Title :
Detection of a Single 40 Gb/s Polarization-Multiplexed QPSK Channel With a Real-Time Intradyne Receiver in the Presence of Multiple Coincident WDM Channels
Author :
Nelson, L.E. ; Woodward, S.L. ; Foo, S. ; Moyer, M. ; Beckett, D.J.S. ; O´Sullivan, M. ; Magill, P.D.
Author_Institution :
AT&T Labs.-Res., Middletown, NJ, USA
Abstract :
We have characterized the performance of a single-ended intradyne receiver when multiple wavelength-division multiplexed (WDM) channels are incident. Detection of a single 40 Gb/s dual-polarization QPSK channel is achieved within a band of up to 17 WDM channels using a receiver with real-time digital signal processing and without optical demultiplexing. Measurements are presented of the performance in a back-to-back configuration as well as after transmission over 400 km of standard single-mode fiber. The dependence of the coincident channels´ interference on various parameters, such as the net chromatic dispersion and the orientation of the coincident channels´ polarization tributaries relative to the receiver polarizer, is explored. We also investigate using a single interfering channel with its power appropriately scaled to represent multiple interfering channels as an alternative configuration for evaluating receiver performance. The single-interferer approach has significant disadvantages including increased polarization sensitivity and different scaling of the interference term arising from the channel-channel beating compared to true multi-channel interference.
Keywords :
light transmission; optical fibre dispersion; optical fibre polarisation; optical information processing; optical receivers; optical signal detection; quadrature phase shift keying; wavelength division multiplexing; WDM channels; bit rate 40 Gbit/s; chromatic dispersion; distance 400 km; optical polarization; optical transmission; polarization-multiplexed QPSK channel; real-time digital signal processing; real-time intradyne receiver; single interfering channel; standard single-mode fiber; wavelength-division multiplexed channels; Bit error rate; Interference; Optical filters; Optical noise; Optical receivers; Signal to noise ratio; Coherent communications; fiber optics links and subsystems; optical communications; polarization;
Journal_Title :
Lightwave Technology, Journal of
DOI :
10.1109/JLT.2010.2071853