System and method for high performance photonic down-conversion of microwave signals
10418943 ยท 2019-09-17
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
H04B2210/006
ELECTRICITY
H03D7/163
ELECTRICITY
H03D7/165
ELECTRICITY
International classification
H04B10/556
ELECTRICITY
Abstract
A method for down-converting an RF signal is described that optically phase modulates an RF signal onto an optical carrier then applies an RF local oscillator (LO) phase modulation which down-converts the RF signal to an intermediate frequency after appropriate optical signal processing and optical-to-electrical photo-detection. The LO phase modulator is constructed such that a common hot electrode is shared among more than one optical mode, where an optical mode can be separate waveguides or optical wavelengths. The relative phase of the LO frequency applied to each optical mode can be different between the different optical modes. The resulting down-converted photo-detected signals of different LO-phase can be processed to reduce noise. A single LO phase modulator can down-convert multiple RF signals carried by multiple optical wavelengths, and a harmonic generation stage with multi-phase-matching peaks can be used to linearize each RF signal.
Claims
1. An apparatus for down-converting an input radio frequency (RF) electromagnetic signal, comprising: a first signal phase modulator that imparts the RF signal at a center frequency of f.sub.RF,0 onto an optical signal at a fundamental wavelength centered at .sub.0 thus creating a phase modulated optical signal; the phase modulated optical signal being sent to a first down-converting (DC) phase modulator that applies a phase modulation at an RF local oscillator (LO) at a frequency f.sub.LO onto the phase modulated optical signal; the DC phase modulator separating the phase modulated optical signal into two modes wherein one mode is phase modulated in-phase with the LO and the other mode is phase modulated at a relative phase of with respect to the LO; the two modes being modulated by a common hot electrode; the LO modulated optical signals in the two modes then being processed and photo-detected so as to generate a first down-converted electrical signal that is in-phase (I) with the LO and a second down-converted electrical signal that is at phase with respect to the LO, where the down-converted signal is shifted in frequency to f.sub.DC=|f.sub.RF,0f.sub.LO|; whereas the I and the down-converted electrical signals are electrically processed to form a net RF output at f.sub.DC; the creation of both the I phase and the phase down-converted electrical signals allowing for additional signal processing.
2. The apparatus of claim 1, wherein = creating an out-of-phase signal ; whereas the I and down-converted electrical signals are electrically subtracted during the electrical signal processing thus reducing common mode noise and increasing signal-to-noise ratio on the net RF output.
3. The apparatus of claim 2, wherein the two modes are two spatially separated arms; the in-phase arm being located between the hot electrode driven by the LO and a first ground electrode and the out-of-phase arm being located between the common hot electrode and a second ground electrode.
4. The apparatus of claim 1, wherein =/2 creating a quadrature-phase signal Q; whereas the I and Q down-converted electrical signals are processed to reject an image band.
5. The apparatus of claim 1, wherein a nonlinear second harmonic generation (SHG) stage is located between the first signal phase modulator and the DC phase modulator, the SHG stage creating a harmonic optical signal at a harmonic optical wavelength centered at .sub.0/2; whereas the harmonic optical signal has a phase modulation depth which is double compared to a phase modulation depth of the fundamental optical signal at the fundamental wavelength .sub.0; the harmonic optical signal being modulated by the LO in a harmonic wavelength DC phase modulator; the LO-modulated harmonic optical signal is then processed and photo-detected to generate a harmonic down-converted electrical signal; the harmonic down-converted electrical signal being subtracted from the net RF output signal to form a linearized RF output thus cancelling out unwanted nonlinear distortions and thereby improving a dynamic range of the down-converted RF signal.
6. The apparatus of claim 5, wherein the harmonic wavelength DC phase modulator shares a hot electrode with the fundamental wavelength DC phase modulator.
7. The apparatus of claim 1, further comprising N additional signal phase modulators imparting N additional RF signals where each signal phase modulator modulates one of N distinct optical signals of wavelength labeled .sub.N, the additional RF signals being either of the same or different RF carrier frequencies as f.sub.RF,0; wherein the N+1 phase modulated optical signals are combined in an optical combiner prior to the LO phase modulation; the DC phase modulator thereby phase modulating the LO onto all N+1 phase modulated optical signals simultaneously; whereas a wavelength division multiplexer (WDM) located after the DC phase modulator separates the N+1 wavelengths to allow them to be separately processed and detected as N+1 net RF outputs thereby allowing for multiple RF signals to be down-converted using a single DC phase modulator.
8. The apparatus of claim 7, whereas M of the N+1 optical signals are processed in a nonlinear second harmonic generation (SHG) stage; the SHG stage doubling the optical frequency and thereby doubling an optical phase modulation depth on all MN+1 optical signals that pass through it which are within its phase-matching bandwidth; the phase-matching bandwidth being comprised of discrete peaks; the SHG stage creating M optical signals at a harmonic optical wavelength centered at .sub.0/2; the harmonic optical signal being modulated by the LO in a harmonic wavelength DC phase modulator; the harmonic optical signal subsequently processed and photo-detected to generate a harmonic down-converted electrical signal; the harmonic down-converted electrical signal being subtracted from the net RF output signals to form linearized RF outputs thus cancelling out unwanted nonlinear distortions and thereby improving dynamic ranges of the N+1 down-converted net RF output signals.
9. The apparatus of claim 1, wherein the two modes are two different wavelengths with a mean of the two wavelengths being .sub.0, whereas a wavelength-dependent phase shift (); the () is applied prior to the LO phase modulation; the wavelength-dependent phase shift acting to apply the di relative phase shift at f.sub.LO, between the two different wavelengths; the two wavelengths being optically processed and separately photo-detected to create the first and second down-converted electrical signals.
10. The apparatus of claim 9, whereas the two wavelengths are derived from a common optical frequency and the wavelength dependent phase shift () is applied by using a first wavelength division multiplexer (WDM) to split the two wavelengths into two arms; the two arms having different optical delays, then re-combining the two wavelengths in an optical combiner so that both modes propagate in the same arm while undergoing the LO phase modulation.
11. The apparatus of claim 9, wherein = thereby creating an out-of-phase signal ; whereas the I and down-converted signals are electrically subtracted during the additional signal processing thus reducing common mode noise and increasing signal-to-noise ratio on the net RF output.
12. The apparatus of claim 9, whereas =/2 thereby allowing for an image-band rejection in the net RF output signal.
13. The apparatus of claim 1, whereas the phase difference between the two modes is applied by splitting the phase modulated optical signal in the DC phase modulator into two physically separated branches, optically delaying one branch with respect to the other with a delay of =(1/f.sub.LO).Math.(/2) where is in radian units; phase-modulating both branches using common electrodes.
14. The apparatus of claim 1, whereas the phase difference between the two modes is applied by splitting the phase modulated optical signal into two branches, optically delaying one branch with respect to the other by an equivalent time of =(1/f.sub.LO).Math.{(+)/2)} where is in radian units; phase-modulating both branches using a common hot electrode.
15. The apparatus of claim 1, whereas the phase modulated optical signal is processed in a nonlinear second harmonic generation (SHG) stage, the SHG stage doubling an optical frequency and thereby doubling an optical phase modulation depth at an optical wavelength of .sub.0/2; the phase modulated optical signals at .sub.0 and at .sub.0/2 being the two modes of the DC phase modulator; whereas the I and down-converted electrical signals are combined in order to cancel out unwanted nonlinear distortions to form a linearized RF output of improved dynamic range.
16. A method for down-converting an input radio frequency (RF) electromagnetic signal, comprising: phase modulating an RF signal onto an optical carrier, splitting the optical carrier into two modes, phase modulating a RF local oscillator (LO) onto the two modes using a common hot electrode where each mode has a distinct relative phase with respect to the LO signal; processing and photo-detecting the two LO-modulated optical carriers to create two down-converted electrical signals of distinct relative phases; and electrically processing the two down-converted electrical signals of distinct phases to create a net RF output signal of higher quality than either of the two down-converted electrical signals.
17. The method of claim 16, wherein the distinct relative phase between the two modes is , and the net RF output signal is created by subtracting the two down-converted electrical signals in order to subtract out common mode noise.
18. The method of claim 16, wherein the optical carrier is split into two spatially distinct modes and a relative optical delay is applied to one of the two modes to realize the distinct relative phase between the two modes.
19. The method of claim 16, wherein the optical carrier is comprised of two distinct optical wavelengths; the two wavelengths serving as the two modes; whereas after the RF signal is phase modulated on the optical carrier but before the LO is phase-modulated on the carrier the two wavelengths experience a wavelength-dependent phase shift such that the LO is phase-modulated onto both wavelengths with a different relative LO phase.
20. A method for down-converting a plurality of input radio frequency (RF) electromagnetic signals, comprising: phase modulating an RF signal onto a plurality of optical carriers of distinct wavelengths; combining the plurality of distinct wavelengths carriers into a single input channel; splitting the single input channel into two physically distinct branches; phase modulating the two physically distinct branches with a local oscillator (LO) using a phase modulator with a common hot electrode that applies phase shifts that are out-of-phase between the two channels; separating the plurality of wavelengths in the two branches so each wavelength carrier can be separately processed and photo-detected; and subtracting the two photo-detected signals from each of the branches that are at a common wavelength carrier to subtract out a common mode noise and improve a signal-to-noise ratio.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF DRAWINGS
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
(9) 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.
(10) 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.
(11) An embodiment of the invention is shown in
(12) The complementary down-converting phase modulators are drawn in
(13) Another embodiment of the invention is shown in
(14) Another embodiment of the invention is shown in
(15) The balanced detection at each wavelength will subtract out common mode noise such as laser RIN and generate a higher signal-to-noise ratio on the photo-detected down-conversion signals. These signals can subsequently be subtracted as is known in the art to reduce unwanted distortions, such as third order mixing terms, which is also known as linearizing the system.
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(18) Ignoring for the time being the modified SHG stage (M-SHG) 206, the two wavelength signal is split in an optical splitter 159 so that similarly to
(19) The modified SHG or M-SHG stage 206 can optionally be used to help improve dynamic range via linearization. The M-SHG stage is designed so that it will phase match both .sub.1 and .sub.2 for SHG, which can for instance be realized by appropriate periodic poling as is known in the art. One such embodiment can manipulate the periodic poling scheme to have a multi-peaked phase matching curve, with phase matching peaks at .sub.1 and .sub.2. Assuming the M-SHG stage has low conversion efficiency, most of the input optical signal at .sub.1 and .sub.2 exits the device unchanged, but a small portion such as 12% of the power at each wavelength is converted to their respective harmonic wavelengths at .sub.1/2 and .sub.2/2 which carry double the phase modulation depth as the fundamental wavelengths. The harmonic wavelengths are modulated by the LO using the same hot electrode as the .sub.1 and .sub.2 signals. The LO modulated harmonic wavelengths are separated in the out-of-phase WDM to be filtered in the optical processor and detected by photo-detectors 230,232. The photo-detected down-converted harmonic signal at .sub.1/2 is subtracted from the balanced photo-detected signal derived from .sub.1 that exits the first electrical hybrid in a first linearization combiner 238. The photo-detected down-converted harmonic signal at .sub.2/2 is subtracted from the balanced photo-detected signal derived from .sub.2 that exist the second electrical hybrid in a second linearization combiner 240. A single M-SHG stage thus allowing multiple RF signals carried on multiple optical wavelengths to be linearized using a single hot electrode of the photonic integrated circuit. The invention can be extended to down-convert more RF input signals as would be apparent to one skilled in the art. It is possible to use harmonic generation to linearize M of the N RF input signals, where MN.
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(21) The phase modulated input signal is split in two in an optical splitter 259. One output of the splitter drives the SHG stage 170. Fiber optical cable external to the -and-/2 I/Q PIC 260 is denoted in dashed lines. The output of the SHG stage at a wavelength of /2 is coupled into fiber to be fed back into a /2 complementary I/Q optical phase splitter 262, which splits the input into four output paths, with each path delayed by an additional /2 phase at the LO frequency, where the delay is .sub.delay=i.Math.(/2)/(2.Math..Math.f.sub.LO) and i is {0,1,2,3}. It is possible to integrate the SHG stage into the PIC so that fiber-feedback is not required thus reducing coupling loss, but the feed-back design allows the SHG stage to be made longer and thus more efficient in terms of how much power at wavelength is required to generate a given power at wavelength /2.
(22) All four paths from the /2 optical phase splitter 262 pass between a hot electrode 264 driven by the LO and a first ground electrode 266, and experience nearly identical phase shifts from the LO. However, due to the /2 optical phase splitter the input signal in each path has been delayed by a different time (phase) with respect to the LO frequency such that the four modulated outputs are the I, Q, and complementary I and complementary Q signals.
(23) The other output of the optical splitter drives a optical phase splitter 270 that performs the same function as the /2 optical phase splitter but at the wavelength of . The hot electrode causes a phase shift on all four outputs due to the electric field between it and the second ground electrode 268. The phase applied in this direction is out of phase with the /2 signals, but since both complementary I and Q signals (4 different signals that after processing will be /2 out of phase with each other) are generated this additional phase shift simply changes the output port that each of the I and Q, and complimentary I and Q outputs are sent to and has no substantial impact on the function of the device.
(24) The design of
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