Low loss high speed optical switch
10425708 ยท 2019-09-24
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
H04B10/2507
ELECTRICITY
H04Q2011/0035
ELECTRICITY
International classification
Abstract
A method for controlling the splitting ratio of an input optical signal to one or more output ports is described. The splitting ratio of a fiber-coupled signal in the communications band is controlled using cross phase modulation from a pump signal in the 980-1090 nm band. This design allows the nonlinear fiber in which the cross phase modulation occurs to be standard single mode fiber having a zero dispersion wavelength between 1250 and 1350 nm, such as SMF-28e fiber, which helps to maintain the lowest possible loss and a low cost while still allowing for power efficient interactions with signal wavelengths in the technologically important 1520-1610 nm band. The design is compatible with low insertion loss, narrow switching windows, and low added noise. The location of the pump pulse can be controlled allowing for the location of an input pulse to be determined.
Claims
1. An apparatus for an optical switch that controls a splitting ratio of an input optical signal containing less than one photon per switching window to one or more output ports, comprising: an interferometer constructed with an optical fiber; the input optical signal being split into a first and a second paths having a relative temporal delay of , including =0, the first path comprising a combiner to combine the input optical signal having a wavelength .sub.s with an optical pump having a wavelength .sub.p, and a first length of fiber where a presence of the pump induces a cross phase modulation (XPM) phase shift on the signal; the second path containing a second length of fiber to set ; the optical signals from the first and second interferometer paths interfering to form one or more output ports, where an inject pump power controls a power splitting ratio between the input signal and each of the two output ports; .sub.s being in a wavelength range from 1500-1610 nm, .sub.p being in a wavelength range from 980-1090 nm, and the first length of fiber having a zero dispersion wavelength that is between .sub.s and .sub.p, a minimum temporal switching window being equal to a group velocity walk-off between the pump and signal wavelengths; specified design parameters allowing for low group velocity walk-off between the pump and signal thereby enabling pump power-efficient switching, and simultaneously allowing for a large optical frequency spacing between the pump and signal of >75 THz to reduce unwanted background noise photons generated from spontaneous Raman photon scattering to <10.sup.3 photons per switching window.
2. The apparatus of claim 1, wherein the first length of fiber has a single spatial mode at .sub.s and multiple spatial modes at .sub.p, and where the pump is launched into the fiber so as to primarily excite a fundamental pump spatial mode thereby mitigating an impact of higher order pump modes.
3. The apparatus of claim 1, wherein the first and second paths are physically separate, and the relative phase delay between the first and second paths is controlled by injecting a locking wavelength signal into the interferometer, the locking wavelength being different from the signal wavelength, detecting the locking wavelength signal with an optical-to-electrical detector, processing the detected locking wavelength signal to generate a feedback signal, and sending the feedback signal to a phase-shifter located in one of the interferometer paths so as to keep the interferometer splitting ratio constant when the pump is not present.
4. The apparatus of claim 3, wherein the locking wavelength signal propagates in the interferometer paths in an opposite direction as the input signal, thereby reducing a leakage from the locking wavelength signal to the output ports and decoupling cross-phase modulation (XPM) from a interferometer phase measurement.
5. The apparatus of claim 1, wherein the optical pump is modulated by directly modulating a laser that generates the optical pump signal.
6. The apparatus of claim 1, wherein the interferometer is a Sagnac loop and the interferometer paths correspond to different propagation directions around the Sagnac loop.
7. The apparatus of claim 1, where the input signal is a series of input optical pulses forming a pulse train that arrives at a repetition frequency f.sub.pulse, a single photon detector (SPD) detects a temporal location of the signal pulses to a coarse temporal resolution .sub.SPD determined by the SPD, and a pulse arrival time is determined with a fine resolution <.sub.SPD by varying the temporal location of a pump pulse using a timing control apparatus with a temporal control resolution of <0.2.Math..sub.SPD thereby allowing for determining the arrival time of the incoming pulse train with enhanced temporal resolution.
8. The apparatus of claim 1, wherein the input signal is a pulse train that arrives at a repetition frequency f.sub.pulse, and the pump is a pulse train that arrives at a repetition frequency f.sub.pump, and whereas f.sub.pulse=(m.sub.1/m.sub.2).Math.f.sub.pump where m.sub.1 and m.sub.2 are integers, a pump pulse arrival time thus scanning its location with respect to a signal pulse arrival time throughout a period of the signal pulse train thereby allowing the arrival time of the signal pulse train to be located.
9. The apparatus of claim 1, wherein the pump is a pulse train and a pump pulse width is controlled by a pump pulse generator, the pump pulse generator selecting the pump pulse width in order to control the switching window, with a wider switching window enabling an arrival time of the input signal being an input pulse train to be determined over a coarse temporal window, followed by selecting a shorter switching window scanned over the coarse temporal window enabling the arrival time of the input pulse train to be determined with higher resolution.
10. An apparatus for an optical switch that controls a splitting ratio of an input optical signal to one or more output ports, comprising: an interferometer constructed with an optical fiber; the input optical signal being split into a first and a second paths having a relative temporal delay of , including =0, the first path comprising a combiner to combine the input optical signal having a wavelength .sub.s with an optical pump having a wavelength .sub.p, and a first length of fiber where a presence of the pump induces a cross phase modulation (XPM) phase shift on the signal; the second path containing a second length of fiber to set ; the optical signals from the first and second interferometer paths interfering to form one or more output ports, where an inject pump power controls a power splitting ratio between the input signal and each of the two output ports; .sub.s being in a wavelength range from 1500-1610 nm, .sub.p being in a wavelength range from 980-1090 nm, and the first length of fiber having a zero dispersion wavelength that is between .sub.s and .sub.p, a minimum temporal switching window being equal to a group velocity walk-off between the pump and signal wavelengths; specified design parameters allowing for low group velocity walk-off between the pump and signal thereby enabling pump power-efficient switching, and simultaneously allowing for a large optical frequency spacing between the pump and signal of >75 THz to reduce unwanted background noise photons from spontaneous Raman photon scattering; wherein the pump is a pulse and a pump power of a pump pulse is controlled by a pump pulse generator, the pump power selecting the amount of XPM phase shift .sub.XPM, whereas a linear phase difference between the two paths of the interferometer is .sub.path, whereas the splitting ratio of the input signal to the a first output ports is Cos.sup.2(.sub.path+.sub.XPM) and the splitting ratio of the input signal to a second output port is Sin.sup.2(.sub.path+.sub.XPM), thereby allowing the pump power to control the splitting ratio to any desired point.
11. A method for dynamic control of a splitting ratio from an input optical signal to one or more output ports, comprising: splitting the input optical signal into two interferometer paths, imparting a phase shift on one path using cross phase modulation (XPM) from an optical pump signal, and interfering the optical signal in the two paths; using optical fiber as a nonlinear medium that generates XPM and whereas the optical fiber is designed to have a zero-dispersion wavelength in-between the pump and signal wavelengths, the signal being of a wavelength in a communications band from 1500-1610 nm and the pump signal being of a wavelength between 980-1090 nm thus having an optical frequency >75 THz away from a signal optical frequency thereby inhibiting unwanted Raman photon scattering and enabling operation with low intensity input optical signals; further comprising injecting a locking wavelength signal into the interferometer, measuring an intensity of the locking wavelength signal exiting the interferometer to measure the phase shift between the two interferometer paths, stabilizing an interferometer phase by applying a feedback phase correction to one of the interferometer paths, thus allowing the interferometer to stay locked even when the input optical signal is not present.
12. The method of claim 11, further comprising injecting the optical pump into a fundamental mode of the fiber thereby reducing a impact of the fiber having multiple spatial modes at the pump wavelength.
13. The method of claim 11, wherein the interferometer paths have an asymmetric time delay, creating a frequency-dependent splitting ratio that is controlled by the pump.
14. The method of claim 11, further comprising a means of temporally pulsing the pump to define a temporal switching window, where the temporal switching window being scanned with respect to an arrival time of the input signal being an input signal pulse train in order to temporally localize the signal.
15. The method of claim 14, further comprising setting the temporal switching window to be narrower than a input signal pulse width, thus enabling a measurement of a input signal temporal pulse shape.
16. The method of claim 14, further comprising using a first longer switching window scanned over up to an entire input optical pulse period to coarsely determine a pulse train temporal location, then using a shorter switching widow scanned over up to the coarsely determined pulse train location, a use of different switching window durations allowing for the pulse train location to be determined both quickly and with high resolution.
17. The method of claim 14, whereas the interferometer paths have an asymmetric time delay, creating a frequency-dependent splitting ratio that is controlled by the pump-induced XPM.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF DRAWINGS
(1)
(2)
(3)
(4)
(5)
(6)
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
(7) In the following description, for purposes of explanation, numerous specific details are set forth in order to provide a thorough understanding of the invention. It will be apparent, however, to one skilled in the art that the invention can be practiced without these specific details.
(8) Reference in this specification to one embodiment or an embodiment means that a particular feature, structure, or characteristic described in connection with the embodiment is included in at least one embodiment of the invention. The appearances of the phrase in one embodiment in various places in the specification are not necessarily all referring to the same embodiment, nor are separate or alternative embodiments mutually exclusive of other embodiments. Moreover, various features are described which may be exhibited by some embodiments and not by others. Similarly, various requirements are described which may be requirements for some embodiments but not to other embodiments. In general, features described in one embodiment might be suitable for use in other embodiments as would be apparent to those skilled in the art.
(9) An embodiment of the invention is shown in
(10) The signal and pump co-propagate through a nonlinear fiber [106] that induces the XPM. The nonlinear fiber is composed of a fiber that has a single spatial mode at the signal wavelength, which is in the 1500-1610 nm band. The fiber has a zero dispersion wavelength between the pump and signal wavelength, and typically between 1250-1380 nm. All the fibers that the signal passes through are of a similar fiber type with similar mode size so they can be spliced or connected together with low loss. The nonlinear fiber can have multiple spatial modes at the pump wavelength, which is in the range of 980-1100 nm. This fiber will henceforth be called standard fiber, which could be for example Corning SMF-28e or similar fiber. Such a fiber has low waveguide dispersion keeping the zero dispersion of the fiber in the desired range. The pump light that is coupled into the standard fiber is coupled so that it primarily excites the fundamental mode of the standard fiber at the pump wavelength. In so doing the standard fiber behaves almost as if as it was single moded at the pump wavelength, provided the fiber does not couple the fundamental pump spatial mode to the higher order pump spatial modes which is typically true for the short (e.g. 1 km) fiber lengths of interest. These choices of parameters allow for a power-efficient nonlinear interaction with low loss in optical fibers. A second WDM [108] removes the pump light after the nonlinear interaction.
(11) The other interferometer arm consists of a fiber polarization controller [110], a second length of fiber [112] to set the differential path length between the two arms of the interferometer to a desired temporal delay difference value of where in this case =0 which indicates a broad band switch. The frequency transfer function of the switch has a periodicity of 1/ and thus the frequency transfer function of the switch is flat (infinite frequency periodicity) when =0. For instance, if the two paths are matched to within 1 ps then the frequency transfer function has a periodicity of about 1,000 GHz and thus input optical frequencies separated by <100 GHz will have similar transfer functions. The MZI also contains a phase shifter [114] to control the splitting ratio of the switch when the pump is not present. The signal in both interferometer arms are combined in an output 50/50 coupler [116] creating two output ports. Other output couplers such as a 21 coupler that would create a single output port could also be used.
(12) A locking signal at a locking wavelength that is sufficiently different from the signal so as to be easily spectrally filtered (e.g. >0.8 nm away) is injected into a low-tap coupler [118] such as a 95/5 splitting ratio coupler that will have very little loss at the signal wavelength but higher loss at the locking wavelength. A wavelength division multiplexer (WDM) coupler could also be used which would preserve more of the locking wavelength power but would likely have more insertion loss for the signal. The locking wavelength propagates backwards through the interferometer and a portion is tapped off in a second low-tap coupler [124], then measured in an optical-to-electrical converter [126] that is fed to phase feedback electronics [128] that generates a feedback signal to send to the phase shifter to phase-lock the interferometer. The phase difference between the two arms of the interferometer at the locking wavelength can be set to any desired value over the full range of 0-360. Typically a dither is applied on either the phase shifter [114] or if the interferometer arm path-lengths are imbalanced (0) a dither can be applied to the wavelength of the locking signal so that the internal phase of the interferometer can be measured and locked. The locking signal does not have to propagate backwards through the interferometer, but doing so can reduce leakage issues from the locking signal into the output ports and helps to decouple the measurement of the inherent interferometer phase from the pump since the pump and locking wavelength do not efficiently interact in this direction.
(13) The ability to stabilize the interferometer phase at the locking signal to any value allows the performance of the switch at the signal wavelength to be controlled without placing many constraints on the wavelength difference between the signal wavelength and locking wavelength. The signal and locking wavelength both need to be suitably stable, say each having a total variation in optical frequency of f<(1/20).Math.(1/), but the exact wavelength separation of the two lasers can be chosen over a wide range. This allows more choice in the locking wavelength, which could for instance be stabilized to some known but fixed wavelength using a gas cell like Acetylene. Locking the interferometer using a locking wavelength signal is more robust than trying to use the potentially low power input signal which in some cases can have less than one photon per pulse or per switching window and in some cases may have no photons for an extended period of time.
(14) The invention could also be realized in a Sagnac loop which has a stable phase relationship between the two interferometer paths which are now realized as two propagation directions around a loop, as is known in the art. Such a design is incorporated into the invention. The benefit of the Sagnac loop is its phase stability thus negating the need for a locking method. A drawback is that to have two output ports a circulator is required which increases the insertion loss of the device. The Sagnac loop is a good design choice when only one output port is required.
(15) The switching window .sub.SW generated by a pump pulse is determined both by the pump pulse duration .sub.pump and the group velocity mismatch (GVM) between the pump and signal in the nonlinear fiber, which can be specified as a walk-off delay time of .sub.d. Roughly speaking we can estimate the gated switching window as .sub.SW(.sub.pump.sup.2+.sub.d.sup.2).sup.0.5.
(16) The interferometer has two outputs Out.sub.A [130] and Out.sub.B [132]. The presence of a pump pulse shifts the mapping of the input ports to the output ports. For example, if no pump is present then a signal sent to IN.sub.A exits OUT.sub.A and a signal sent to IN.sub.B exits OUT.sub.B, while if a pump is present that generates a XPM phase shift then the outputs are switched so that a signal entering IN.sub.A exits OUT.sub.B and a signal sent to IN.sub.B exits OUT.sub.A. The mapping from IN.sub.A and IN.sub.B to the outputs can be written as OUT.sub.A=IN.sub.A.Math.Cos.sup.2(+.sub.p)+IN.sub.B.Math.Sin.sup.2(+.sub.p) and OUT.sub.B=IN.sub.A.Math.Sin.sup.2(+.sub.p)+IN.sub.B.Math.Cos.sup.2(+.sub.p), where is the internal phase difference between the interferometer paths at the signal wavelength and .sub.p is the XPM phase shift applied by the pump pulse (when present). Typically =0 or and .sub.p=, which is the switching function where the output port that either input port is sent to depends on if the pump is or is not injected into the switch.
(17)
(18)
(19) For the purposes of an example, assume the SPD has a temporal resolution of 200 ps and requires a dead-time of 10 s. Also assume for now that we know the input signal pulse period is T.sub.rep, but do not know the arrival time of the pulse train of low-photon signal pulses. A first course measurement of the signal pulse train arrival time can be made by turning the pump off (or if the pump pulse duty cycle is low enough one can even leave it on as it will have minimal effect since the short pump pulse is unlikely to arrive at exactly the same time as the signal). The switch interferometer phase is configured so that the input signal when the pump pulse is off goes to OUT.sub.A which is detected by the output optical detector [202]. After a photon is detected its arrival time is now known to a precision of about the detector temporal resolution .sub.det or about 200 ps. This time interval over which the system knows that the incoming pulse is localized to can be called the coarse arrival time .sub.coarse, which could be reduced by averaging M such single photon detections to a value of .sub.coarse.sub.det/M. In other words, detecting many pulses can help to reduce the temporal arrival time uncertainty. The invention aims to improve the ability to measure the temporal arrival time of the pulses over simply measuring multiple pulse arrival times with the SPD.
(20) The switch phase is now configured so that the signal only hits the optical output detector when the pump is on (by adding an additional internal phase shift). The gate feedback electronics configures the pump temporal duration (thus also the switching gate .sub.sw if .sub.d<<.sub.pump, which is assumed here) so that .sub.sw<0.2.Math..sub.coarse, say in this case .sub.sw is 100 times smaller than .sub.coarse or .sub.sw=200 ps/100=2 ps. The gate feedback electronics scans the pump location in fine increments smaller or approximately the same as .sub.sw or in this case about 2 ps steps over the coarse arrival time. In so doing 100 steps are used to finely scan the pulse location with 2 ps duration (resolution) over .sub.coarse. The use of different coarse and fine temporal measurements is depicted in
(21) As an example of the utility of this method, assume that T.sub.rep=20 ns. To scan this entire duration in 2 ps steps would require 10,000 steps or when averaging over 20 pulses per step 200,000 pulses. This brute force scanning method that does not employ both a course and a fine resolution would also localize the pulse location to 2 ps. A simplified diagram of a scheme that scans the fine gate time over the entire repetition rate is shown in
(22) Another way to try to measure the incoming signal pulse location to 2 ps resolution would be to use count averaging. This would require M100.sup.2=10,000 counts. Given the 20% probability of detecting a pulse this is about 50,000 optical pulses. However, by using the course and fine capability of the invention we only need a small number of counts (say 1 or 2) to initially localize the pulse to 200 ps, then about 100 steps to find the pulse to 2 ps resolution. This is much more efficient, especially if the detector dead time is large which necessitates that a large number of counts will take a correspondingly large amount of time. In this case the time to localize the pulse can be reduced by a factor of 50,000/2,000=25 by using the invention as described.
(23) Note that by scanning the location of .sub.sw we can also measure the incoming pulse shape, even when the pulse duration is much smaller than the detector temporal resolution .sub.det. This is because the effective temporal resolution of the detection is now set by .sub.sw which can be designed to be much smaller than .sub.det. If we define a pulse to be well characterized if its temporal width is 5 or more times the measurement temporal resolution then the detector alone can measure the shape of 1 ns pulses but by using the switch with the aforementioned parameters a pulse resolution of 10 ps is possible.
(24) The use of a coarse and fine temporal detection time can be embodied in many ways, including widening the pump pulse duration to have a first longer gate width (switching window) that spans a given fraction of the repetition period to initially determine the input signal pulse position to a coarse resolution, followed by then using a shorter pump pulse and thus a shorter gate width of a duration that is a fraction of the course resolution.
(25) It is possible to use detectors with different characteristics on both output ports of the switch and use the switch to control which detector is used at any given time. We note that in many cases one will want to optimize the pump temporal position to optimally operate on the signal pulses by overlapping them in time at the nonlinear fiber. The coarse and fine temporal detection technique can be used to determine the optimal pump pulse location in an efficient way.
(26) The ability to measure pulse shape can also be implemented by using a pump pulse repetition rate that is different from the signal pulse repetition rate. This effectively scans the pump pulse location with respect to the signal pulse location. The invention would allow such a measurement for very low power signals because of the low noise interaction that is embodied by the wavelength choices previously noted. Other methods of optical sampling like the use of four-wave mixing gain will work for macroscopic signals but are too noisy for very small signals especially signals that have less than or about one photon per pulse.
(27) As an example, if the incoming pulse has a period of T.sub.period=1 ns(f.sub.signal=1 GHz), and the pump pulse has a period of (n/m).Math.T.sub.period, where n and m are integers then the relative location of the pump and signal pulses will shift in a predictable way scanning the pump location over the repetition period. Setting n=99 and m=100 would mean the pump pulse is shifted by 1% of 1 ns or 10 ps with respect to the signal pulse subsequent period, with the pattern repeating every 100 periods. Creating a count histogram of the total singles count in every relative pump-to-signal temporal location will produce a measured signal pulse shape with 10 ps resolution.
(28) The switch can be configured to operate as both a temporal and frequency domain switch by choosing 0. A transfer function of the switch outputs as a function of wavelength is shown in
(29) Foregoing described embodiments of the invention are provided as illustrations and descriptions. They are not intended to limit the invention to precise form described. In particular, it is contemplated that functional implementation of invention described herein may be implemented equivalently in other available functional components or building blocks. Other variations and embodiments are possible in light of above teachings, and it is thus intended that the scope of invention not be limited by this.