Author_Institution :
Tyco Submarine Syst. Ltd., Eatontown, NJ, USA
Abstract :
WDM networks can achieve significant enhancements in efficiency, flexibility and throughput by enabling wavelength-selective add/drop multiplexing (ADM) at user nodes. The wavelength insertion and deletion can be achieved by simply using appropriate wavelength multiplexers and demultiplexers. For achieving optimal performance, the cascaded EDFAs in add/drop networks are typically operated in the gain-saturation regime. Unfortunately, system performance is critically affected by the adding/dropping of WDM channels since all channels present are amplified simultaneously by each amplifier and must share the available saturated gain. Therefore, when channels are added or dropped, there will be a power transient in each of the remaining output channels. In general, system performance may be degraded: (i) by fiber nonlinearity when the channel powers are too high, and (ii) by a small receiver SNR when the channel, powers are too low. These transients occur on the time scale of microseconds to milliseconds, and could momentarily and significantly disrupt the system performance. In the work, an analysis is presented regarding fiber transmission penalties due to nonlinearity and amplified-spontaneous-emission (ASE) noise resulting from channel drop/add EDFA gain transients in a chain of 10-20 EDFAs with as many as 32 WDM channels
Keywords :
erbium; high-speed optical techniques; laser noise; optical fibre amplifiers; optical fibre networks; optical saturation; optical transmitters; superradiance; transients; wavelength division multiplexing; EDFA power transients; Er-doped fibre amplifier; WDM channels; WDM networks; add/drop networks; amplified-spontaneous-emission noise; cascaded EDFAs; channel drop/add gain transients; channel powers; efficiency; fiber nonlinearity; fiber transmission penalties; flexibility; gain-saturation regime; high speed optical networks; microseconds; milliseconds; nonlinearity; optimal performance; output channels; power transient; receiver signal-to-noise ratio; saturated gain; system performance; throughput; time scale; transients; user nodes; wavelength deletion; wavelength demultiplexers; wavelength insertion; wavelength multiplexers; wavelength-selective add/drop multiplexing; Erbium-doped fiber amplifier; High speed optical techniques; Optical amplifiers; Optical receivers; Optical saturation; Performance gain; System performance; Throughput; WDM networks; Wavelength division multiplexing;