of the R-SOA to emulate the remote node demultiplexer. The R-SOA was a butterfly packaged commercial device, having 0 dbm output saturation power, db small signal gain and < 1 db polarization dependent gain when biased at 50 ma. Its α factor was experimentally measured (by using the technique proposed in [13]) to be around 5. For Gb/s operation the R-SOA was biased at ma and directly modulated by a 31 1 long Pseudo Random Bit Sequence (PRBS) by means of a Volt peak-to-peak electrical data signal. At the receiver side we implemented either the off-set AWG- (3 db bandwidth of 1 GHz over a 50 GHz grid) or a programmable optical filter (POF). Shapes of both the AWG- and the POF Gaussian filter are shown in Figure -b. AWG- was thermally detuned by about GHz in respect of the on-grid AWG-1. The detuning between AWG- and the optical signal was adjusted by setting the tunable laser emission wavelength accordingly. A GHz Avalanche Photo-Diode (APD) was used as detector and the received signal was directly sent to a BER

Fig.. a): Experimental setup. R-SOA: Reflective SOA; OC: Optical Circulator; TL: Tunable Laser; SMF: Single Mode Fiber; POF: Programmable Optical Filter; APD: Avalanche Photo Diode. b): Comparison of AWG- and ideal Gaussian filter obtained by the programmable optical filter. Frequency Response (db) -0-5 -30-35 -0-5 Transmitter Output (a) 0 nm 0. nm -50 0 1 Frequency (GHz) Frequency Response (db) -0-5 -30-35 -0-5 After 0 km SMF (b) 0 nm 0.n nm -50 0 1 Frequency (GHz) Fig. 3. Frequency response measured as a function of the detuning at the transmitter output (a) and after 0 km propagation (b). tester, with no further electrical filtering or processing. A 0 km Single Mode Fibre (G.5) was also implemented for some measurements. We first characterized experimentally the increase of the effective modulation bandwidth as a function of the detuning between the AWG and the optical signal. We report in figure 3-(a) three significant detuning cases: 0, 0.0,. Those detuning values range from no off-set detuning (pure low-pass E/O response of the R-SOA used in the experiment) to the maximum allowed detuning (high-pass response added by the phase modulation). Further detuning would result in excessive insertion losses. As expected, the detuning increases the E/O modulation bandwidth. We repeated the same measurement after transmission over 0 km of SMF fiber (corresponding to 30 ps/nm): as can be seen in figure 3-(b), the low-pass response at 0 nm detuning is reduced by the combined effect of chirp and chromatic dispersion. However, when the high-pass filter due to phase modulation is added by increasing the detuning, the resulting E/O bandwidth results even enhanced. We also investigated the resilience of this scheme to the detuning between the AWG transmission peak and the seeding wavelength. To this aim we measured the Q-factor of the received signal as a function of the detuning (in back-to-back), as shown in figure -a. This measurement was performed by using a built-in function of the sampling oscilloscope (it gives a pessimistic estimation of the Q-factor as it includes the electrical noise added by the equipment). As can be seen, the Q-factor increases monotonically as the relative detuning between signal wavelength and filter center is increased. However it should be also noted that the detuning also increases the losses (which are indicated on top x-axis in figure -a). Therefore, a trade-off must be found between optimal performance and extra losses. Nevertheless, we obtained good performance (Q-factor >, which corre-

Insertion Loss (db) 13.1 1.5 0.1.3 1 9 0 nm 7 Q-factor Q-factor 1 GHz 0 GHz 5 GHz 30 GHz 1 5 3 0.0 (a) 0.0 0.1 0.1 0.1 Detuning (nm) 0.1 0.1 (b) 0 0 0.05 0.1 0.15 0. 0.5 0.3 0.35 Detuning (nm) Fig.. a) Q-factor improvement as a function of the AWG detuning. For selected detuning, corresponding eye-diagrams are reported in the insets. On the left, the first eye diagram was recorded without offset between the AWG and the signal. Insertion losses for the various detuning are reported on top x-axis. b) Q-factor improvement obtained with Gaussian filters of different bandwidths. All measurements are performed in back-to-back and eyediagrams have been recorded over 1 minute time persistence. Time scale is 0 ps/div. spond to a BER lower than 9 ) over a wide detuning range where the AWG slope increases linearly between 0. and 0. db/ghz: this represents a significant improvement in respect to previous implementations [7 9] that required electronic equalization or wavelength lockers to compensate for the low tolerance to detuning. The proposed approach is therefore compliant with WDM standards, which specify tolerances of GHz in respect to the nominal frequencies. The signal quality improvement can be clearly seen in figure -a. All the eye diagrams were recorded over the same persistence time (1 min.). We also report in the same figure (upper-left corner) an eye diagram recorded without applying the offset filtering: it was so closed that BER measurement or Q-factor estimation were not feasible. In order to better understand the benefits added by the narrow off-set filtering, we compared the performance obtained by using Gaussian filters of different bandwidths. To this aim we used a programmable optical filter with 1 GHz resolution, set to provide a Gaussian shape with bandwidths between 1 and 30 GHz. We measured the Q-factor (in back-to-back) as a function of the detuning as reported in figure -b. The Q-factor was measured by keeping a constant optical power to the receiver ( 17 dbm) for all the measured points. As can be seen, Q-factor exceeds the value of only in the case of the 1 GHz filter. It could be noted that in the case of the 1 GHz filter at detuning shows an even better value in respect to the result reported in figure -a. We attribute this behavior to the fact that the AWG has a non-exact Gaussian shape at large detuning: this is clearly visible in figure -b where we compare the shape of the Gaussian AWG and the synthesized Gaussian optical filter. The AWG shape starts differing from the ideal Gaussian one at detuning where we found a saturation behavior of the Q-factor improvement (see figure -a. Finally, we investigated the system performance by BER measurements taken for different values of the detuning. For both back-to-back, figure 5-(a), and propagation over 0 km, figure 5-(b), we obtained uniform performance (less than db power penalty) over a GHz detuning range (from 0.0 to detuning). Despite the link bandwidth is further enhanced after 0 km transmission (see figure3) we found about 1 db additional power penalty after propagation, which is attributed to the accumulated chromatic dispersion. It can be noted that in both cases the sensitivity values were about 19 dbm, quite higher than the typical value of dbm of Gb/s IMDD system. This is due mostly to the reduced extinction ratio (ER) obtained by this technique. We experimentally measured ER values ranging from 1. to. db in the considered detuning range.

-log(ber) 3 5 7 9 (a) 0.0 nm 0.07 nm 0.0 nm 0.09 nm 0. nm 0.11 nm 0.1 nm 0.13 nm 0.1 nm 0.15 nm -log(ber) 3 5 7 9 (b) 0.0 nm 0.07 nm 0.0 nm 0.09 nm 0. nm 0.11 nm 0.1 nm 0.13 nm 0.1 nm 0.15 nm - - - - -0-1 -1-1 Received Power (dbm) -----0-1-1-1-1 Received Power (dbm) Fig. 5. BER measurements as function of the received optical power. a) Transmitter Output (Back-to-Back). b) After 0 km propagation -15 Sensitivity (dbm) -0-5 < db -30 1535 150 155 1550 1555 Wavelength (nm) Fig.. Sensitivity of selected channels across the C-band. These measurements were performed by using the receiver of an OC-19 XFP transceiver. Light-gray point indicates the channel used for the extended characterization. As the R-SOA chirp is not constant along its emission spectrum it is important to verify the system performance across the whole C-band. We verified this by measuring the sensitivity (in back-to-back) on selected channels in the 1535 1555 nm range. In order to verify the compatibility of the proposed off-set filtering with commercial receivers, we replaced the optical receiver and used the one integrated within a XFP transceiver, which is designed for standard OC-19 WDM links and has a fixed built-in decision threshold. Results are shown in figure. As can be seen, on the selected channels, the sensitivities are within a range of db. This is due both to chirp variations and non optimized offset filtering (set at 0.1 nm). An optimized R-SOA design (aimed at increasing the chirp value and its uniformity) could help in reducing such spread.. Conclusion We experimentally demonstrated an improved off-set filtering approach to extend the effective modulation bandwidth of a common R-SOA for WDM-PON applications. The proposed approach is based on the use of a single narrow bandwidth AWG detuned in respect to the WDM grid which acts simultaneously both as WDM-demultiplexer and bandwidth enhancer filter. This allows to obtain Gb/s IMDD links by using a directly-modulated Reflective SOA of < 1 GHz bandwidth with enhanced tolerance to the wavelength detuning (up to GHz). The proposed filtering is effective across the C-band. Error-free operation was obtained after a 0 km fiber without the use of electronic equalization, pre-emphasis or Forward Error Correction, in favor of much simpler direct detection.