System and methods for fiber and wireless integration
09621270 ยท 2017-04-11
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
H04B10/63
ELECTRICITY
H04L5/04
ELECTRICITY
H04L27/365
ELECTRICITY
International classification
H04B10/63
ELECTRICITY
H04B10/2575
ELECTRICITY
Abstract
Embodiments of the present invention pertain to optical wireless architecture and, in particular, to novel optical architecture to provide fiber-optic and wireless communication systems, links, and access networks. Certain embodiments of the invention pertain to a novel method and apparatus to provide 109.6 Gb/s capacity over spans of 80-km SMF and 22 MIMO. Conversion of PM-QAM modulated wireless mm-wave signal to an optical signal as well as 80-km fiber transmission of the converted optical signal is also realized.
Claims
1. A fiber-wireless transmitting system comprising: a transmitter central office (CO), wherein a first lightwave is (i) modulated by transmitter data, and (ii) polarization multiplexed, to generate a PM-QAM modulated optical baseband signal; and a transmitter base station (BS) operatively coupled to the transmitter CO by an optical fiber, wherein, after obtaining the PM-QAM modulated optical baseband signal from the transmitter central office via the optical fiber, the PM-QAM modulated optical baseband signal is (i) heterodyned with a second lightwave, and (ii) up-converted to a PM-QAM modulated wireless signal; wherein the PM-QAM modulated wireless signal is at a mm-wave frequency of approximately f.sub.RF=c|1/.sub.11/.sub.2|, wherein c is the velocity of light, .sub.1 is the wavelength of the first lightwave, and .sub.2 is the wavelength of the second lightwave.
2. The system of claim 1, further comprising a MIMO wireless transmitter having a plurality of horn antennas to transmit the PM-QAM modulated wireless signal.
3. The system of claim 2, further comprising: a receiver having a plurality of horn antennas that receives the PM-QAM modulated wireless signal; a receiver base station, wherein the PM-QAM modulated wireless signal modulates a third lightwave to generate an E-field modulated signal at an optical carrier suppression point, and wherein a sideband of the E-field modulated signal and an optical carrier are filtered out by a tunable optical filter resulting in an equivalent PM-QAM modulated optical baseband signal; and a receiver central office operatively coupled to the receiver BS by a second optical fiber, wherein, after obtaining the equivalent PM-QAM modulated baseband signal from the receiver BS via the second optical fiber, transmitter data is recovered from the equivalent PM-QAM modulated optical baseband signal by homodyne coherent detection and baseband digital signal processing.
4. The system of claim 3, further comprising an electrical mixer to down-convert the received PM-QAM modulated wireless signal.
5. A fiber-wireless method comprising: polarization multiplexing a modulated first lightwave to generate a PM-QAM modulated optical baseband signal; transmitting the PM-QAM modulated optical baseband signal via an optical fiber; and obtaining the PM-QAM modulated optical baseband signal from the optical fiber, and heterodyne beating with a second lightwave and up-converting the PM-QAM modulated optical baseband signal to form a PM-QAM modulated wireless signal; wherein the PM-QAM modulated wireless signal is at a mm-wave frequency of approximately f.sub.RF=c|1/.sub.11/.sub.2|, wherein c is the velocity of light, .sub.1 is the wavelength of the first lightwave, and .sub.2 is the wavelength of the second lightwave.
6. The method of claim 5, further comprising transmitting the PM-QAM modulated wireless signal via a MIMO wireless transmitter having a plurality of horn antennas.
7. The method of claim 6, further comprising: receiving the PM-QAM modulated wireless signal; modulating a lightwave by the PM-QAM modulated wireless signal to generate an E-field modulated signal at an optical carrier suppression point; filtering out a sideband of the E-field modulated signal and an optical carrier resulting in an equivalent PM-QAM modulated optical baseband signal; transmitting the equivalent PM-QAM modulated optical baseband signal via a second optical fiber; and recovering transmitter data from the equivalent PM-QAM modulated optical baseband signal obtained from the second optical fiber, by homodyne coherent detection and baseband digital signal processing.
8. The method of claim 7, further comprising down-converting the received PM-QAM modulated wireless signal.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
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DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
(6)
(7) If the modulator's bandwidth is large enough, we do not need to use down-conversion. The following architecture is can be used as shown in
(8)
(9) At the transmitter CO, the CW lightwave from ECL1 at 1549.38 nm is modulated by a 1027.4-Gbaud electrical binary signal using an I/Q modulator. The electrical binary signal has a PRBS length of 2.sup.151 and is generated from a PPG. Then, the generated optical QAM signal passes through an EDFA and polarization multiplexed by a polarization multiplexer. The generated PM-QAM modulated optical baseband signal is launched into 80-km SMF-28, which has 18-dB average fiber loss and 17-ps/km/nm CD at 1550 nm without optical dispersion compensation at a launched power of 6 dBm into fiber.
(10) At the transmitter BS, ECL2 at 1550.14 nm functioned as LO has 95-GHz frequency offset relative to ECL1. Two polarization beam splitters (PBSs) and two OCs are used to implement polarization diversity of the received optical signal and LO in optical domain before heterodyne beating.
(11) The generated PM-QAM modulated wireless mm-wave signal is delivered over 2-m 22 MIMO wireless link at W-band. Each pair of transmitter and receiver HAs has a 2-m wireless distance, the X- and Y-polarization wireless links are parallel and two transmitter (receiver) HAs have a 10-cm wireless distance. Each HA has 25-dBi gain. A 12-GHz sinusoidal RF signal firstly passes through an active frequency doubler (2) and an EA in serial, and is then halved into two branches by a power divider. Next, each branch passes through a passive frequency tripler (3) and an EA. As a result of this cascaded frequency doubling, an equivalent 72-GHz RF signal is provided for the corresponding balanced mixer. Therefore, the X- and Y-polarization components centered on 23 GHz (IF2=23 GHz) are obtained after first-stage down conversion. Then two cascaded electrical amplifiers with 3 dB bandwidth of 40 GHz after the mixers are employed to boost the electrical signals before they are used to drive an IM.
(12) At the receiver BS, the CW lightwave from ECL3 at 1550.07 nm is first split by a polarization-maintaining OC into two branches. Each branch is modulated by the X- or Y-polarization component of the received wireless mm-wave signal with the aid of an intensity modulator (IM). Each IM has a 3-dB bandwidth of 36 GHz, a 2.8-V half-wave voltage and a 5-dB insertion loss. Each IM is DC-biased at the OCS point for E-field modulation. A PBC is used to recombine the two modulated branches.
(13) At the receiver CO, ECL4 functioned as LO has an operating wavelength identical to that of the optical baseband signal. A polarization-diversity 90 hybrid is used to realize polarization- and phase-diversity coherent detection of the LO and the received optical signal before the balanced detection. The analog-to-digital conversion is realized in the real-time digital oscilloscope (OSC) with 80-GSa/s sampling rate and 30-GHz electrical bandwidth. The baseband DSP is carried out after analog-to-digital conversion. In this experiment, the BER is counted over 10106 bits (10 data sets, and each set contains 106 bits).
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CONCLUSIONS
(16) We propose and experimentally demonstrate an integrated optical wireless system at W-band, in which, up to 109.6-Gb/s PM-QAM signal has been transmitted for the first time over 80-km SMF-28, followed by transmission over 2-m 22 MIMO wireless link and finally traversing over another 80-km SMF-28 with a BER smaller than 210.sup.2, a third generation FEC limitation. The observed degradation of BER performance can be attributed to the increased wireless path loss at high frequencies. This implies that the seamlessly integrated fiber-wireless-fiber link at W-band is inherently tolerant for the MIMO service delivery and for high-speed mobile backhaul and high capacity fiber back-up systems, especially for emergency back-up communications.
REFERENCES
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