Title :
N×N multiwavelength optical cross-connect based on tunable fiber Bragg gratings
Author :
Moon, Nam Su ; Kikuchi, Kazuro
Author_Institution :
Res. Center for Adv. Sci. & Technol., Univ. of Tokyo, Japan
fDate :
3/1/2003 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
We propose a highly channel-scalable multiwavelength optical cross-connect (OXC) based on tunable fiber Bragg gratings (TFBGs), which is suited for metropolitan or access networks. N×N OXC of this architecture is constructed by cascading independently operating routing modules, and each routing module consists of fiber Bragg gratings (FBGs) with fixed center wavelength and a TFBG-based N×N routing block. The group velocity dispersion (GVD) and intraband crosstalk (IXT) are the main signal-degrading factors arising from the operation of the proposed OXC, and the effectiveness of each factor is individually investigated numerically for 10-Gb/s nonreturn-to-zero (NRZ) systems. Then, a routing experiment of the proposed OXC is carried out in a 3×3 routing block configuration, using OC-192 signals with channel spacing of 0.8 nm. Finally, the installable size of the proposed OXC and network scale are estimated by resorting to a comprehensive numerical simulation of 10-Gb/s NRZ signal transmission.
Keywords :
Bragg gratings; metropolitan area networks; optical crosstalk; optical fibre dispersion; optical fibre networks; optical fibre subscriber loops; optical interconnections; optical tuning; telecommunication network routing; wavelength division multiplexing; 10 Gbit/s; 10-Gb/s NRZ systems; 3×3 routing block configuration; DWDM; N×N multiwavelength optical cross-connect; OC-192 signals; access networks; channel spacing; fixed center wavelength; group velocity dispersion; highly channel-scalable multiwavelength OXC; intraband crosstalk; metropolitan networks; numerical simulation; operating routing module cascading; signal-degrading factors; tunable fiber Bragg gratings; Bragg gratings; Fiber gratings; Moon; Optical crosstalk; Optical devices; Optical fiber networks; Optical signal processing; Ultrafast optics; Wavelength division multiplexing; Wavelength routing;
Journal_Title :
Lightwave Technology, Journal of
DOI :
10.1109/JLT.2003.808632