Emerging Subsea Networks

Similar documents
from ocean to cloud TCM-QPSK PROVIDES 2DB GAIN OVER BPSK IN FESTOON LINKS

Emerging Subsea Networks

from ocean to cloud DIMINISHED NONLINEAR IMPACT OF BIT-ALIGNED POLARIZATION MULTIPLEXING WITH ADVANCED MODULATION FORMATS ON SUBSEA CABLES

Emerging Subsea Networks

from ocean to cloud WELCOME TO 400GB/S & 1TB/S ERA FOR HIGH SPECTRAL EFFICIENCY UNDERSEA SYSTEMS

Emerging Subsea Networks

40 Gb/s and 100 Gb/s Ultra Long Haul Submarine Systems

Emerging Subsea Networks

Emerging Subsea Networks

40Gb/s Coherent DP-PSK for Submarine Applications

Emerging Subsea Networks

from ocean to cloud LATENCY REDUCTION VIA BYPASSING SOFT-DECISION FEC OVER SUBMARINE SYSTEMS

PLC-based integrated devices for advanced modulation formats

Choosing an Oscilloscope for Coherent Optical Modulation Analysis

Performance Analysis Of Hybrid Optical OFDM System With High Order Dispersion Compensation

Innovations in Coherent Technologies for Subsea Transmission Systems

Emerging Subsea Networks

25 Tb/s transmission over 5,530 km using 16QAM at 5.2 b/s/hz spectral efficiency

Peter J. Winzer Bell Labs, Alcatel-Lucent. Special thanks to: R.-J. Essiambre, A. Gnauck, G. Raybon, C. Doerr

from ocean to cloud Copyright SubOptic2013 Page 1 of 5

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

from ocean to cloud THE FUTURE IS NOW - MAXIMIZING SPECTRAL EFFICIENCY AND CAPACITY USING MODERN COHERENT TRANSPONDER TECHNIQUES

Single- versus Dual-Carrier Transmission for Installed Submarine Cable Upgrades

Phase Modulator for Higher Order Dispersion Compensation in Optical OFDM System

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

from ocean to cloud Fraunhofer Institute for Telecommunications, Heinrich-Hertz-Institut, Einsteinufer 37, D-10587, Berlin, Germany

Chalmers Publication Library. Copyright Notice. (Article begins on next page)

PHASE MODULATION FOR THE TRANSMISSION OF NX40GBIT/S DATA OVER TRANSOCEANIC DISTANCES

Emerging Subsea Networks

Chalmers Publication Library. Copyright Notice. (Article begins on next page)

(1) Istituto Superiore Mario Boella, Torino - Italy (2) OPTCOM Optical Communications Group Politecnico di Torino, Torino - Italy (3) Cisco Photonics

Effects of Polarization Tracker on 80 and 112 Gb/s PDM-DQPSK with Spectral Amplitude Code Labels

from ocean to cloud USING COHERENT TECHNOLOGY FOR SIMPLE, ACCURATE PERFORMANCE BUDGETING

Fibers for Next Generation High Spectral Efficiency

Current Trends in Unrepeatered Systems

Lecture 7 Fiber Optical Communication Lecture 7, Slide 1

Phase Noise Compensation for Coherent Orthogonal Frequency Division Multiplexing in Optical Fiber Communications Systems

Emerging Subsea Networks

DESIGN METHODOLOGIES FOR 25 GHz SPACED RZ-DPSK SYSTEMS OVER CONVENTIONAL NZ-DSF SUBMARINE CABLE

from ocean to cloud SEAMLESS OADM FUNCTIONALITY FOR SUBMARINE BU

Optical Measurements in 100 and 400 Gb/s Networks: Will Coherent Receivers Take Over? Fred Heismann

Enabling technology for suppressing nonlinear interchannel crosstalk in DWDM transoceanic systems

from ocean to cloud Power budget line parameters evaluation on a system having reached its maximum capacity

46 GBaud Multi-Format Optical Transmitter OM5110 Datasheet

Next Generation Optical Communication Systems

Next-Generation Optical Fiber Network Communication

UNREPEATERED SYSTEMS: STATE OF THE ART

Performance Analysis of 112 Gb/s PDM- DQPSK Optical System with Frequency Swept Coherent Detected Spectral Amplitude Labels

NOW WITH UP TO 40 GHz BANDWIDTH

1 COPYRIGHT 2011 ALCATEL-LUCENT. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

Sensors & Transducers Published by IFSA Publishing, S. L.,

from ocean to cloud EFFICIENCY OF ROPA AMPLIFICATION FOR DIFFERENT MODULATION FORMATS IN UNREPEATERED SUBMARINE SYSTEMS

Polarization Optimized PMD Source Applications

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

L évolution des systèmes de transmission optique très haut débit et l impact de la photonique sur silicium

REDUCTION OF CROSSTALK IN WAVELENGTH DIVISION MULTIPLEXED FIBER OPTIC COMMUNICATION SYSTEMS

The Challenges of Data Transmission toward Tbps Line rate in DWDM System for Long haul Transmission

ECOC Market Focus Linear Components Enabling Flexible Optical Networks. Sep 24, 2014 Lian Zhao Richard Ward

SPECTRAL HOLE BURNING EFFECTS AND SYSTEM ENGINEERING RULES FOR SYSTEM UPGRADES

Options for Increasing Subsea Cable System Capacity

40Gb/s Optical Transmission System Testbed

Meeting The Challenge of Cloud Scale Connectivity. Abhijit Chitambar Ph.D. Principal Product Manager Infinera

Irregular Polar Coding for Multi-Level Modulation in Complexity-Constrained Lightwave Systems

EXTREMELY LONG-SPAN NON-REPEATERED SUBMARINE CABLE SYSTEMS AND RELATED TECHNOLOGIES AND EQUIPMENT

Digital back-propagation for spectrally efficient WDM 112 Gbit/s PM m-ary QAM transmission

Polarization Related Tests for Coherent Detection Systems

60 Gbit/s 64 QAM-OFDM coherent optical transmission with a 5.3 GHz bandwidth

Optical Networks emerging technologies and architectures

40Gb/s & 100Gb/s Transport in the WAN Dr. Olga Vassilieva Fujitsu Laboratories of America, Inc. Richardson, Texas

The Affection of Fiber Nonlinearity in Coherent Optical Communication System

Reach Enhancement of 100%for a DP-64QAM Super Channel using MC-DBP with an ISD of 9b/s/Hz

Optical phase-locked loop for coherent transmission over 500 km using heterodyne detection with fiber lasers

Fiber Nonlinearity Compensation Methods (used by our group)

Dr. Monir Hossen ECE, KUET

High-Dimensional Modulation for Mode-Division Multiplexing

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION

Full-duplex bidirectional transmission of 10-Gb/s millimeter-wave QPSK signal in E-band optical wireless link

Multi-format all-optical-3r-regeneration technology

Comparison of nonlinearity tolerance of modulation formats for subcarrier modulation

Laser Frequency Drift Compensation with Han-Kobayashi Coding in Superchannel Nonlinear Optical Communications

Optical Digital Transmission Systems. Xavier Fernando ADROIT Lab Ryerson University

Global Consumer Internet Traffic

from ocean to cloud LOW COMPLEXITY BACK-PROPAGATION FOR UPGRADING LEGACY SUBMARINE SYSTEMS

WDM in backbone. Péter Barta Alcatel-Lucent

Real-time transmission of 16 Tb/s over 1020km using 200Gb/s CFP2-DCO

2016 Spring Technical Forum Proceedings

From static WDM transport to software-defined optics

Free spectral range optimization of return-tozero differential phase shift keyed demodulation in the presence of chromatic dispersion

Emerging Subsea Networks

CodeSScientific. OCSim Modules 2018 version 2.0. Fiber Optic Communication System Simulations Software Modules with Matlab

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

ARTICLE IN PRESS. Optik 119 (2008)

SCIENCE CHINA Technological Sciences. A flexible multi-16qam transmitter based on cascaded dual-parallel Mach-Zehnder modulator and phase modulator

Frequency Diversity MIMO Detection for DP- QAM Transmission

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

Optical Complex Spectrum Analyzer (OCSA)

Development of a Micro ITLA for Optical Digital Coherent Communication

SEVENTH FRAMEWORK PROGRAMME THEME [ICT ] [Photonics]

Spectral-Efficient 100G Parallel PHY in Metro/regional Networks

Pilot-aided carrier phase recovery for M-QAM using superscalar parallelization based PLL

Transcription:

Impact of Frequency Separation between Orthogonal Idlers on System Performance Lei Zong, Ahmed Awadalla, Pierre Mertz, Xiaohui Yang, Emily Abbess, Han Sun, Kuang-Tsan Wu, Steve Grubb Email: lzong@infinera.com Infinera, 9005 Junction Drive, Annapolis Junction, MD 20701 Abstract: Continuous-wave (CW) idlers are widely used in submarine links to control channel power to optimize transmission performance. The use of two orthogonally polarized CW lasers as a single idler, instead of a single free-running laser source, has been proved to reduce polarization dependence fluctuation in channels close to it. The frequency difference between the two CW lasers must be carefully controlled, otherwise the system may suffer significant penalty. 1. Introduction Power control and idler placement is critical for optimizing transmission performance in submarine links. Legacy cables were designed with high output power repeaters and dispersion management for on-off-keying (OOK) modulation formats, which tolerates more nonlinearity than coherent phase modulated counterparts. In recent years, coherent advanced modulation formats, such as binary phase shift keying (BPSK), quadrature phase shift keying (QPSK), and quadrature amplitude modulation (QAM), dominate in submarine links [1-2]. These formats employ digital signal processing (DSP) algorithms to compensate most linear distortions of the waveform and are generally limited by nonlinear effects and noise in the link. Therefore they require much lower per-channel launch power, which is especially true for channels close to the zero dispersion wavelength (ZDW), where cross-phase-modulation (XPM) penalty from neighbouring channels becomes much more detrimental. Single-polarization (SP) and dualpolarization (DP) continuous-wave (CW) idler have been effective components in submarine links to control channel power in both the entire passband and within a narrow bandwidth of several hundred Giga-Hertz [3-4]. SP CW idler, as a single free-run laser, is simple and of low cost, but can cause polarization dependent penalty to channels close to it. A DP CW laser, on the other hand, utilizes two orthogonally polarized lasers as a single idler. These two lasers, whose total power can be the same as that of a SP idler, have much less polarization dependent penalty while maintain the same level of power control over channel power. In a DP CW idler, the frequency of the two orthogonally polarized lasers must be slightly tuned away from each other. During submarine lab test, field trials, and simulation, we found out that when the frequency separation between the two lasers is within a certain range, neighboring channels will experience Q penalty and fluctuation due to beating of the two lasers. In this paper, we investigate the impact of laser frequency separation between the two lasers in a DP CW idler, both by experiments in a field trial and in a lab recirculating loop. We will also Copyright SubOptic2016 Page 1 of 5

demonstrate the effect with simulation results. 2. Experimental Results In this section, we present test results in a field trial over a trans-pacific submarine link, and lab test results in a recirculating loop. The modulation formats used in these tests include BPSK, QPSK, and 8QAM. 2.1 Field Trial Test The link used for field trial is 8870 km in length, with 207 spans at an average span loss of 11.3 db. The link is comprised of NZDSF with periodical in-line compensation. The ZDW of the cable is at about 193.4 THz. combiner (PBC). The recombined channels are decorrelated through a pair of 1x8 interleaver/deinterleaver and seven patchcords of different lengths between them. After decorrelation these channels are combined with 50 channels from five line modules, and two DP CW idlers at 191.7 THz and 193.85 THz, respectively. Finally all channels are preemphasize in a dynamic spectrum equalizer (DSE) and amplifier before being launched into the submarine cable. The launch spectrum, after pre-emphasis, is shown in Fig. 2. In this test, the CW idler at 193.85 THz is close to ZDW. Tunable ECL 71 Ch DFB Coherent Rx IQ Mod PPG IQ Mod DMUX 2x2 PMS PBC 1x8 Interleaver 1x8 Interleaver Submarine link of 207 spans at 11.3 db average span loss Fig. 1. Field trial test setup CW Idlers The test setup is as shown in Fig. 1. The Tx consists of a total of 122 channels at 25 GHz channel spacing from 191.80 THz to 195.05 THz, within which a bandwidth of 200 GHz from 193.725 to 193.925 THz are reserved for guard band. Among the channels there are 50 channels from five line modules of Infinera s, 71 loading channels generated by DFB lasers, and an ECL tunable laser for test channel. All channels are modulated with 15.3 GBaud BPSK format. The test channel and loading channels are modulated in two separate IQ modulators, then combined and polarization multiplexed with a 2x2 polarization maintaining splitter (PMS), an optical delay in one arm, and then combined again in a polarization beam MUX DSE Fig. 2. Field trial launch spectrum At the Rx side, a demultiplexer (DMUX) sends the test channel to a coherent receiver, which utilizes a Tektronix DPO71604B sampling scope and off-line processing. At the same time, another set of five line modules provides real-time Q values of the 50 channels from the Tx s. In normal tests, the two orthogonally polarized lasers in each CW idler are kept at +/- 6 GHz away from the idler s nominal frequency of 191.7 THz and 193.85 THz, respectively. To investigate the impact of the laser frequency separation, the separation in idler 193.85 THz is gradually reduced down to +/-1 GHz at a step size of 1 GHz, and then further reduced to +/- 0.5 GHz, +/- 0.2 GHz, and +/- 0.1 GHz. At each separation, Q values of all 50 SOLX channels are measured and recorded. The Copyright SubOptic2016 Page 2 of 5

test channel are also checked at the rest of the bandwidth. Fig. 3 shows the monitored deltaq values of the 50 channels during the process. CW Idler ASE Idlers 48 Ch Tunable ECL PM/IQ Mod DAC WSS Coherent Rx WSS 7 x 50 km + 60 km x m Fig. 4. Recirculating loop test setup Fig. 3. Field trial test results In the results, points at deltaq = 0 db means they are below forward error correction (FEC) limit and the channel fails. It is clear that at +/- 0.1 GHz separation, all 50 channels have failed. As the two lasers separate farther in frequency, channels far away from the CW idler start to recover, while those close to the CW idler still experience Q loss or Q penalty until the separation becomes about +/-1 GHz. After that channel Q values become stable and independent to frequency separation. 2.2. Recirculating Loop Test The recirculating loop contains a total of 8 spans. The first 6 spans each has about 50 km of fiber, of which the two halves are two different types of negative-dispersion fiber. The seventh span is 50 km NDSF fiber to compensate dispersion. The last span contains 10 km of LS fiber and loop supporting equipment, including a loop synchronous polarization scrambler (LSPS), a DSE, an acoustic optical switch (AOSW), and a 3 db coupler [5-6]. The 10 km LS fiber plus the supporting equipment is equivalent to 60 km of fiber. The ZDW of the loop is around 193.1 THz. The test setup of the loop experiments is shown in Fig. 4. The Tx is comprised of three groups of signals. The first are 48 test channels from ECL, which can be tuned within the entire C band, are modulated in a PM/IQ modulator. Second, an amplified spontaneous emission (ASE) light source fills in the rest of the spectrum as loading channels. These two groups of signals are combined in a wavelength selective switch (WSS) that also pre-emphasizes the launch spectrum. Finally, a dual-polarization CW idler combines with the test channels and ASE idler. These signals are amplified and launched into the recirculating loop. At Rx side, a WSS drops test channels to a coherent receiver, which utilizes a Tektronix DPO72304DX, triggered by loop clock, and off-line processing. Three modulation formats, i.e., BPSK, QPSK, and 8QAM, are tested in the recirculating loop. Table 1 shows the parameters of these formats used in the test. BPSK QPSK 8QAM Baud Rate (Gbaud) 31.5 31.5 21 Ch. Spacing (GHz) 37.5 37.5 25 CW Idler Freq. (THz) 192.3 192.3 192.45 Ch next to Idler (THz) 192.35 192.35 192.5 Ch. Count 48 48 48 Loop Round Trips 18 10 3 Transmission Distance (km) 7380 4100 1230 Table. 1. Parameters of modulation formats. Copyright SubOptic2016 Page 3 of 5

In the tests, frequency separation between the two lasers of the DP CW idler start from 0, then increases gradually at 0.1 GHz step size to +/- 1 GHz. After that, the step size adjusts to 0.5 GHz for the rest of the tests all the way to +/-6 GHz separation. Channel Q values are monitored during the process. enlarged copy of the results from 0 to +/- 1 GHz separation For 8QAM format, the launch signal spectrum and deltaq vs. Frequency Separation is shown in Fig. 6. (a) (a) (b) (c) Fig. 5. Loop test results of BPSK and QPSK. (a) Launch signal spectrum. (b) BPSK test results. (c) QPSK test results. For BPSK and QPSK, the transmission distance is 7380 km and 4100 km, respectively. The launch signal spectrum and deltaq vs. Frequency Separation is shown in Fig. 5. The inset in the lowerright part of the deltaq results is an (b) Fig. 6. Loop test results of 8QAM. (a) Launch signal spectrum. (b) 8QAM test results. With all three formats, the impact of frequency separation on channel Q performance is similar to what has been observed in the field trial. One major difference, as shown in the inset of Fig. 5 (b) and (c) as well as in Fig. 6(b), is that at zero separation, some channels in the loop test results have a significant deltaq at the beginning, but as the separation increases deltaq reduces to zero or near zero and then back to normal. This is due to the fact that the real frequency of the two orthogonally polarized laser are slight off their nominal values and they drift slightly from time to time by a few tens to a hundred mega Hertz. A second difference is that the measured Q values fluctuate in channels with the separation from about +/- 2 GHz to +/- 4 GHz. This will be further investigated in the future. Copyright SubOptic2016 Page 4 of 5

3. Simulation Results We simulate the performance of BPSK channels separated by 50GHz channel separation in a typical subsea link of 7000km length. The idlers are inserted at 192.325THz and the channels span 192.THz to 193.2THz. The results are show in Fig. 7. Similar to the lab experiments, the idlers have appreciable penalty for any separation below 1GHz. At 500MHz separation penalty is severe for channels neighbour to the idlers. The effects gets stronger as the separation decreases. At 10MHz, channels as far as 1THz from the idlers are completely blocked by the noise from the idlers. deltaq(db) Fig. 7. Simulation results of BPSK over 7000 km of subsea link. 4. Summary Submarine field trial, lab tests, and simulation results demonstrate the risk of catastrophic traffic failure when the two lasers in a DP CW idler are within a range of about +/- 1 GHz. The findings are of importance for subsea cable systems which require the use of CW idlers to control power per channel and optimally load the wet plant. Orthogonally polarized CW idler is a field proven component to reduce polarization dependent performance fluctuation in submarine links. In order for the system operator to have the desirable advantages of dual-polarization idlers, however, the designing and controlling of the frequency separation between the two idlers has to be done with great care, otherwise the system can suffer from great penalties. 5. REFERENCES [1] A. Pilipetskii, High capacity submarine transmission systems, Proceedings of Optical Fiber Communications Conference (OFC) 2015, W3G.5, OFC 2015, Los Angeles. [2] H. Zhang, A. Turukhin, O.V. Sinkin, W. Patterson, H.G. Batshon, Y. Sun, C.R. Davidson, M. Mazurczyk, G. Mohs, D.G. Foursa, A. Pilipetskii, Power-efficient 100 Gb/s transmission over transoceanic distance using 8-dimensional coded modulation, Proceedings of European Conference on Optical Communication (ECOC) 2015, 0148, ECOC 2015, Valencia, Spain. [3] X. Yang, E. Burmeister, H. Xu, etc., Demonstration of Effective Idler solutions in Subsea Field Trials, Proceedings of SubOptic 2013, EC16, SubOptic 2013, Paris, France. [4] P. Mertz, H. Xu, Subsea optical communication system dual polarization idler, US Patent Appl., US9154258 B1. [5] H. Xu, J. Wen, J. Zweck, L. Van, C. Menyuk, G. Carter, The effects of distributed PMD, PDL, and loop scrambling on BER distributions in a recirculating loop used to emulate longhaul terrestrial transmission, Proceedings of Optical Fiber Communications Conference (OFC) 2003, TuO2, OFC 2003, Atlanta. [6] C. Vinegoni, M. Karlsson, M. Petersson, H. Sunnerud, The statistics of polarization-dependent loss in a recirculating loop, Journal of Lightwave Technology, vol. 22, pp. 968-976, April, 2004. Copyright SubOptic2016 Page 5 of 5