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Claims  |
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What is claimed is:
1. Optical transmitter apparatus for generating a high power optical signal
which is substantially immune from stimulated Brillouin scattering in a
transmission medium having a refractive index n and an effective length
L.sub.eff, the apparatus comprising:
a laser having a supplied bias current for generating a continuous wave
output signal operating at a predetermined optical carrier wavelength;
means connected to the laser for dithering the optical carrier wavelength
of the laser at a periodic rate, f.sub.d, said periodic rate being greater
than or equal to c/2nL.sub.eff, where c is the speed of light in a vacuum;
an intensity modulator connected to an output of the laser for varying the
intensity of the continuous wave output signal; and
highly saturated amplifier means responsive to an output signal from the
intensity modulator for reducing a peak-to-peak amplitude of residual
amplitude modulation on said intensity modulated output signal, said
amplifier means having a low cutoff frequency, f.sub.c, being greater than
or equal to c/2nL.sub.eff, and wherein c/2nL.sub.eff .ltoreq.f.sub.d
.ltoreq.f.sub.c.
2. The optical transmitter apparatus as defined in claim 1 wherein the
highly saturated amplifier means is a Raman amplifier.
3. The optical transmitter apparatus as defined in claim 1 wherein the
highly saturated amplifier means is a semiconductor amplifier.
4. The optical transmitter apparatus as defined in claim 1 wherein the
highly saturated amplifier means is an erbium doped optical fiber
amplifier.
5. The optical transmitter apparatus as defined in claim 4 wherein the
transmission medium is single-mode optical fiber and the periodic rate is
greater than or equal to 5 kHz.
6. The optical transmitter apparatus as defined in claim 1 wherein the
dithering means varies the bias current to the laser.
7. The optical transmitter apparatus as defined in claim 1 wherein the
dithering means varies an operating temperature of the laser.
8. Method for generating a high power optical signal which is substantially
immune from stimulated Brillouin scattering in a transmission medium
having a refractive index n and an effective length L.sub.eff, the method
comprising the steps of:
generating an optical output signal having a wavelength which varies at a
periodic rate about a predetermined optical carrier wavelength; and
reducing a peak-to-peak amplitude of residual amplitude modulation on said
optical output signal by amplifying the signal so that the periodic rate
occurs in a small signal intensity response region in the neighborhood of
or below a low frequency cutoff and above or equal to c/2nL.sub.eff.
9. The method as defined in claim 8 wherein the step of generating further
includes biasing a laser via a bias current to produce the optical output
signal and dithering the bias current to the laser at a periodic rate,
f.sub.d, said periodic rate being greater than or equal to c/2nL.sub.eff,
where c is the speed of light in a vacuum to vary the wavelength of the
optical output signal.
10. The method as defined in claim 9 wherein the generating step further
includes the step of modulating the intensity of the optical output signal
in response to a data signal.
11. Optical transmitter apparatus for generating a high power optical
signal which is substantially immune from stimulated Brillouin scattering
in a transmission medium having a refractive index n and an effective
length L.sub.eff, the apparatus comprising:
an optical source for generating an intensity modulated output signal
having a carrier wavelength which varies about a predetermined wavelength
at a periodic rate, f.sub.d ; and
highly saturated amplifier means responsive to the intensity modulated
output signal for reducing a peak-to-peak amplitude of residual amplitude
modulation occurring substantially related to said periodic rate on said
intensity modulated output signal, said amplifier means having a low
cutoff frequency, f.sub.c, being greater than or equal to c/2nL.sub.eff,
and wherein c/2nL.sub.eff .ltoreq.f.sub.d .ltoreq.f.sub.c.
12. Optical transmitter apparatus for generating a high power optical
signal which is substantially immune from stimulated Brillouin scattering
in a transmission medium having a refractive index n and an effective
length L.sub.eff, the apparatus comprising:
an optical source for generating a continuous wave output signal having a
carrier wavelength which varies about a predetermined wavelength at a
periodic rate, f.sub.d ; and
highly saturated amplifier means responsive to the intensity modulated
output signal for reducing a peak-to-peak amplitude of residual amplitude
modulation occurring substantially related to said periodic rate on said
intensity modulated output signal, said amplifier means having a low
cutoff frequency, f.sub.c, being greater than or equal to c/2nL.sub.eff,
and wherein c/2nL.sub.eff .ltoreq.f.sub.d .ltoreq.f.sub.c. |
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Claims  |
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Description  |
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TECHNICAL FIELD
This invention relates to an apparatus and a method for transmitting high
power lightwave signals and, more particularly, for transmitting signals
whose power exceeds the stimulated Brillouin scattering threshold.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
In optical transmission systems and especially in systems having long
unrepeatered fiber spans, it is important to launch as high an optical
power into the transmission fiber as possible. Unfortunately, the amount
of launch power at a particular wavelength is limited by nonlinear
phenomena such as stimulated Brillouin scattering ("SBS"), stimulated
Raman scattering, self-phase modulation, four-photon mixing and
cross-phase modulation. These phenomena can degrade the optical signals
and increase bit error rates for the data.
Narrow linewidth laser sources are particularly vulnerable to SBS problems
because the SBS power threshold increases with increasing linewidth of the
optical signal being propagated. The SBS power threshold is arbitrarily
defined as the input optical pump signal power level at which the powers
of the input optical pump signal and the backward Stokes signal become
equal. It is well known that dithering of the source optical wavelength
for a narrow linewidth source is a useful technique for overcoming the
power limitations imposed by SBS. Specifically, the source wavelength can
be swept over some narrow band of wavelengths by directly modulating the
source laser with a periodically varying dithering current. This technique
permits higher launch power to be employed--well above the original SBS
threshold for the source without dithering--without incurring the penalty
of SBS. Present experiments have shown that a dither rate, for the source
wavelength, at or above approximately 5 kHz is effective for suppressing
SBS. See, for example, U.S. Pat. No. 5,329,396 issued Jul. 12, 1994.
But, there is one problem for this dither technique. As the dither current
sweeps back and forth, it imparts an amplitude modulation at the dither
rate. The amplitude modulation varies the envelope of modulated signal.
For intensity modulated data, this additional or residual amplitude
modulation on the intensity modulated signal penalizes the optical
receiver by causing a closure of the eye pattern and thereby increasing
the difficulty of discriminating between zero and one optical data bits.
In other words, the error rate increases with increasing dither rate. To
date, no one is known to have addressed or solved this problem.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
Stimulated Brillouin scattering has been effectively suppressed and the
effect of residual amplitude modulation has been mitigated in a dithered
optical transmitter by injecting the dithered optical signal into an
optical device, such as a highly saturated amplifier, whose small-signal
intensity response at the dither frequency dampens the residual amplitude
modulation thereby decreasing the eye closure (alternatively, increasing
the eye pattern opening). The optical device (e.g., the highly saturated
amplifier) exhibits a low frequency cutoff (-3 dB) at a frequency greater
than or equal to the inverse of the round trip time for a fiber span with
the effective optical transmission length into which the optical signal
power is launched. That is, the low cutoff frequency should be greater
than or equal to c/2nL.sub.eff, where c is the speed of light in a vacuum,
n is the effective refractive index for the transmission system, and
L.sub.eff is the effective optical fiber transmission length.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWING
A more complete understanding of the invention may be obtained by reading
the following description of specific illustrative embodiments of the
invention in conjunction with the appended drawing in which:
FIG. 1 shows a simplified block diagram of a lightwave transmission system
including an illustrative lightwave transmitter realized in accordance
with the principles of the present invention;
FIG. 2 shows a graphical representation of linewidth broadening for a
dithered optical source;
FIGS. 3A-3C show graphical plots of gain versus input power, gain versus
output power, and small signal intensity response versus frequency for an
exemplary highly saturated optical amplifier suitable for use in the
present invention;
FIGS. 4A shows an eye diagram for dithered optical transmitters without the
highly saturated amplifier, whereas FIGS. 4B-4D show eye diagrams at
various dither rates for dithered optical transmitters including the
highly saturated amplifier; and
FIG. 5 shows a comparison of experimental results for dithered transmitters
with and without the highly saturated amplifier.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
FIG. 1 shows a block diagram of a transmission system including wavelength
dithered transmitter 10, receiver 17, and optical transmission fiber 16
interconnecting the transmitter and the receiver. The transmitter is
capable of high power operation without the deleterious effects of
stimulated Brillouin scattering and residual amplitude modulation caused
by dithering.
Transmitter 10 includes laser 11, dither source 12, a bias, an external
modulator 14, and amplifier 15. External modulator 14 receives input data
from a data source 13. While the illustrative embodiment of the
transmitter shown in FIG. 1 uses external modulation, it is contemplated
that the principles of the present invention will extend equally to
directly modulated lasers.
Laser 11 is a nominally single frequency laser such as a distributed
feedback laser or a distributed Bragg reflector laser or the like. An
appropriate current ("BIAS") biases the laser for continuous wave
operation. Dither source 12 supplies a periodic variation, such as a
sinusoidal or square wave signal, to the bias signal. Alternatively,
dithering can be obtained by inducing a local periodic variation of the
laser operating temperature.
The effect of either of these dithering techniques is to sweep the optical
carrier wavelength of the laser over a particular range of wavelengths at
a periodic rate called a dither rate or frequency, f.sub.d. The dither
signal causes the laser output to be frequency modulated independent of,
and in addition to, any other modulation such as analog or digital
information encoding. This frequency modulation serves to increase the
effective linewidth of the laser output.
It has been shown that a desirable dither frequency is at or above
c/2nL.sub.eff, where c is the speed of light in a vacuum, n is the
effective refractive index for the transmission system, and L.sub.eff is
the effective optical fiber transmission length. L.sub.eff can be
approximated as (1-e.sup.-.alpha.L)/.alpha..congruent.1/.alpha., where
.alpha. is the optical fiber attenuation constant and L is the actual
length of optical fiber. Typical systems have .alpha.=0.22 dB/km and
L.sub.eff is approximately 20 km. In most system applications, this
translates to a dither rate of greater than or equal to approximately 5
kHz.
The minimum dither frequency ensures that the absolute optical frequency of
the Brillouin gain is shifted in a time equal to the transit time of the
optical fiber. This prevents any significant length of optical fiber from
being subjected to a narrow linewidth signal of a particular wavelength
for any appreciable amount of time. As a result, the interaction length
for the optical signal within the fiber is shortened, thereby inhibiting
SBS over the length of the fiber. In accordance with the principles of the
invention as described in more detail below, the maximum dither frequency
is bounded by the lower cutoff frequency (-3 dB point) for the optical
device such as amplifier 15.
FIG. 2 shows a graphical illustration of the effective linewidth broadening
accomplished by dithering the laser bias current. Curves 201, 202, and 203
are representative plots of the optical spectrum (intensity versus
wavelength) for a typical single frequency laser biased at some fixed
current I.sub.0. In normal operation, the laser produces an optical output
signal having a fixed linewidth as shown by curve 201 centered about a
wavelength .lambda..sub.o. When the dither signal is applied the bias
current shifts between extremes and the laser outputs signals whose
spectra are shown in curve 202 (bias at I.sub.0 -.DELTA.I) and curve 203
(bias at I.sub.0 +.DELTA.I). As illustrated, each output spectrum is
shifted by a wavelength .DELTA..lambda.. When the bias current is dithered
so that it cyclically varies between I.sub.0 -.DELTA.I and I.sub.0
+.DELTA. I, the laser output when viewed over time appears to have a
broadened output centered about .lambda..sub.o and represented by curve
204.
The magnitude of the dither required to effectively suppress SBS depends
upon the .DELTA.v/.DELTA.I frequency modulation response of the laser,
where .DELTA.v/.DELTA.I is the change in effective linewidth of the laser
output per unit change in the laser bias current. Typical semiconductor
lasers exhibit a frequency modulation response between 200 MHz/mA and 1
GHz/mA.
External modulator 14 provides intensity modulation for the output signal
from laser 11. Data from data source 13 are encoded in a particular analog
or digital format such as NRZ or RZ to create intensity variations in the
laser output signal.
In addition to the intensity variations produced by modulator 14, amplitude
modulation ("AM") related to the signal from dither source 12 also appears
as a lower frequency intensity variation on the signals output from laser
11 and modulator 14. This additional AM signal is referred to as residual
AM. It is this AM signal which corrupts the data received by receiver 17.
Eye closure results at the receiver as shown in FIG. 4A for a 10 kHz
dither signal.
In order to mitigate the effects of residual AM caused by dithering the
laser bias while still retaining the positive results of dithering
(namely, suppression of SBS during higher power lightwave transmission),
highly saturated amplifier 15 is optically coupled to the modulator
output. Highly saturated optical amplifier 15 has a low cutoff frequency
f.sub.c which is greater than or equal to 1/T.sub.R (where T.sub.R is the
round trip transit time) established as c/2nL.sub.eff, where c is the
speed of light in a vacuum, n is the effective refractive index for the
transmission system, and L.sub.eff is the effective optical fiber
transmission length. It should be noted that the dither frequency f.sub.d
is also greater than or equal to c/2nL.sub.eff.
Amplifier 15, in one example from experimental practice, is realized as an
erbium doped optical fiber amplifier. Characteristic gain and saturation
recovery times of a non-saturated erbium doped optical fiber amplifier are
typically on the order of 1 ms. Consequently, such an amplifier has little
or no observable variation in the gain level when amplitude modulation of
10 kHz (e.g., residual amplitude modulation from the action of dithering
the carrier wavelength of laser 11) is present on the input signal to the
amplifier. The characteristic gain saturation and recovery times decrease
with increasing levels of gain saturation. Lower limits on the saturation
and the recovery times are each on the order of 10 .mu.s. Consequently,
the gain of a highly saturated amplifier will not respond to variations in
the input signal power on a time scale shorter than approximately 10
.mu.s. However, a 10 kHz residual AM signal injected into a highly
saturated amplifier on an intensity modulated signal will experience an
intensity dependent gain which will reduce the modulation index of the
residual AM.
FIGS. 3A through 3C show gain characteristics for an exemplary highly
saturated erbium doped fiber amplifier suitable for use in the present
invention. FIGS. 3A and 3B show the relationship of gain to input power
and output power, respectively. FIG. 3C shows the small signal intensity
response as a function of the frequency of the input signal measured via a
square-law detector. In this FIG., arbitrary units are shown and there are
5 dB/division along the ordinate. As shown in this FIG., useful dither
signal frequencies from 5 kHz to almost 30 kHz are below the low cutoff
frequency of the amplifier. That is, they are at frequencies where the
small signal intensity response is approximately 3 dB or more below the
peak response above dc for the amplifier.
In one example from experimental practice, laser 11 was a distributed Bragg
reflector laser operating at 1558 nm. A 10 v (peak-to-peak), 5 kHz signal
from the dither source applied through a resistive connection to the laser
achieved 10 kHz of dithering in the laser output by means of heating the
laser diode (temperature dithering). The laser output was broadened to
12.5 GHz as a time-averaged FWHM measurement. In a second example from
experimental practice, a 24 mA peak-to-peak 10 kHz current was
superimposed on the dc bias of a DBR laser to obtain a laser linewidth
broadening of 8.65 GHz. A 2.488 Gbps pseudo-random bit sequence data
signal was applied to a LiNbO.sub.3 Mach-Zehnder external optical
intensity modulator. Prior to amplification, the modulated signal showed
significant eye closure from the residual amplitude modulation caused by
dithering. See FIG. 4A where the logical "1" rail is thickened thereby
forcing the eye pattern to be more closed than expected. By passing this
signal through the amplifier described above (see FIGS. 3A-3C), it is
possible to restore a significant amount of the eye opening as shown in
FIG. 4B. FIGS. 4C and 4D show eye pattern opening improvement as the
dither frequency is reduced to 7 kHz and 5 kHz, respectively, under the
same other operating conditions.
FIG. 5 shows a series of curves which depict the relationship of bit error
rate to received power. The curves having circular data points employ a 5
kHz dither signal; the curves having triangular data points employ a 7 kHz
dither signal; and the curves having square data points employ a 10 kHz
dither signal. The curves having hollow square, triangular and circular
data points relate to systems wherein transmitter 10 did not include a
highly saturated amplifier 15. The curves having filled square, triangular
and circular data points relate to systems wherein transmitter 10 included
a highly saturated amplifier 15. The solid line curve on the left depicts
an undithered transmission condition in which there is no dithering of the
laser and the system launch power is less than 5 dBm. All other curves
represent a system launch power of approximately 23 dBm.
Conclusions drawn from this experimental system data are that the dithered
transmitter which included a highly saturated amplifier offered improved
performance over comparable transmitters using dithering alone. Improved
performance can be seen as a considerably lower bit error rate (several
orders of magnitude lower) for the same received power or a significant
power advantage (greater than 3 dB) for the same bit error rate. The
latter improvement can be translated into range extension for the system
length. It should also be noted that the dithered transmitter utilizing
the highly saturated amplifier suffered a small penalty, less than 1 dB,
with respect to the undithered system.
Although the dithered transmitter is described above with an erbium doped
fiber amplifier, it is contemplated that other amplifiers such as
semiconductor amplifiers or Raman amplifiers can be used in the inventive
transmitter. It is only required that the particular amplifier satisfy the
small signal intensity response condition. Of course, other optical
devices may satisfy the response condition above and therefore would be
suitable for substitution in transmitter 10 with amplifier 15.
The present invention has been described in terms of reducing the residual
amplitude modulation after intensity modulation has been performed. It is
contemplated, although not shown in the drawing, that the intensity
modulator can be placed after amplifier 15.
As described above, the present invention will retain the positive benefit
of dithering the optical carrier wavelength of an optical source without
the normally attendant negative feature. That is, the present invention
will allow generation and launching of higher than expected power optical
signals without experiencing the effects of SBS and with significantly
reduced residual amplitude modulation. The present invention improves
either range extension, which is important in setting optical fiber span
length, or bit error rate for a particular span length. The present
invention can also be used to lower the output power and thereby accept a
particular bit error rate.
The relationship between the low cutoff frequency and the dither rate,
##EQU1##
can be relaxed in that f.sub.d can be less than or equal to f.sub.c
+.epsilon., where .epsilon. is a small frequency change to f.sub.c so that
even at the new frequency f.sub.c +.epsilon. the small signal intensity
response provides an intensity dependent response and suppresses the
residual amplitude modulation.
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Description  |
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