• DocumentCode
    1410269
  • Title

    Integrated tunable fiber gratings for dispersion management in high-bit rate systems

  • Author

    Eggleton, B.J. ; Ahuja, A. ; Westbrook, P.S. ; Rogers, J.A. ; Kuo, P. ; Nielsen, T.N. ; Mikkelsen, B.

  • Author_Institution
    Lucent Technol. Bell Labs., Murray Hill, NJ, USA
  • Volume
    18
  • Issue
    10
  • fYear
    2000
  • Firstpage
    1418
  • Lastpage
    1432
  • Abstract
    Dispersion management is becoming paramount in high-speed wavelength-division-multiplexed lightwave systems, that operate at per-channel rates of 40 Gb/s and higher. The dispersion tolerances, in these systems, are small enough that sources of dispersion variation, that are negligible in slower systems, become critically important to network performance. At these high-bit rates, active dispersion compensation modules may be required to respond dynamically to changes occurring in the network, such as variations in the per-channel power, reconfigurations of the channel´s path that are caused by add-drop operations, and environmental changes, such as changes in ambient temperature. We present a comprehensive discussion of an emerging tunable dispersion compensating device, based on thermally actuated fiber gratings. These per-channel devices rely on a distributed on-fiber thin film heater, deposited onto the outer surface of a fiber Bragg grating. Current flowing through the thin film generates resistive heating at rates that are governed by the thickness profile of the metal film. A chirp in the grating is obtained by using a thin-film, whose thickness varies with position along the length of the grating in a prescribed manner; the chirp rate is adjusted by varying the applied current. The paper reviews some of the basic characteristics of these devices and their implementation, in a range of different applications, including the mitigation of power penalties associated with optical power variations. We present detailed analysis of the impact of group-delay ripple and polarization-mode dispersion on systems performance, and present results from systems experiments, that demonstrate the performance of these devices at bit rates of 10, 20, 40 and 160 Gb/s. We also discuss advantages and disadvantages of this technology, and compare to other devices.
  • Keywords
    diffraction gratings; optical fibre dispersion; optical fibre networks; optical fibre polarisation; optical tuning; telecommunication channels; telecommunication network management; wavelength division multiplexing; 10 Gbit/s; 160 Gbit/s; 20 Gbit/s; 40 Gbit/s; add-drop operations; ambient temperature; chirp rate; dispersion compensation modules; dispersion variation; distributed on-fiber thin film heater; fiber Bragg grating; fibre dispersion management; fibre network performance; group-delay ripple; high-bit rate systems; high-speed wavelength-division-multiplexed lightwave systems; integrated tunable fiber gratings; outer surface; per-channel devices; per-channel power; per-channel rates; polarization-mode dispersion; power penalties; resistive heating; thermally actuated fiber gratings; tunable dispersion compensating device; Chirp; Fiber gratings; Heating; Optical fiber devices; Optical fiber polarization; Optical surface waves; Sputtering; Temperature; Thin film devices; Transistors;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Journal_Title
    Lightwave Technology, Journal of
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • ISSN
    0733-8724
  • Type

    jour

  • DOI
    10.1109/50.887194
  • Filename
    887194