TY - JOUR
T1 - Reconfigurable Channel Slicing and Stitching for an Optical Signal to Enable Fragmented Bandwidth Allocation Using Nonlinear Wave Mixing and an Optical Frequency Comb
AU - Cao, Yinwen
AU - Almaiman, Ahmed
AU - Ziyadi, Morteza
AU - Mohajerin-Ariaei, Amirhossein
AU - Bao, Changjing
AU - Liao, Peicheng
AU - Alishahi, Fatemeh
AU - Fallahpour, Ahmad
AU - Akasaka, Youichi
AU - Langrock, Carsten
AU - Fejer, Martin M.
AU - Touch, Joseph D.
AU - Tur, Moshe
AU - Willner, Alan E.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 1983-2012 IEEE.
PY - 2018/1/15
Y1 - 2018/1/15
N2 - A scheme for reconfigurable channel slicing and stitching is proposed and experimentally demonstrated. By employing optical nonlinear wave mixing and a coherent frequency comb, a single channel spectrum is sliced and redistributed into fragmented frequency slots, which can be stitched together to recover the original channel at the receiver. This approach is verified through a single channel experiment with the modulation formats of quadrature phase-shift keying and 16 quadrature amplitude modulation. The system exhibits less than 1.5% error-vector-magnitude deterioration and no more than 2-dB optical signal-To-noise ratio penalty, compared to a back-To-back baseline. To demonstrate robustness of the scheme, different parameters of the channel slices are varied, such as relative phase offset, relative amplitude, and the number of slices. A 10-km transmission experiment is also conducted and the additional system penalty is negligible. This scheme is used to experimentally demonstrate fragmented channel bandwidth allocation in a dense 6-channel wavelength-division-multiplexing system. The incoming 20-Gbaud optical channel is successfully reallocated into two fragmented frequency slots and reconstructed at the receiver.
AB - A scheme for reconfigurable channel slicing and stitching is proposed and experimentally demonstrated. By employing optical nonlinear wave mixing and a coherent frequency comb, a single channel spectrum is sliced and redistributed into fragmented frequency slots, which can be stitched together to recover the original channel at the receiver. This approach is verified through a single channel experiment with the modulation formats of quadrature phase-shift keying and 16 quadrature amplitude modulation. The system exhibits less than 1.5% error-vector-magnitude deterioration and no more than 2-dB optical signal-To-noise ratio penalty, compared to a back-To-back baseline. To demonstrate robustness of the scheme, different parameters of the channel slices are varied, such as relative phase offset, relative amplitude, and the number of slices. A 10-km transmission experiment is also conducted and the additional system penalty is negligible. This scheme is used to experimentally demonstrate fragmented channel bandwidth allocation in a dense 6-channel wavelength-division-multiplexing system. The incoming 20-Gbaud optical channel is successfully reallocated into two fragmented frequency slots and reconstructed at the receiver.
KW - Inter-channel interference
KW - WDM networks
KW - optical frequency comb
KW - optical wavelength conversion
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85042409098&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1109/JLT.2017.2750168
DO - 10.1109/JLT.2017.2750168
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AN - SCOPUS:85042409098
VL - 36
SP - 440
EP - 446
JO - Journal of Lightwave Technology
JF - Journal of Lightwave Technology
SN - 0733-8724
IS - 2
M1 - 8030047
ER -