Wide passband wavelength selective switch
10701465 ยท 2020-06-30
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
H04Q2011/0026
ELECTRICITY
G02B6/356
PHYSICS
H04J14/0212
ELECTRICITY
G02B6/3558
PHYSICS
International classification
Abstract
Methods and apparatus are provided that configure a wider passband for one or more channels of a wavelength selective switch (WSS). When a wider passband route WSS and a normal width passband select switch are used in combination, crosstalk that may be introduced by the wider passband route WSS can be mitigated. The wider passband WSS can provide a passband that allows a maximum bandwidth of signal to pass on a given channel and avoid signal being attenuated at the channel edges, especially when channels have a reduced channel spacing, such as with 50 GHz spacing.
Claims
1. A method of providing a wider channel passband for a wavelength selective switch (WSS), the method comprising: spatially separating an optical signal comprising at least one wavelength channel onto an optical deflector array comprising a plurality of deflection elements, each of the at least one wavelength channel defined on the optical deflector array by a respective common wavelength channel region; modifying deflection elements in a first area of the optical deflector array in accordance with a single phase shift profile to deflect a first wavelength channel portion of a first wavelength channel to a first output port, the first area including deflection elements from a first portion of the common wavelength channel region of the first wavelength channel and from a first portion of the common wavelength channel region of a second wavelength channel adjacent the first portion of the common wavelength channel region of the first wavelength channel, wherein deflection elements in the first area are non-overlapping with deflection elements of a second area of the optical deflector array configured to deflect a second wavelength channel portion of a second wavelength channel to a second output port in accordance with a single phase shift profile, the second area including deflection elements from a second portion of the common wavelength channel region of the second wavelength channel and from a second portion of the common wavelength channel region of the first wavelength channel adjacent the second portion of the common wavelength channel region of the second wavelength channel, wherein the first and second wavelength channels are distinct from one another.
2. The method of claim 1, the method further comprising modifying deflection elements in the second area of the optical deflector array to deflect the second wavelength channel portion of the second wavelength channel to the second output port, the second area including deflection elements from the second portion of the common wavelength channel region of the second wavelength channel and from the second portion of the common wavelength channel region of the first wavelength channel adjacent the second portion of the common wavelength channel region of the second wavelength channel.
3. The method of claim 2, wherein: for a multiplexing WSS the first output port and the second output port are the same output port; and for a demultiplexing WSS the first output port and the second output port are different output ports.
4. The method of claim 2, further comprising: receiving the optical signal at an input port; spatially separating two adjacent wavelength channels of the optical signal; and directing the two spatially separated adjacent wavelength channels onto the optical deflector array so that each wavelength channel is incident on its respective common wavelength channel region of the optical deflector array.
5. The method of claim 2 further comprising, for a third wavelength channel adjacent the second wavelength channel: modifying deflection elements in a third area of the optical deflector array in accordance with a single phase shift profile to deflect a first wavelength channel portion of a third wavelength channel to a third output port, the third area including deflection elements from a first portion of the common wavelength channel region of the third wavelength channel and from a first portion of the common wavelength channel region of the second wavelength channel, wherein the first, second and third wavelength channels are distinct from one another; and modifying deflection elements in the second area of the optical deflector array in accordance with a single phase shift profile, the second area also including deflection elements from a second portion of the common wavelength channel region of the third wavelength channel, wherein the deflection elements in the second area and the deflection elements in the third area are non-overlapping.
6. The method of claim 2, wherein: the deflection elements are arranged in a two dimensional lattice; and controlling the optical deflector array comprises controlling phase shift profiles of the deflection elements in the first and second areas of the optical deflector array.
7. The method of claim 6, wherein controlling phase shift profiles of the deflection elements in the first and second areas of the optical deflector array comprises controlling the optical deflector array so that: deflection elements in the first area of the optical deflector array have a first phase shift profile; and deflection elements in the second area of the optical deflector array have a second phase shift profile.
8. The method of claim 7, wherein: the two dimensional lattice of deflection elements extends in a first direction along a wavelength dispersion axis and in a second direction along a second axis perpendicular to the wavelength dispersion axis; and the phase shift profiles are along the direction of the second axis.
9. The method of claim 8, wherein the common wavelength channel region of each wavelength channel comprises a predefined number of columns of deflection elements in the first direction that collectively correspond to a predefined bandwidth.
10. The method of claim 9, wherein: a first portion of the common wavelength channel region of the second wavelength channel includes n columns of deflection elements in the first direction, where n is an integer number 10% of the predefined number of deflection elements in the common wavelength channel region of the first wavelength channel; and a second portion of the common wavelength channel region of the first wavelength channel includes m columns of deflection elements in the first direction, where m is an integer number 10% of the predefined number of deflection elements in the common wavelength channel region of the second wavelength channel.
11. The method of claim 1, wherein the optical deflector array is a liquid crystal on silicon (LCoS) pixel array.
12. The method of claim 2 further comprising: modifying deflection elements in a first wavelength channel portion of the second wavelength channel to a first monitoring output port; and modifying deflection elements in a second wavelength channel portion of the first wavelength channel to a second monitoring port.
13. A method of providing a wider channel passband for a wavelength selective switch (WSS), the method comprising: spatially separating a first optical signal received from a first input port comprising at least one wavelength channel onto an optical deflector array comprising a plurality of deflection elements, each wavelength channel defined on the optical deflector array by a common wavelength channel region; spatially separating a second optical signal received from a second input port comprising two adjacent wavelength channels onto the optical deflector array, wherein one wavelength channel of the two adjacent wavelength channels is the same as one of the at least one wavelength channel of the first optical signal and the adjacent wavelength channel of the two adjacent wavelength channels is different than any of the at least one wavelength channels of the first optical signal; modifying deflection elements in a first area of the optical deflector array in accordance with a single phase shift profile to deflect a first wavelength channel portion of a first wavelength channel from the first optical signal to an output port, while deflecting the first wavelength channel portion of the first wavelength channel from the second optical signal somewhere other than the output port due at least in part to spacing of the first and second input ports, the first area including deflection elements from a first portion of the common wavelength channel region of the first wavelength channel and from a first portion of the common wavelength channel region of a second wavelength channel; modifying deflection elements in a second area of the optical deflector array configured to deflect a second wavelength channel portion of the second wavelength channel from the second optical signal to the output port in accordance with a single phase shift profile, the second area including deflection elements from a second portion of the common wavelength channel region of the second wavelength channel and from a second portion of the common wavelength channel region of a third wavelength channel; wherein the first, second and third wavelength channels are distinct from one another.
14. An apparatus comprising: at least one output port; an optical deflector array comprising a plurality of deflection elements configured to receive incident thereupon at least one spatially separated optical signal comprising at least one wavelength channel, each of the at least one wavelength channel being incident on a respective common wavelength channel region of the optical deflector array; and a controller operatively coupled to the optical deflector array and configured to control the optical deflector array in order to: modify deflection elements in a first area of the optical deflector array in accordance with a single phase shift profile to deflect a first wavelength channel portion of the first wavelength channel to a first output port, the first area including deflection elements from a first portion of the common wavelength channel region of the first wavelength channel and from a first portion of the common wavelength channel region of a second wavelength channel, wherein the first and second wavelength channels are distinct from one another; modify deflection elements in a second area of the optical deflector array in accordance with a single phase shift profile to deflect a second wavelength channel portion of the second wavelength channel to a second output port, the second area including deflection elements from a second portion of the common wavelength channel region of the second wavelength channel and from a second portion of the common wavelength channel region of the first wavelength channel adjacent the second portion of the common wavelength channel region of the second wavelength channel, wherein the deflection elements in the first area and the deflection elements in the second area are non-overlapping.
15. The apparatus of claim 14, wherein: for a multiplexing apparatus the first output port and the second output port are the same output port; and for a demultiplexing apparatus the first output port and the second output port are different output ports.
16. The apparatus of claim 14, further comprising: an input port to receive the optical signal; and optics located between the input port and the optical deflector array and configured to: spatially separate two adjacent wavelength channels of the optical signal; and direct the two spatially separated adjacent wavelength channels onto the optical deflector array so that each wavelength channel is incident on its respective common wavelength channel region of the optical deflector array.
17. The apparatus of claim 14, wherein the deflection elements are arranged in a two dimensional lattice and the controller is configured to control the optical deflector array by controlling phase shift profiles of the deflection elements in the first and second areas of the optical deflector array.
18. The apparatus of claim 17, wherein the controller is configured to control phase shift profiles of deflection elements in the first and second areas of the optical deflector array so that: deflection elements in the first area of the optical deflector array have a first phase shift profile; and deflection elements in the second area of the optical deflector array have a second phase shift profile.
19. The apparatus of claim 18, wherein: the two dimensional lattice of deflection elements extends in a first direction along a wavelength dispersion axis and in a second direction along a second axis perpendicular to the wavelength dispersion axis; and the phase shift profiles are along the direction of the second axis.
20. The apparatus of claim 14, wherein the optical deflector array is a liquid crystal on silicon (LCoS) pixel array.
21. A wavelength selective switch (WSS) comprising the apparatus of claim 14.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1) Embodiments will now be described with reference to the attached drawings in which:
(2)
(3)
(4)
(5)
(6)
(7)
(8)
(9)
(10)
(11)
(12)
(13)
(14)
(15)
(16)
(17)
(18)
(19)
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF EMBODIMENTS
(20) Wavelength selective switches (WSSs) are used in DWDM systems. Embodiments of the present disclosure can be incorporated in a WSS.
(21) A DWDM optical network supports a plurality of wavelength-multiplexed optical channels with central wavelengths .sub.i, i=1, . . . , N, wherein N is an integer value. These optical channels are typically spaced uniformly in frequency and lie on a predefined grid, for example corresponding to 50 GHz, 100 GHz or 200 GHz frequency spacing. In this context, wavelength channels will be referred to according to the channel central wavelengths Ai. It is also noted that the number N of wavelength channels in the network may be implementation specific, with typical examples being in the range of 40 to 96 channels. However, it will be appreciated that a uniform frequency spacing of wavelengths channels is not a requirement for the present disclosure. For example, embodiments are contemplated that support flex-grid compatibility, where at least one of channel bandwidths and spacings may be one or both of non-uniform and adaptable.
(22)
(23) The optical communication links between the access ROADM nodes 102A, 102B, 102C, 102D, 102E, 102F and 102G may be optical fiber communication links, for example.
(24) A person of ordinary skill will understand that an optical network may also include amplification nodes between access ROADM nodes, but such amplification nodes are not shown in
(25)
(26) The ROADM element 202A includes a WSS 204A used for dropping one or more wavelength channels of a received signal, also known as a Route WSS, a drop demultiplexer 206A, a plurality of local receivers 208A, a plurality of local transmitters 210A, an add multiplexer 212A, a WSS 214A for adding one or more wavelength channels, also known as a Select WSS, and an OPM device 216A. The ROADM elements 202B and 202C are the same as ROADM element 202A. These components are optically interconnected as shown in
(27) The OPM devices are used for optical performance monitoring at various monitoring points within the node, such as at one or both of the input port(s) and the output port(s) of the respective WSS, for example.
(28) As will be appreciated, operating a ROADM node architecture 200 such as that illustrated in
(29) It is noted that the ROADM node architecture 200 shown in
(30) It is noted that the Select WSSs shown in
(31)
(32) For illustrative purposes, in
(33) However, it should be noted that in other configurations two or more channel wavelengths may be routed to the same output port. In further configurations one or more of the channel wavelengths may be blocked or attenuated by the WSS so that they are not routed to any of the output ports.
(34) Many types of WSSs are known in the art. One common type of WSS is based on an optical deflector array, sometimes referred to as a beam steering device.
(35) Optics 405 serve to spatially separate different wavelength channels of an incoming optical signal from the input port 402 and direct the spatially separated wavelength channels onto the controllable optical deflector array 406, such that each spatially separated wavelength channel is incident on a respective common wavelength region of the optical deflector array 406. As will be seen in
(36) The optical deflector array 406 includes a plurality of deflection, or beam steering, elements 407 arranged in a two dimensional lattice in an X-Y plane of the optical deflector array 406. The X-axis of the X-Y plane may be referred to as the wavelength dispersion axis because the optics 405 and the optical deflector array 406 are arranged such that the wavelength channels of the incoming optical signal are spatially separated along the X-axis of the optical deflector array 406.
(37) The deflection elements 407 of the optical deflector array 406 are controllable to steer the incident wavelength channels in a programmable direction. After each wavelength channel has been steered by the optical deflector array 406, the optics 405 can re-multiplex the wavelength channels and direct them to an output port according to the steering imparted by the optical deflector array 406.
(38)
(39) The wavelength channels .sub.1, .sub.2, .sub.3, .sub.4, .sub.5 of the incoming optical signal from the input port 502 are spatially separated and directed onto the controllable optical deflector array 506 by optics 505 (not shown in detail), which may be similar to the optics 405 of
(40) The optical deflector array 506 can be controlled such that deflection elements 507 in each of the respective common wavelength channel regions 508.sub.1, 508.sub.2, 508.sub.3, 508.sub.4, 508.sub.5 are configured to steer the incident light in a programmable direction. In particular, the optical deflector array 506 is configured such that each of the wavelength channels .sub.1, .sub.2, .sub.3, .sub.4, and .sub.5 of the input signal is steered toward a respective one of the output ports 504.sub.1, 504.sub.2, 504.sub.3, 504.sub.4 and 504.sub.5.
(41) There are several different types of optical deflector arrays known in the art. Some examples of optical deflector arrays include, but are not limited to, Micro-Electro-Mechanical System (MEMS) mirror arrays and liquid crystal on silicon (LCoS) pixel arrays.
(42)
(43) The illustrated LCoS pixel array device 600 includes a two dimensional lattice of pixels 607 arranged in rows and columns in an X-Y plane. Each pixel can be individually drivable to provide a local phase change to an optical signal incident thereupon, thereby providing a two-dimensional array of phase manipulating regions. Manipulation of individual wavelength channels is possible once the wavelength channels of an optical signal have been spatially separated and each spatially separated wavelength channel has been directed onto a respective common wavelength channel region of the LCoS pixel array device 600. Each common wavelength channel region can be independently manipulated by driving the corresponding pixels within the region in a predetermined manner. The portion of the LCoS pixel array device 600 shown in
(44) Each wavelength channel .sub.1, .sub.2, .sub.3 can be steered at a respective steering angle 610.sub.1, 610.sub.2, 610.sub.3 from the respective common wavelength channel region 608.sub.1, 608.sub.2, 608.sub.3 upon which it is incident. In the illustrated example, the respective steering angles are measured relative to the Z-axis which is normal to the X-Y plane. The steering angle of each common wavelength channel region can be controlled by controlling a phase shift profile of the pixels across the respective region along the direction of the Y-axis. For example,
(45) Accordingly, by controlling the pixels in the third common wavelength channel region 608.sub.3 to adjust the periodic, stepped phase shift profile 612, the wavelength channel .sub.3 can be selectively steered toward a desired switching output port. Wavelength channels .sub.1, .sub.2 can be similarly steered by controlling the phase shift profiles of the pixels in the respective common wavelength channel regions 608.sub.1, 608.sub.2 upon which they are respectively incident.
(46) As noted above, controlling a conventional WSS device to selectively route wavelength channels includes configuring wavelength paths through the WSS device from an input port of the WSS to a switching output port of the WSS for those channel wavelengths that are to be routed. However, such conventional WSS devices only permit a wavelength channel to be routed to a single output port at any given time. For example, in the conventional optical deflector based 15 WSS device 500 of
(47)
(48)
(49) In
(50) The wider passband of each wavelength channel when used in a Route WSS may result in increased crosstalk with an adjacent channel. However, in some implementations this is not a problem as increased crosstalk for a given channel can eventually be blocked when the channel is processed by a Select WSS that does not utilize a wider passband for the channel, but only modifies the deflection elements within a common wavelength channel region of the channel. An example of this is described below with reference to
(51) Also included in
(52) While the common wavelength regions are shown in
(53) Furthermore, it is to be understood that while a 50 GHz channel is described in example herein, the channel size is also implementation specific.
(54)
(55) Similar to the LCoS optical deflector array 600 shown in
(56) For example, the deflection elements in the first portion 708.sub.3A of the third common wavelength region and the deflection array elements in the second portion 708.sub.3B of the third common wavelength region are respectively configured so that a first portion of the third wavelength channel .sub.3 that is incident on the third common wavelength channel region 708.sub.3 is steered at a first steering angle 710.sub.3, and a second portion of the third wavelength channel .sub.3 that is incident on the third common wavelength region 708.sub.3 is steered at a second steering angle 716.sub.3.
(57) The respective steering angles 710.sub.3 and 716.sub.3 of the first and second portions 708.sub.3A and 708.sub.3B of the third common wavelength channel region 708.sub.3 are controllable by controlling phase shift profiles of the deflection array elements across the respective portions of the common wavelength region along the direction of the Y-axis. For example, a first phase shift profile 712 may be produced across the rows 702 of deflection array elements in the first portion 708.sub.3A of common wavelength channel region 708.sub.3 to steer the first wavelength portion of the third wavelength channel .sub.3 at the intended first steering angle 710.sub.3. A second phase shift profile 713 that may be produced across the rows 704 of deflection array elements in the second portion 708.sub.3B of common wavelength channel region 708.sub.3 to steer the second wavelength portion of the third wavelength channel .sub.3 at the intended second steering angle 716.sub.3.
(58) The first and second phase shift profiles 712 and 713 produce first and second cumulative phase profiles 714 and 715 that provide first and second linear optical phase retardations in the direction of the intended first and second deflections, thereby steering the first and second portions of the third wavelength channel .sub.3 at the intended steering angles 710.sub.3 and 716.sub.3, respectively.
(59) Accordingly, by controlling the deflection elements in the first and second portions 708.sub.3A and 708.sub.3B of the third common wavelength channel region 708.sub.3 to adjust the first and second phase shift profiles 712 and 713, the first and second wavelength portions of the wavelength channel .sub.3 can be independently steered, with the first wavelength portion being steered for wavelength selective switching purposes and the second portion not being used, or possibly being steered for monitoring purposes. For an adjacent wavelength channel, second and first wavelength portions of the wavelength channel can be similarly steered as the first and second wavelength portions by controlling the phase shift profiles of deflection elements in the respective second and first portions of the common wavelength region.
(60) In some embodiments, each of the common wavelength channel regions 708.sub.1, 708.sub.2, 708.sub.3 may be controlled independently, allowing the first portions of the respective wavelength channels .sub.1, .sub.2, .sub.3 incident thereupon to be independently steered for switching purposes.
(61) For illustrative purposes, the phase shift profiles 712 and 713 appear as a series of periodic linear phase progressions across their respective portions 708.sub.3A and 708.sub.3B of the common wavelength region 708. However, in reality the phase shift profiles 712 and 713 have a periodic, stepped profile.
(62) In the example embodiment shown in
(63) Furthermore, in some embodiments, the relative sizes of the first and second portions of a common wavelength region are adjustable. For example, the relative sizes of the first and second portions of a common wavelength region upon which a wavelength channel is incident may be configured such that the areas of the deflection array that are modified to steer the first or second wavelength portions in a common wavelength channel region do not overlap with a second or first wavelength portion in an adjacent common wavelength region.
(64) The optical deflector array can be configured so that a substantially equal amount of the signal power of adjacent wavelength channels is incident on deflection elements that occupy a first portion of a first common wavelength channel region upon which a first wavelength channel is incident and deflection elements that occupy a second portion of a second common wavelength channel region upon which a second wavelength channel, which is adjacent the first wavelength channel, is incident. However, it is to be understood that while up to half of deflection elements of deflector array of a common wavelength channel region may be available to be modified when the optical power is spread substantially equally over the common wavelength channel region, it is possible that less than half of the deflection elements of a common wavelength channel region may be modified to deflect a portion of the beam incident on that portion of the common channel region.
(65) The optical deflector array 700 may be an LCoS pixel array device, for example. More generally, embodiments of the present disclosure may employ any type of diffractive optical element that can be controlled to a) selectively steer first and second wavelength portions of each of one or more wavelength channels incident thereupon for switching purposes.
(66) In the embodiment illustrated in
(67)
(68) The wavelength channels .sub.1, .sub.2, .sub.3, .sub.4, .sub.5 of the incoming optical signal from the input port 802 are spatially separated and directed onto the controllable optical deflector array 806 by optics 805 (not shown in detail), which may be similar to the optics 405 of
(69) A first area 808.sub.1C includes deflection elements of the first wavelength portion 808.sub.1A of common wavelength channel region 808.sub.1 and deflection elements of the first wavelength portion 808.sub.2A of common wavelength channel region 808.sub.2. A second area 808.sub.2C includes deflection elements of the second wavelength portion 808.sub.2B of common wavelength channel region 808.sub.2 and deflection elements of the second wavelength portion 808.sub.1B of common wavelength channel region 808.sub.1 and deflection elements of the third wavelength portion 808.sub.3B of common wavelength channel region 808.sub.3. A third area 808.sub.3C, a fourth area 808.sub.4C and a fifth area 808.sub.5C are similar to the first area 808.sub.1C and the second area 808.sub.2C.
(70) The first, third and fifth areas 808.sub.1C, 808.sub.3C, 808.sub.5C are configurable to steer a first wavelength portion of the wavelength channel that is incident on the common wavelength channel region of each channel so that the first wavelength portion of the wavelength channel can be selectively routed to one of the switching output ports 804.sub.1, 804.sub.3, 804.sub.5. The second area 808.sub.1B, 808.sub.3B, 808.sub.5B of the common wavelength regions 808.sub.1, 808.sub.3, 808.sub.5 is configurable to steer the wavelength channel that is incident on the common wavelength region so that the second area of the wavelength channel can be selectively routed to monitoring output port 809 or in a direction that it does not interfere with channels that are being routed to a particular port. The second and fourth areas 808.sub.2C, 808.sub.4C, are configurable to steer a second wavelength channel portion of the wavelength channel that is incident on the common wavelength regions so that the second wavelength portion of the wavelength channels can be selectively routed to one of the switching output ports 804.sub.2, 804.sub.4. The first area 808.sub.2A, 808.sub.4A of each common wavelength region 808.sub.2, 808.sub.4 is configurable to steer the wavelength channel that is incident on the common wavelength region so that the second area of the wavelength channel can be selectively routed to monitoring output port 809 or in a direction that it does not interfere with channels that are being routed to a particular port.
(71) For example, in the configuration illustrated in
(72)
(73) The 15 WSS 901 includes optics 905, an optical deflector array 903 and a controller 914. Optics 905 are located between the optical switching input port 902 and the optical deflector array 903 and between the optical deflector array 903 and the optical switching output ports 904.sub.1, 904.sub.2, 904.sub.3, 904.sub.4, 904.sub.5 and the optical monitoring output port 909. Optics 905 are configured to spatially separate wavelength channels of an optical signal received via the optical switching input port 902 and direct spatially separated wavelength channels 920 onto the optical deflector array 903. The optics 905 and the optical deflector array 903 may be implemented with components/technologies such as those described above. The optics 905 may include components similar to those of optics 405 shown in
(74) The controller 914 may be implemented using any suitable electronic component/design, including analog components, digital components, or both.
(75) The controller 914 is operatively coupled to the optical deflector array 903 at 910 and is configured to control the optical deflector array responsive to control signalling received via control input 924 so that the optical deflector array 903 steers the first and second portions of the wavelength channels as described above. The steered first and second portions of the wavelength channels are shown collectively as 922. Optics 905 multiplex the steered first and second wavelength channel portions of adjacent wavelength channels and direct them to an optical switching output port 904.sub.1, 904.sub.2, 904.sub.3, 904.sub.4, 904.sub.5 according to the steering imparted to the first and second wavelength channel portions of the wavelength channels by the optical deflector array 903. Optics 905 ensure that the second and first wavelength portions of the wavelength channels do not interfere with the first and second wavelength portions of the wavelength channels, or possibly multiplex the steered second and first wavelength portions of the wavelength channels and direct them to the optical monitoring output port 909 according to the steering imparted to the second and first wavelength channel portions of the wavelength channels by the optical deflector array 903.
(76) If included in apparatus 900, the PD 912 receives an optical signal that includes the second and first wavelength channel portions of the wavelength channels that are steered toward the optical monitoring output port 909 and converts the optical signal to an electrical signal. The PD 912 may be used to detect powers of single wavelength channels, or some wavelength channel combinations, for example. The electrical signal output of the PD 912 may serve as an input to subsequent signal processing components/circuits (not shown in
(77)
(78) Operations 1100 begin with the apparatus receiving an optical signal at an input port (block 1102).
(79) Wavelength channels of the optical signal are spatially separated (block 1104). The spatial separation of the wavelength channels may be accomplished using a diffractive grating or any other type of dispersive optical element that is capable of spatially separating the wavelength channels of the optical signal.
(80) The spatially separated wavelength channels are directed onto an optical deflector array (block 1106). The optical deflector array is a two dimensional lattice of deflection elements. The two dimensional lattice of deflection elements extends in a first direction along a wavelength dispersion axis and in a second direction along a second axis perpendicular to the wavelength dispersion axis. The direction of the spatially separated wavelength channels may involve at least one of reflection by one or more mirrors and focusing by one or more lenses, for example.
(81) The optical deflector array is controlled in order to modify deflection elements in a first area of the optical deflector array to deflect a first wavelength channel portion of the first wavelength channel to a first output port (1108). The first area includes deflection elements from a first portion of the common wavelength region of the first wavelength channel and from a first portion of the common wavelength region of the second wavelength channel.
(82) The optical deflector array is also controlled to modify deflection elements in a second area of the optical deflector array to deflect a second wavelength channel portion of the second wavelength channel to a second output port (1110). The second area includes deflection elements from a second portion of the common wavelength region of the second wavelength channel and from a second portion of the common wavelength region of the first wavelength channel.
(83) The example operations 1100 are illustrative of an example embodiment. Various ways to perform the illustrated operations, as well as examples of other operations that may be performed, are described herein. Further variations may be or become apparent.
(84) Referring back to
(85) As the deflector array is programmable, it is to be understood that the size of the areas of deflection elements defined above that result in a wider passband response for a given channel, could be defined by the controller to be as narrow as the common wavelength channel region for a wavelength channel, which would thereby result in normal width passband response. Similarly, in some implementations, the controller could include deflection elements from a common wavelength channel region of one adjacent channel, but not the other, as will be described in further detail below with reference to the example shown in
(86)
(87)
(88)
(89)
(90) As shown in
(91) As described above, the optical signal from Port 1 is spread over common wavelength channel regions for .sub.1, .sub.2 and .sub.4 and the optical signal from Port 4 is spread over a common wavelength channel region for .sub.3. To enable some of the channels to have a wider passband, it is possible to use the deflection elements of a first portion of the common wavelength channel regions for a first input port to steer the beams to the output port and use the deflection elements of a second portion of the common wavelength channel regions for a second input port to steer the beams to the output port, where the first and second portions do not overlap. In such an implementation, for one or more channels, an area in either the first or second portion may be comprised of deflection elements from a common wavelength channel region of multiple wavelength channels, as described above.
(92) In the example of
(93) On deflector array 1310, the area of deflection elements selected to be modified are shown by 1315a and 1315b. On deflector array 1320, the area of deflection elements selected to be modified are shown by 1325. For adjacent wavelengths, the area of the modified deflection elements ends at the edge of the common wavelength channel region or the wavelength channel boundary, to avoid crosstalk of adjacent channels. However, if there is no adjacent channel, the area of modified deflection elements can expand into the adjacent common wavelength channel region. For example, the common wavelength channel region for each of the wavelength is 16 pixels wide. With regard to Port 1, for .sub.1, as there is no adjacent channel on the left side of the deflector array, the area of modified deflection elements may extend one or more pixels in that direction to provide a wider passband for wavelength channel .sub.1. Again with regard to Port 1, for .sub.2, as there is no beam on adjacent wavelength channel .sub.3, the area of modified deflection elements may extend one or more pixels in that direction to provide a wider passband response for wavelength channel .sub.2. Again with regard to Port 1, for .sub.4, as there is no beam on adjacent wavelength channel .sub.3 and there is no adjacent channel on the right side of the deflector array, the area of modified deflection elements may extend one or more pixels in both directions to provide a wider passband response for wavelength channel .sub.4. With regard to Port 4, for .sub.3, as there is no beam on adjacent wavelength channels .sub.2 and .sub.4, the area of modified deflection elements may extend one or more pixels in both directions to provide a wider passband response for wavelength channel .sub.3.
(94)
(95) In
(96) On deflector array 1360, the area of deflection elements selected to be modified are shown by 1365a and 1365b. On deflector array 1370, the area of deflection elements selected to be modified are shown by 1375. With regard to Port 1, for .sub.1, as there is no adjacent channel on the left side of the deflector array, the area of modified deflection elements may extend one or more pixels in that direction to provide a wider passband response for wavelength channel .sub.1. Again with regard to Port 1, for .sub.2, as there is no beam on adjacent wavelength channel .sub.3, the area of modified deflection elements may extend one or more pixels in that direction to provide a wider passband for wavelength channel. The wavelength channel .sub.2 beam from Port 4 is also incident upon the same common wavelength channel region of the deflector array in a practical implementation. As described above, because the beam for .sub.2 from Port 4 is incident at a different angle upon the deflection elements of the common wavelength channel region for wavelength channel .sub.2, only the wavelength channel .sub.2 beam from Port 1 is directed to the output port and the wavelength channel .sub.2 beam from Port 4 is dropped as it is not directed to the output port. Again with regard to Port 1, for .sub.4, as there is no beam on adjacent wavelength channel .sub.3 and there is no adjacent channel on the right side of the deflector array, the area of modified deflection elements may extend one or more pixels in both directions to provide a wider passband response for that wavelength channel. With regard to Port 4, for .sub.3, as there is a beam on adjacent wavelength channel .sub.2 that needs to be filtered out, the area of modified deflection elements is not extended into the common wavelength region of .sub.2 as doing so would result in crosstalk between wavelength channel .sub.2 that would be allowed to pass through the wider passband into wavelength channel .sub.3 on port 4 and the beam on wavelength channel .sub.2 on port 1. However, as there is no beam on adjacent wavelength channel .sub.4, the area of modified deflection elements may extend one or more pixels in that direction to provide a wider passband on that side for wavelength channel .sub.3.
(97) General rules for determining whether a wider bandwidth can be tolerated for a given channel when multiple ports are included in the Select WSS are described below.
(98) Considering a wavelength channel .sub.i from Port A and a wavelength channel .sub.i+1 from Port B, if there is a signal on wavelength channel .sub.i on Port A and a signal on wavelength channel .sub.i on Port B, then the left side passband of wavelength channel .sub.i+1 from Port B must be normal and not wide.
(99) Considering a wavelength channel .sub.i from Port A and a wavelength channel .sub.i1 from Port B, if there is a signal on wavelength channel .sub.i on Port A and a signal on wavelength channel .sub.i on Port B, then the right side passband of channel .sub.i1 from Port B must be normal and not wide.
(100) Numerous modifications and variations of the present application are possible in light of the above teachings. It is therefore to be understood that within the scope of the appended claims, the application may be practiced otherwise than as specifically described herein.
(101) In addition, although described primarily in the context of methods, apparatus and equipment, other implementations are also contemplated, such as in the form of instructions stored on a non-transitory computer-readable medium, for example.