Title :
A 1580-nm band WDM transmission technology employing optical duobinary coding
Author :
Aisawa, Shigeki ; Kani, Jun-ichi ; Fukui, Masaki ; Sakamoto, Tadashi ; Jinno, Masahiko ; Norimatsu, Seiji ; Yamada, Makoto ; Ono, Hirotaka ; Oguchi, Kimio
Author_Institution :
NTT Opt. Network Syst. Lab., Kanagawa, Japan
fDate :
2/1/1999 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
This paper reports 1580-nm band wavelength division multiplexed (WDM) transmission employing optical duobinary coding over dispersion-shifted fibers. By using the 1580 nm band, the generation of four-wave mixing (FWM) over dispersion-shifted fibers (DSFs) can he suppressed. Optical duobinary coding is dispersion-tolerant because of its narrow bandwidth, and enables the use of the conventional binary intensity modulated direct detection (IM-DD) receiver. First, comparisons are made for WDM transmission performance in the 1580-nm band between conventional binary nonreturn-to-zero (NRZ) coding with and without postdispersion compensation, and optical duobinary coding by computer simulation is described. From the numerical simulations, it is found that the optical duobinary coding has superior transmission performance to the conventional binary coding without any dispersion compensation, and that the difference in the transmission performance between two coding methods is very small even if postdispersion compensation at the optical receiver is applied to the NRZ coding method. Second, transmission performance between the conventional binary NRZ and the optical duobinary signals without any dispersion compensation is compared with the straight-line experiment over 500-km dispersion-shifted fiber. The experimental results reveal that the transmission distance with optical duobinary coding is doubled in comparison with that of the conventional binary NRZ signals. Finally, 16-channel, 10-Gb/s optical duobinary WDM signals in the 1580-nm band are successfully transmitted over 640 km (80 km×8) of DSF without any dispersion compensation or management
Keywords :
compensation; encoding; intensity modulation; multimedia communication; optical fibre dispersion; optical fibre subscriber loops; optical receivers; wavelength division multiplexing; 10 Gbit/s; 1580 nm; 1580-nm band WDM transmission technology; 500 km; 640 km; IM-DD receiver; NRZ coding method; WDM transmission performance; binary intensity modulated direct detection receiver; binary nonreturn-to-zero coding; computer simulation; dispersion-shifted fiber; dispersion-shifted fibers; dispersion-tolerant; four-wave mixing; narrow bandwidth; optical duobinary coding; optical receiver; postdispersion compensation; straight-line experiment; wavelength division multiplexed; Bandwidth; Fiber nonlinear optics; Four-wave mixing; Intensity modulation; Nonlinear optics; Optical mixing; Optical modulation; Optical receivers; Optical signal processing; Wavelength division multiplexing;
Journal_Title :
Lightwave Technology, Journal of