CIRCUIT FOR MULTI-PATH INTERFERENCE MITIGATION IN AN OPTICAL COMMUNICATION SYSTEM
20250330249 ยท 2025-10-23
Inventors
- Benjamin P. Smith (Ottawa, CA)
- Jamal Riani (Fremont, CA)
- Sudeep Bhoja (San Jose, CA)
- Arash Farhoodfar (Santa Clara, CA, US)
- Vipul Bhatt (Los Altos, CA, US)
Cpc classification
H04B10/2507
ELECTRICITY
H04B10/25073
ELECTRICITY
International classification
H04B10/2507
ELECTRICITY
Abstract
An optical receiver includes an error generator, a multipath interference estimator, and a combiner. The error generator is configured to receive an input comprising a received optical signal, to estimate a modulation level of samples of the received optical signal, and to generate an error signal based on the estimated modulation level of the samples, the error signal representing a difference between an actual level of the received optical signal and the estimated modulation level. The multipath interference estimator is configured to generate estimates of multipath interference (MPI) associated with the samples of the received optical signal based on the error signal. The combiner is configured to generate an MPI-mitigated signal based on a combination of the samples and the estimates of MPI.
Claims
1. An optical receiver, comprising: error generator circuitry configured to generate an error signal corresponding to a received optical signal, the error signal representing respective differences between (i) actual levels of samples of the received optical signal and (ii) estimated modulation levels of the received optical signal, the differences caused at least in part by multipath interference (MPI); and combiner circuitry configured to generate an MPI-mitigated signal based on (i) the samples of the received optical signal and (ii) the error signal by at least: generating weighted samples of the error signal by at least weighting samples of the error signal according to weights that vary based on the estimated modulation levels of the optical signal, and mitigating for the MPI in the received optical signal using the weighted samples of the error signal.
2. The optical receiver of claim 1, wherein the error generator circuitry comprises: a slicer configured to generate the estimated modulation levels based on the samples of the received optical signal.
3. The optical receiver of claim 1, further comprising: a filter configured to filter the error signal to generate a filtered error signal; wherein the combiner circuitry is configured to generate the MPI-mitigated signal based on the filtered error signal.
4. The optical receiver of claim 3, wherein the filter is configured to generate respective samples of the filtered error signal using respective windows of the error signal.
5. The optical receiver of claim 4, wherein a size of the windows is configured as a function of transmitter coherence.
6. The optical receiver of claim 1, further comprising a delay circuit configured to generate delayed samples of the received optical signal; wherein the combiner circuitry is configured to generate the MPI-mitigated signal based on the delayed samples of the received optical signal.
7. The optical receiver of claim 1, further comprising: interference estimation circuitry configured to generate estimates of at least one additional interference component corresponding to the received optical signal, the at least one additional interference component different than the MPI; wherein the combiner circuitry is configured to generate the MPI-mitigated signal further based on the estimates of at least one additional interference component.
8. The optical receiver of claim 7, wherein the interference estimation circuitry is configured to generate estimates of interference components due to electrical reflections corresponding to the received optical signal.
9. The optical receiver of claim 1, further comprising: an analog-to-digital converter configured to generate the samples of the received optical signal.
10. The optical receiver of claim 9, further comprising: a photodiode; and a transimpedance amplifier coupled between the photodiode and the analog-to-digital converter.
11. A method for optical communication, comprising: generating, at an optical receiver, an error signal corresponding to a received optical signal, the error signal representing respective differences between (i) actual levels of samples of the received optical signal and (ii) estimated modulation levels of the received optical signal, the differences caused at least in part by multipath interference (MPI); and generating, at an optical receiver, an MPI-mitigated signal based on (i) the samples of the received optical signal and (ii) the error signal, including: generating weighted samples of the error signal by at least weighting samples of the error signal according to weights that vary based on the estimated modulation levels of the optical signal, and mitigating for the MPI in the received optical signal using the weighted samples of the error signal.
12. The method for optical communication of claim 11, wherein generating the estimated modulation levels comprises: generating the estimated modulation levels based on the samples of the received optical signal.
13. The method for optical communication of claim 11, further comprising: filtering the error signal to generate a filtered error signal; wherein generating the MPI-mitigated signal further comprises generating the MPI-mitigated signal based on the filtered error signal.
14. The method for optical communication of claim 13, wherein filtering the error signal comprises generating respective samples of the filtered error signal using respective windows of the error signal.
15. The method for optical communication of claim 14, wherein a size of the windows is configured as a function of transmitter coherence.
16. The method for optical communication of claim 11, further comprising generating delayed samples of the received optical signal; wherein generating the MPI-mitigated signal further comprises generating the MPI-mitigated signal based on the delayed samples of the received optical signal.
17. The method for optical communication of claim 11, further comprising: generating estimates of at least one additional interference component corresponding to the received optical signal, the at least one additional interference component different than the MPI; wherein generating the MPI-mitigated signal further comprises generating the MPI-mitigated signal based on the estimates of at least one additional interference component.
18. The method for optical communication of claim 17, wherein generating estimates of at least one additional interference component corresponding to the received optical signal comprises generating estimates of interference components due to electrical reflections corresponding to the received optical signal.
19. The method for optical communication of claim 11, further comprising: using an analog-to-digital converter (ADC) to generate the samples of the received optical signal.
20. The method for optical communication of claim 19, further comprising: a photodiode; and a transimpedance amplifier coupled between the photodiode and the ADC.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0005] Embodiments of the disclosure will now be described with reference to the attached drawings in which:
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0017] As mentioned in the background section, interference due to reflections that occur in the electrical domain can be cancelled directly, by estimating the delay and amplitude of each component, because the electrical reflections typically occur over very short distances (.sup.mm), so they remain within a small number of bauds from the main signal. Traditional approaches to interference cancellation explicitly cancel the individually reflected terms (for example using a decision-feedback equalizer). This approach is challenging to apply to MPI, since the reflections may be delayed by many 1000s of bauds, and the size and location of the taps may vary as a function of time, for example due to mechanical vibrations and laser phase variation. It is very challenging to make the adaptation loops sufficiently fast, and a large amount of memory is required to store past decisions.
[0018] In addition, the impact of MPI is level-dependent for direct-detection receivers, i.e., a receiver that detects power of optical waveform. More specifically, in a multi-level modulation schemes such as pulse amplitude modulation (PAM), the effect of MPI is larger for larger PAM levels than for smaller PAM levels.
[0019] According to one aspect of the present invention, there is provided a method of processing a plurality of samples of an optical signal having a pulse amplitude modulated (PAM) E-field, the method comprising: for each sample, estimating a respective PAM level; for each sample, subtracting the sample from the respective PAM level to generate a corresponding error sample; low-pass filtering the error samples to produce estimates of multi-path interference (MPI); for each sample, combining one of the estimates of MPI with the sample to produce an interference-mitigated sample.
[0020] According to another aspect of the present invention, there is provided a circuit for processing a plurality of samples of an optical signal having a pulse amplitude modulated (PAM) E-field, the circuit comprising: a slicer that, for each sample, estimates a respective PAM level of the sample; a subtractor that, for each sample, subtracts the sample from the respective PAM level to generate a corresponding error sample; a low-pass filter that filters the error samples to produce estimates of multi-path interference (MPI); a combiner that for each sample, combines one of the estimates of MPI with the sample to produce an interference-mitigated sample.
[0021] An example of an optical communications system is depicted in
[0022] Each connector has an associated return loss. Each length of cable has an associated phase shift .sub.i which relates to link-induced phase randomization (relative to main signal, also referred to herein as the interference victim, or simply victim) of interferers.
[0023] A baud rate system model based on the system of
[0025] In addition, y[k], r[k], and the MPI interference component can be modelled according to:
[0026] For the purpose of this model, it is assumed that: [0027] the phase of the transmitted signal varies according to a random walk, where [0028] [k][kl]=[l], where [l] is a zero-mean Gaussian random variable with variance .sup.2=2vlT.sub.B, where v is the 3-dB line-width of the laser, and T.sub.B is the baud-period of the signal; [0029] d.sub.m and .sub.m, the temporal and phase delays associated with an interfering path, vary due to mechanical/thermal effects; [0030] the additive noise n[k] models other sources of noise in the channel; [0031] due to independence of data symbols, A[k], the amplitudes of the victims and interferers are jointly independent; [0032] the .sub.m models the attenuation of a reflected signal, originating from the return loss of the connectors at which the reflections occur; [0033] The [m] are of the general form .sub.i=a.sup.b2.sub.l, for a,b{1,2,3,4,5}
[0034] Referring now to
[0035] The MPI-mitigation circuit 500 has an error generator 506 that estimates a PAM level of samples received from RX1 501, and generates a corresponding error signal. The error signal is filtered in low-pass filter 508 to produce estimates of the MPI. A compensation combiner 504 combines the estimates of the MPI with the samples received from RX1 501, optionally after a delay 502 that accounts for the time it takes to process the samples in the error generator 506 and the filter 508.
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[0037] There are many options for the low-pass filter. In some embodiments, the low-pass filter is a fixed block average component that determines an average of the error samples for a block of consecutive samples. The average thus determined is used as the estimate of MPI that is combined with each sample in the block of consecutive samples. In a specific example, the estimate of MPI is determined using a fixed 32-baud window according to:
[0038] The approach requires 31 additions per 32 bauds.
[0039] In some embodiments, the low-pass filter is a moving window average component that determines, for each sample, an average of the error samples for a respective block of error samples defined by a moving window, wherein the average is used as the estimate of MPI that is combined with the sample. In some embodiments, there is a unique window used for each sample. In other embodiments, the same window is used for a set of consecutive samples that is smaller than the size of the block of error samples. In a specific example, the estimate of MPI is determined using a sliding 32-baud window, with MPI mitigation common over 8 consecutive bauds according to:
[0040] The approach requires >=40 additions per 32 bauds.
[0041] In some embodiments, a size of the block of consecutive samples (for fixed or moving window embodiments) is configured as a function of transmitter coherence.
[0042] In some embodiments, the compensation combiner 504 is a subtractor that combines the estimate of the component of multi-path interference with the sample to produce an interference-mitigated sample by subtracting the estimate from the sample to produce the interference-mitigated sample.
[0043] In some embodiments, the compensation combiner 504 is a level-dependent subtractor that produces a weighted estimate by multiplying the estimate of MPI output by the filter by a value proportional to a respective PAM level modulating the E-field estimated from the sample. This weighted estimate is then subtracted from the sample to produce the interference-mitigated sample. The PAM level modulating the E-field is to be distinguished from the output of a direct detector (for example slicer 522), in that the PAM levels after direct detection are a function of power, and so are the square of the E-field amplitude.
[0044] As noted above, RX1 block 501 represents any input signal processing that is performed prior to the feed-forward MPI-mitigation circuit 500. With reference to
[0045] As noted above, RX2 block 510 represents any input signal processing that is performed after the feed-forward MPI-mitigation circuit 500. In some embodiments, this includes a PAM decision slicer that performs PAM decision slicing for each interference-mitigated sample. There may be additional functionality in RX2 block 510.
[0046] Another interference mitigation circuit provided by an embodiment of the invention will now be described with reference to
[0047] The interference component estimator 702 estimates at least one interference component by estimating a respective delay and respective amplitude for each interference component. Typically, the interference component estimator will estimate components due to electrical reflections. Because the electrical reflections typically occur over very short distances (on the order of tens of mm or less), they remain within a small number of bauds from the main signal. The combiner 705 combines the estimate of MPI and the estimated at least one electrical interference component 702 with the sample to produce interference mitigated samples that are passed on to RX2 block 510.
[0048] With reference to
[0049] In respect of signals received at the electrical IO 804, the PAM ASIC is further configured to perform PAM modulation based on an incoming electrical signal. The optical module also has a laser plus modulator 808 that outputs an optical signal at the optical IO having a PAM modulated E-field based on the output of the PAM modulation.
[0050] Referring now to
[0051] The specific operating frequencies, in terms of baud rate of the incoming signals, and the passband of the low-pass filter, are implementation specific. In some embodiments, the systems and methods described herein are applied for optical signals having a baud rate that is greater than 25 GBaud, and the MPI mitigation circuit performs low-pass filtering to remove MPI below frequencies of 100 MHz in some embodiments, and below 10 MHz in other embodiments.
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[0053] Numerous modifications and variations of the present disclosure are possible in light of the above teachings. It is therefore to be understood that within the scope of the appended claims, the disclosure may be practiced otherwise than as specifically described herein.