OPTICAL LINK ARCHITECTURE PROVIDING MODULATION OF OPTICAL DATA SIGNALS AFTER FILTERING
20260128797 ยท 2026-05-07
Inventors
Cpc classification
International classification
H04B10/80
ELECTRICITY
Abstract
An optical apparatus, with an optical interconnect, the optical interconnect including a first optical transceiver having a first notch filter, the first notch filter including first and second optical add drop multiplexer demultiplexers connected to receive a continuous wave light beam and send a first and second filtered wavelengths to first and second resonant modulators which send first and send modulated optical signals through a light propagation path. The second filtered wavelength is different from the first filtered wavelength, and the second modulated optical signal has a polarity that is orthogonal to a polarity of the first modulated optical signal. Methods of communicating using the apparatus and an optical filter for use in an optical transceiver are also
Claims
1. An optical apparatus, comprising: an optical interconnect, the optical interconnect including: a first optical transceiver, the first optical transceiver including: a first notch filter, the first notch filter including: a first optical add drop multiplexer demultiplexer connected to receive a continuous wave light beam and send a first filtered wavelength of the continuous wave light beam to a first modulator, and a second optical add drop multiplexer demultiplexer connected to receive the continuous wave light beam and send a second filtered wavelength of the continuous wave light beam to a second modulator, wherein the first modulator is configured to send a first modulated optical signal and the second modulator is configured to send a second modulated optical signal with a polarity that is orthogonal to a polarity of the first modulated optical signal.
2. The optical apparatus of claim 1, wherein the optical interconnect further includes: a second optical transceiver, the second optical transceiver including: a second notch filter, the second notch filter including: a third optical add drop multiplexer demultiplexer connected to receive the continuous wave light beam and send the second filtered wavelength of the continuous wave light beam to a third modulator, and a fourth optical add drop multiplexer demultiplexer connected to receive the continuous wave light beam and send the first filtered wavelength of the continuous wave light beam to a fourth modulator, wherein the third modulator is configured to send a third modulated optical signal and the fourth modulator is configured to send a fourth modulated optical signal with a polarity that is orthogonal to a polarity of the third modulated optical signal.
3. The optical apparatus of claim 2, wherein the first and the second modulators are configured to send the first and the second modulated optical signals in a first direction and the third and the fourth modulators are configured to send the third and the fourth modulated optical signal in a second direction that is different than the first direction.
4. The optical apparatus of claim 2, wherein the first optical transceiver is set as one of a receiver or a transmitter and the second optical transceiver is set as the other of the transmitter or the receiver.
5. The optical apparatus of claim 2, wherein the first, the second, the third, and the fourth modulators are each resonant modulators.
6. The optical apparatus of claim 5, wherein the first resonant modulator includes a first micro-resonant modulator to produce the first modulated optical signal at the first filtered wavelength.
7. The optical apparatus of claim 5, wherein the second resonant modulator further includes a second micro-resonant modulator to produce the second modulated optical signal at the second filtered wavelength.
8. The optical apparatus of claim 5, wherein the third resonant modulator includes a third micro-resonant modulator to produce the third modulated optical signal at the second filtered wavelength.
9. The optical apparatus of claim 5, wherein the fourth resonant modulator includes a fourth micro-resonant modulator to produce the fourth modulated optical signal at the second filtered wavelength.
10. The optical apparatus of claim 1, further including one or more photodetectors optically coupled to the first notch filter of the first optical transceiver.
11. The optical apparatus of claim 1, further including one or more polarization couplers to optically couple a polarized state of the continuous wave light beam to the first notch filter of the first optical transceiver.
12. The optical apparatus of claim 1, wherein the first and second modulated optical signals carry data signals encoded from electrical bit sequences from one or more drivers.
13. An optical filter, comprising: a first modulator configured to receive a first filtered wavelength of a continuous light beam and send a first modulated optical signal in a first direction along a light propagation path; and a second modulator configured to receive a second filtered wavelength of the continuous wave light beam and send a second modulated optical signal in the first direction, wherein the second modulated optical signal has a polarity orthogonal to a polarity of the first modulated optical signal.
14. The optical filter of claim 13, further comprising: a first optical add drop multiplexer demultiplexer connected to receive the continuous wave light beam and send the first filtered wavelength of the continuous wave light beam to the first modulator; and a second optical add drop multiplexer demultiplexer connected to receive the continuous wave light beam and send the second filtered wavelength of the continuous wave light beam to the second modulator.
15. The optical filter of claim 14, wherein the optical filter is a notch filter.
16. The optical filter of claim 14, wherein the first modulator includes a first micro-resonant modulator to produce the first modulated optical signal at the first filtered wavelength.
17. The optical filter of claim 14, wherein the second modulator includes a second micro-resonant modulator to produce the second modulated optical signal at the second filtered wavelength.
18. An optical interconnect, comprising: a first optical add drop multiplexer demultiplexer connected to receive a continuous wave light beam and send a first filtered wavelength of the continuous wave light beam to a first modulator; and a second optical add drop multiplexer demultiplexer connected to receive the continuous wave light beam and send a second filtered wavelength of the continuous wave light beam to a second modulator, wherein the first modulator is configured to send a first modulated optical signal and the second modulator is configured to send a second modulated optical signal with a polarity that is orthogonal to a polarity of the first modulated optical signal.
19. The optical interconnect of claim 18, further comprising: a third optical add drop multiplexer demultiplexer connected to receive the continuous wave light beam and send the second filtered wavelength of the continuous wave light beam to a third modulator; and a fourth optical add drop multiplexer demultiplexer connected to receive the continuous wave light beam and send the first filtered wavelength of the continuous wave light beam to a fourth modulator, wherein the third modulator is configured to send a third modulated optical signal and the fourth modulator is configured to send a fourth modulated optical signal with a polarity that is orthogonal to a polarity of the third modulated optical signal.
20. The optical interconnect of claim 19, wherein the first modulator and the second modulator are configured to send the first modulated optical signal and the second modulated optical signal in a first direction along a light propagation path and the third modulator and the fourth modulator are configured to send the third modulated optical signal and the fourth modulated optical signal in a second direction along the light propagation path that is opposite of the first direction.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION
[0007] Reference is now made to the following descriptions taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings, in which:
[0008]
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[0015]
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0016] Embodiments of the disclosure follow from designing high speed scaling optical interconnects that are simple to implement, and, avoid complex wavelength filtering designs that are both expensive and prone to introducing impairments, e.g., due to the narrow bandwidth of filter shapes or amplitude ripple in the pass band or group velocity dispersion associated with the filter itself.
[0017] As further illustrated in the example embodiments disclosed herein, this can be accomplished by performing wavelength filtering before optical modulation and by not overloading any one encoding multiplexing dimension to avoid introducing in the crosstalk associated with e.g., a larger number of channels on a wavelength dimension. Wavelength filtering before optical modulation is in contrast to, and the opposite of, standard approaches for wavelength and polarization multiplexing, where wavelength filtering of the high-speed optical signal in the multiplexer and/or demultiplexer can cause significant penalties arising from narrow bandwidths, passband ripple, or group velocity dispersion. Herein, by exchanging the order of modulating and wavelength filtering so that the filtering happens before modulation, an optical data signal does not encounter optical filtering, resulting in negligible filtering penalties. Additionally, to avoid overloading any one physical dimension of propagation direction, polarization, and wavelength, no two optical states are shared in a same dimension. E.g., only half of the eight possible encoded channel states are populated and the states are selected to ensure that no two channels overlap in two of the three dimensions for carrying optical data signals.
[0018] One aspect of the disclosure is an optical apparatus.
[0019]
[0020] With continuing reference to
[0021] For instance, as illustrated in
[0022] That is, the apparatuses of the disclosure multiplex by a factor of 2 in each of the wavelength, space and polarization domains. However, rather than using that 8X multiplexing to scale the bandwidth per fiber by 8 times the channel rate, only half of the channel states are populated, and the populated states are selected uniquely. The specific selection of the states, firstly, guarantees that no two channels overlap in two of the three dimensions at any time, which can significantly reduce device crosstalk requirements, potentially allowing a designer to shift toward lower loss or lower complexity designs.
[0023] Additionally, the state selection in accordance with our disclosure facilitates each propagation path (optical fiber) being indistinguishable from every other propagation path in a simplex cable configuration. E.g., there may be no fixed or set transmitter (TX) and receiver (RX) ports, and in such cases, optical fibers may be provisioned in even or odd counts, including a single fiber used to connect two end points, with a same transceiver and a same optical source at each end of the fiber. Such a configuration can be facilitated by making the polarization domain institute an orthogonal rotation of the wavelength assignment between the forward and backward propagating directions. Since polarization rotation in the fiber can be arbitrary the end point of the fiber can be assigned the correct polarity (e.g., TX or RX) simply by rotating the polarization of the received or transmitted signal.
[0024] Consequently, the optical link architecture embodied in the optical apparatuses as disclosed herein, relocates the optical wavelength-filtering (e.g., multiplexing and demultiplexing) out of the traditional location (e.g., between the modulator and detector) where it can cause penalties due to high-frequency attenuation, amplitude ripple, or group delay. Moreover, for the optical apparatuses disclosed herein, optical wavelength filters can be implemented as add/express filters, where a narrowband add function is performed on a continuous-wave (e.g., unmodulated) signal, and the express (e.g., broadband) function provides a wide and non-interfering passband for the counter-propagating modulated signal.
[0025] As further illustrated in
[0026] The second notch filter 130 can also include a fourth optical add drop multiplexer/demultiplexer (e.g., OADM4) connected to receive the CW light beam and send the first filtered wavelength (e.g., 1) of the CW light beam to a fourth resonant modulator 144. The fourth resonant modulator can be connected to send a fourth modulated optical signal 146 (e.g., S4) in the second direction through the opposite end 135 of the light propagation path 114, where the third modulated optical signal 136 has a polarity that is orthogonal to a polarity of the fourth modulated optical signal 146.
[0027] For instance, as illustrated in
[0028] With continuing reference to
[0029] As further illustrated in
[0030] As further illustrated in
[0031] As further illustrated in
[0032] The polarization controllers 150, 160 can advantageously align the polarization of the transmitted or received signals (e.g., S1, S2 and S3, S4) with respect to the transceivers 104, 128 at the other end of the light propagation path 114. E.g., an optical fiber that provides the path 114 can perform an arbitrary polarization rotation and the polarization controllers 150, 160 can realign the local polarization to the remote axis. Because the polarization rotation caused by the light propagation path 114 is often a linear process, in some embodiments only one polarization controller (e.g., one of polarization controllers 150 or 160) may be required, but in some embodiments, polarization controllers 150, 160 can be included one at both ends 112, 135 for symmetrical realignment.
[0033] The polarization rotation in the fiber may drift over time and so a closed-loop tracking system can be placed around the polarization controller.
[0034] As also illustrated in
[0035] As illustrated in
[0036] One skilled in the pertinent art would understand that for some embodiments, the first optical transceiver 104 can be set as one of a receiver or a transmitter and the second optical transceiver 128 can be set as the other of the transmitter or the receiver.
[0037] For any of the apparatus embodiments of the disclosure, and, as illustrated in
[0038] For any of the apparatus embodiments of the disclosure, and, as illustrated in
[0039] As illustrated in
[0040] As further illustrated in
[0041] As illustrated in
[0042] As illustrated in
[0043] As illustrated in
[0044]
[0045] The embodiment shown in
[0046]
[0047] The architectures illustrated in
[0048] Another embodiment of the disclosure is a method of optical communication using an optical apparatus.
[0049] With continuing reference to
[0050] Some embodiments of the method can include receiving (step 845) to a second notch filter 130 of a second optical transceiver 128of the apparatus, the continuous wave light beam having the first wavelength and the second wavelength. Some embodiments include outputting (step 850), from the second notch filter, filtered ones of the first wavelength and the second wavelength. Some embodiments include receiving (step 855), to a third resonant modulator 134 of the optical interconnect, the second wavelength and generating (step 860) a third modulated optical signal 136 (e.g., S3) of the second wavelength. Some embodiments include outputting (step 865) the third modulated optical signal 134 in a second direction (e.g., D2) through an opposite end 135 of the light propagation path 114 optically coupled to the third resonant modulator, where the second direction is opposite the first direction. Some embodiments include receiving (step 870), to a fourth resonant modulator 144 of the optical interconnect, the first wavelength, and generating (step 875) a fourth modulated optical signal 146 (e.g., S4) of the first wavelength. Some embodiments include outputting (step 880) the fourth modulated optical signal 146 in the second direction through the opposite end 135 of the light propagation path 114 optically coupled to the fourth resonant modulator. The third modulated optical signal 136 has a polarity that is orthogonal to a polarity of the fourth modulated optical signal 146
[0051] In some embodiments, generating (step 820) the first modulated optical signal 110 of the first wavelength can include encoding (step 885), a first electrical bit sequence, from one or more drivers (e.g., first driver 190a), in the first wavelength. Generating (step 835) the second modulated optical signal 122 of the second wavelength can include encoding (step 887), a second electrical bit sequence from the one or more drivers (e.g., second driver 190b) in the second wavelength. Generating (step 860) the third modulated optical signal 136 of the second wavelength can include encoding (step 889), a third electrical bit sequence from the one or more drivers (e.g., third driver 190c) in the second wavelength. Generating (step 875) the fourth modulated optical signal 146 of the first wavelength can include encoding (step 890), a fourth electrical bit sequence from the one or more drivers (e.g., fourth driver 190d) in the first wavelength.
[0052] Those skilled in the art to which this application relates will appreciate that other and further additions, deletions, substitutions and modifications may be made to the described embodiments.