Author :
Roudas, Ioannis ; Vgenis, Athanasios ; Petrou, Constantinos S. ; Toumpakaris, Dimitris ; Hurley, Jason ; Sauer, Michael ; Downie, John ; Mauro, Yihong ; Raghavan, Srikanth
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electr. & Comput. Eng., Univ. of Patras, Rio, Greece
Abstract :
Spectrally-efficient optical communications systems employ polarization division multiplexing (PDM) as a practical solution, in order to double the capacity of a fiber link. Polarization demultiplexing can be performed electronically, using polarization-diversity coherent optical receivers. The primary goal of this paper is the optimal design, using the maximum-likelihood criterion, of polarization-diversity coherent optical receivers for polarization-multiplexed optical signals, in the absence of polarization mode dispersion (PMD). It is shown that simultaneous joint estimation of the symbols, over the two received states of polarization, yields optimal performance, in the absence of phase noise and intermediate frequency offset. In contrast, the commonly used zero-forcing polarization demultiplexer, followed by individual demodulation of the polarization-multiplexed tributaries, exhibits inferior performance, and becomes optimal only if the channel transfer matrix is unitary, e.g., in the absence of polarization dependent loss (PDL), and if the noise components at the polarization diversity branches have equal variances. In this special case, the zero-forcing polarization demultiplexer can be implemented by a 2 ? 2 lattice adaptive filter, which is controlled by only two independent real parameters. These parameters can be computed recursively using the constant modulus algorithm (CMA). We evaluate, by simulation, the performance of the aforementioned zero-forcing polarization demultiplexer in coherent optical communication systems using PDM quadrature phase shift keying (QPSK) signals. We show that it is, by far, superior, in terms of convergence accuracy and speed, compared to conventional CMA-based polarization demultiplexers. Finally, we experimentally test the robustness of the proposed constrained CMA polarization demultiplexer to realistic imperfections of polarization-diversity coherent optical receivers. The PMD and PDL tolerance of the proposed demultipl- - exer can be used as a benchmark in order to compare the performance of more sophisticated adaptive electronic PMD/PDL equalizers.
Keywords :
adaptive filters; demodulation; demultiplexing; demultiplexing equipment; equalisers; light coherence; optical control; optical design techniques; optical fibre communication; optical fibre dispersion; optical fibre polarisation; optical filters; optical links; optical receivers; quadrature phase shift keying; wavelength division multiplexing; 2 x 2 lattice adaptive filter; CMA-based polarization demultiplexer; adaptive electronic PMD-PDL equalizer; channel transfer matrix; constant modulus algorithm; demodulation; fiber link; intermediate frequency offset; optical control; optical design; phase noise; polarization dependent loss; polarization division multiplexing; polarization mode dispersion; polarization-diversity coherent optical receiver; quadrature phase shift keying signal; spectrally-efficient coherent optical communications system; zero-forcing polarization demultiplexer; Coherent communications; constant modulus algorithm; polarization demultiplexing;