FAKULTÄT FÜR
ELEKTROTECHNIK,
INFORMATIK UND
MATHEMATIK
Development and Real-time Implementation
of Digital Signal Processing Algorithms
for Coherent Optical Receivers
Zur Erlangung des akademischen Grades
DOKTORINGENIEUR (Dr.-Ing.)
der Fakultät für Elektrotechnik, Informatik und Mathematik
der Universität Paderborn
vorgelegte Dissertation
von
Dipl.-Ing. Timo Pfau
Stuttgart
Referent: Prof. Dr.-Ing. Reinhold Noé
Korreferent: Prof. Dr.-Ing. Ulrich Rückert
Tag der mündlichen Prüfung: 05.03.2009
Paderborn, den 13.03.2009
Diss. EIM-E/251
Abstract
The continuous increase of the worldwide data traffic demands new concepts for data
transmission in the optical fiber-based backbone networks. One promising way to increase
the capacity of the existing fiber infrastructure is to use multilevel modulation formats in
combination with polarization-multiplexing and coherent detection. Though elaborate
transmitters and receivers are required to transmit multiple bits per symbol, but this also
enables a very efficient utilization of the available bandwidth. The development of
coherent optical receivers thereby profits from advancements in integrated circuit
technologies that allow the digital realization of the required signal processing.
In this dissertation all necessary algorithms for the signal processing in a coherent digital
receiver are presented. The main focus thereby lies on the algorithms for polarization
control and carrier recovery. A digital polarization control is required to realize a
polarization-multiplexed transmission system without optical polarization control. Both a
non-data-aided and a decision-directed polarization control algorithm are presented. For
the latter an extension is proposed to enable also the compensation of intersymbol
interference.
The most time-critical task in coherent receivers for optical transmission systems is it to
recover the carrier phase from the received symbols. Due to the large linewidth of the
distributed feedback (DFB) lasers employed in commercial systems a high phase noise
tolerance is required. Several algorithms have been proposed to solve this problem This
dissertation compares the different approaches at the example of the quadrature phase shift
keying (QPSK) modulation format. Additionally a novel feed-forward carrier recovery for
arbitrary quadrature amplitude modulation (QAM) constellations is proposed. Together
with the other carrier recovery schemes it is analyzed for QPSK, but additionally also for
higher-level square QAM.
Finally the results of the real-time implementation of a polarization-multiplexed
synchronous optical QPSK transmission system are presented, which was developed in the
framework of the synQPSK project funded by the European Commission. The algorithms
implemented in the coherent receiver and their parameters are optimized based on the
simulation results of this thesis. Both the single-polarization QPSK transmission system
and the polarization-multiplexed QPSK transmission system presented in this dissertation
are the worldwide first that were realized with a real-time coherent digital receiver and
standard DFB lasers.
Zusammenfassung
Der kontinuierliche Anstieg des weltweiten Datenverkehrs erfordert neue
Datenübertragungskonzepte für die auf optischen Glasfasern basierenden Backbone-Netze.
Eine vielversprechende Möglichkeit, die Kapazität der bestehenden Glasfaser-Infrastruktur
zu erhöhen, ist der Einsatz von mehrstufigen Modulationsverfahren in Kombination mit
Polarisationsmultiplex und kohärentem Empfang. Zwar werden aufwendige Sender und
Empfänger benötigt, um mehrere Bit pro Symbol zu übertragen, aber das ermöglicht auch
eine sehr effiziente Nutzung der verfügbaren Bandbreite. Die Entwicklung kohärenter
optischer Empfänger profitiert dabei von den Fortschritten in der integrierten Schaltung-
stechnik, die eine digitale Realisierung der erforderlichen Signalverarbeitung ermöglicht.
In dieser Dissertation werden alle zur Signalverarbeitung in einem kohärenten digitalen
Empfänger benötigten Algorithmen vorgestellt. Der Schwerpunkt liegt dabei auf den
Algorithmen zur Polarisationsregelung und Trägerrückgewinnung. Eine digitale
Polarisationsregelung wird benötigt, um ein Übertragungssystem mit
Polarisationsmultiplex ohne optische Polarisationsregelung zu realisieren. Sowohl ein
datenunabhängiger und ein entscheidungsgesteuerter Polarisationsregel-Algorithmus
werden vorgestellt. Für letzteren wird eine Erweiterung vorgeschlagen, die zusätzlich die
Kompensation von Intersymbolstörungen ermöglicht.
Die zeitkritischste Aufgabe für den kohärenten Empfänger eines optischen
Übertragungssystems ist die Rückgewinnung der Trägerphase aus den empfangenen
Symbolen. Aufgrund der hohen Linienbreite der in kommerziellen Systemen eingesetzten
DFB-Laser wird eine hohe Phasenrauschtoleranz benötigt. Mehrere Algorithmen wurden
zur Lösung dieses Problems vorgeschlagen. Diese Dissertation vergleicht die
verschiedenen Ansätze am Beispiel der Quadratur-Phasenumtastung (QPSK). Zusätzlich
wird eine neuartige vorwärtsgekoppelte Trägerrückgewinnung für Quadratur-
Amplitudenmodulation (QAM) mit beliebigen Konstellationen vorgeschlagen. Zusammen
mit den anderen Verfahren zur Trägerrück-gewinnung wird sie für QPSK, aber auch für
höherstufige quadratische QAM analysiert.
Schließlich werden die Ergebnisse einer Echtzeit-Implementierung eines synchronen
optischen Übertragungssystems mit Polarisationsmultiplex vorgestellt, das im Rahmen des
EU-geförderten synQPSK-Projekts entwickelt wurde. Die in dem kohärenten Empfänger
implementierten Algorithmen und ihre zugehörigen Parameter wurden mithilfe der
Simulationsergebnisse dieser Arbeit optimiert. Sowohl das QPSK Übertragungssystem mit
einfacher Polarisation als auch das QPSK Übertragungssystem mit Polarisationsmultiplex
sind weltweit die ersten, die mit einem kohärenten digitalen Echtzeit-Empfänger und
Standard-DFB-Lasern realisiert wurden.
i
Publications
Articles
T. Pfau, S. Hoffmann, R. Noé, „Hardware-efficient Coherent Digital Receiver Concept
with Feed-forward Carrier Recovery for M-QAM Constellations”, IEEE J.
Lightwave Technol., accepted for publication
S. Hoffmann, R. Peveling, T. Pfau, O. Adamczyk, R. Eickhoff, R. Noé, „Multiplier-
free Realtime Phase Tracking for Coherent QPSK Receivers”, IEEE Photon.
Technol. Lett., Vol. 21, No. 3, Feb. 1, 2009, pp. 137-139
M. El-Darawy, T. Pfau, S. Hoffmann, R. Peveling, C. Wördehoff, B. Koch, M.
Porrmann, O. Adamczyk, R. Noé, “Fast Adaptive Polarization and PDL Tracking in
a Real-time FPGA-based Coherent PolDM-QPSK Receiver”, IEEE Photon.
Technol. Lett., Vol. 20, No. 21, Nov. 1, 2008, pp. 1796-1798
S. Hoffmann, S. Bhandare, T. Pfau, O. Adamczyk, C. Wördehoff, R. Peveling, M.
Porrmann, R. Noé, “Frequency and Phase Estimation for Coherent QPSK
Transmission with Unlocked DFB Lasers”, IEEE Photon. Technol. Lett., Vol. 20,
No. 18, Sept. 15, 2008, pp. 1569-1571
T. Pfau, S. Hoffmann, O. Adamczyk, R. Peveling, V. Herath, M. Porrmann, R. Noé,
“Coherent optical communication: Towards real-time systems at 40 Gbit/s and
beyond”, Optics Express, Vol. 16, No. 2, Jan. 21, 2008
T. Pfau, R. Peveling, J. Hauden, N. Grossard, H. Porte, Y. Achiam, S. Hoffmann, S.
Ibrahim, O. Adamczyk, S. Bhandare, D. Sandel, M. Porrmann, R. Noé, “Coherent
Digital Polarization Diversity Receiver for Real-Time Polarization-Multiplexed
QPSK Transmission at 2.8 Gbit/s”, IEEE Photon. Technol. Lett., Vol. 19, No. 24,
Dec. 15, 2007, pp. 1988-1990
T. Pfau, S. Hoffmann, R. Peveling, S. Ibrahim, S. Bhandare, O. Adamczyk, M.
Porrmann, R. Noé, Y. Achiam, “Synchronous QPSK transmission at 1.6 Gbit/s with
standard DFB lasers and real-time digital receiver”, Electron. Lett., Vol. 42, No. 20,
Sept. 28, 2006, pp. 1175-1176
T. Pfau, S. Hoffmann, R. Peveling, S. Bhandare, S. K. Ibrahim, O. Adamczyk, M.
Porrmann, R. Noé, Y. Achiam, “First Real-Time Data Recovery for Synchronous
QPSK Transmission with Standard DFB Lasers”, IEEE Photon. Technol. Lett.,
Vol. 18, No. 18, Sept. 15, 2006, pp. 1907-1909
ii
Conference papers
T. Pfau, R. Peveling, V. Herath, S. Hoffmann, C. Wördehoff, O. Adamczyk, M.
Porrmann, R. Noé, “Towards Real-Time Implementation of Coherent Optical
Communications”, Proc. OFC/NFOEC’09, OThJ4 (invited), March 22-26, 2009,
San Diego, CA, USA
V. Herath, R. Peveling, T. Pfau, O. Adamczyk, S. Hoffmann, C. Wördehoff, M.
Porrmann, R. Noé, “Chipset for a Coherent Polarization-Multiplexed QPSK
Receiver”, Proc. OFC/NFOEC’09, OThE2, March 22-26, 2009, San Diego, CA,
USA
M. El-Darawy, T. Pfau, C. Wördehoff, B. Koch, S. Hoffmann, R. Peveling, M.
Porrmann, R. Noé, “Real-time 40 krad/s Polarization Tracking with 6 dB PDL in
Digital Synchronous Polarization-Multiplexed QPSK Receiver”, Proc. ECOC‘08,
We3.E.4, Sept. 21-25, 2008, Brussels, Belgium
T. Pfau, M. El-Darawy, C. Wördehoff, R. Peveling, S. Hoffmann, B. Koch, O.
Adamczyk, M. Porrmann, R. Noé, “32-krad/s Polarization and 3-dB PDL Tracking
in a Real-time Digital Coherent Polarization-Multiplexed QPSK Receiver”, Proc.
IEEE/LEOS Summer Topicals 2008, MC2.4, July 21-23, 2008, Acapulco, Mexico
R. Noé, S. Hoffmann, T. Pfau, O. Adamczyk, V. Herath, R. Peveling, M. Porrmann,
“Real-time Digital Polarization and Carrier Recovery in a Polarization Multiplexed
Synchronous Optical QPSK Transmission”, Proc. IEEE/LEOS Summer Topicals
2008, MC2.1 (invited), July 21-23, 2008, Acapulco, Mexico
S. Hoffmann, T. Pfau, O. Adamczyk, C. Wördehoff, R. Peveling, M. Porrmann, R.
Noé, S. Bhandare, “Frequency Estimation and Compensation for Coherent QPSK
Transmission with DFB Lasers”, Proc. COTA‘08, CWB4, July 13-16, 2008, Boston,
MA, USA
T. Pfau, R. Noé, “Real-time Digital Coherent QPSK Transmission: Algorithms and
Technologies”, Proc. HDOC-WS‘08, pp. 83-88, June 25-26, 2008, Tokyo, Japan
T. Pfau, C. Wördehoff, R. Peveling, S. K. Ibrahim, S. Hoffmann, O. Adamczyk, S.
Bhandare, M. Porrmann, R. Noé, A. Koslovsky, Y. Achiam, D. Schlieder, N.
Grossard, J. Hauden, H. Porte, “Ultra-fast Adaptive Digital Polarization Control in a
Real-time Coherent Polarization-Multiplexed QPSK Receiver”, Proc.
OFC/NFOEC‘08, OTuM3, Feb. 24-28, 2008, San Diego, CA, USA
T. Pfau, R. Peveling, F. Samson, J. Romoth, S. Hoffmann, S. Bhandare, S. Ibrahim, D.
Sandel, O. Adamczyk, M. Porrmann, R. Noé, J. Hauden, N. Grossard, H. Porte, D.
Schlieder, A. Koslovsky, Y. Benarush, Y. Achiam, “Polarization-Multiplexed 2.8
Gbit/s Synchronous QPSK Transmission with Real-Time Digital Polarization
Tracking”, Proc. ECOC‘07, 8.3.3, Sept. 16-20, 2007, Berlin, Germany
T. Pfau, R. Peveling, S. Hoffmann, S. Bhandare, S. Ibrahim, D. Sandel, O. Adamczyk,
M. Porrmann, R. Noé, Y. Achiam, D. Schlieder, A. Koslovsky, Y. Benarush, J.
Hauden, N. Grossard, H. Porte, “PDL-Tolerant Real-Time Polarization-Multiplexed
QPSK Transmission with Digital Coherent Polarization Diversity Receiver”, Proc.
IEEE/LEOS Summer Topicals’07, Ma3.3, July 23-25, 2007, Portland, OR, USA
iii
T. Pfau, O. Adamczyk, V. Herath, R. Peveling, S. Hoffmann, M. Porrmann, R. Noé,
“Real-time Optical Synchronous QPSK Transmission with DFB Lasers”, Proc.
IEEE/LEOS Summer Topicals’07, Ma3.2 (invited), July 23-25, 2007, Portland, OR,
USA
R. Noé, T. Pfau, O. Adamczyk, R. Peveling, V. Herath, S. Hoffmann, M. Porrmann, S.
Ibrahim, S. Bhandare, “Real-time Digital Carrier & Data Recovery for a
Synchronous Optical Quadrature Phase Shift Keying Transmission System”, Proc.
IMS‘07, TH2E-01 (invited), June 3-8, 2007, Honolulu, HI, USA
S. Hoffmann, T. Pfau, R. Peveling, S. Bhandare, O. Adamczyk, M. Porrmann, R. Noé,
“PLL-free coherent optical QPSK transmission with real-time digital phase
estimation using DFB lasers”, Proc. ITG-Workshop Modellierung photonischer
Komponenten und Systeme, Feb. 12-13, 2007, Munich, Germany
R. Noé, T. Pfau, Y. Achiam, F.-J. Tegude, H. Porte, “Integrated Components for
Optical QPSK Transmission”, Proc. FiO‘06, FMF4, October 8-12, 2006, Rochester,
NY, USA
R. Noé, T. Pfau, “Synchronous Demodulation of Optical Phase Shift Keying in
Coherent Systems with DFB Lasers”, Proc. FiO‘06, FMF3 (invited), October 8-12,
2006, Rochester, NY, USA
T. Pfau, S. Hoffmann, R. Peveling, S. Bhandare, O. Adamczyk, M. Porrmann, R. Noé,
Y. Achiam, “1.6 Gbit/s Real-Time Synchronous QPSK Transmission with Standard
DFB Lasers”, Proc. ECOC‘06, Mo4.2.6, Sept. 24-28, 2006, Cannes, France
S. Hoffmann, T. Pfau, R. Peveling, S. Bhandare, O. Adamczyk, M. Porrmann, R. Noé,
“Synchrone 1,6 Gbit/s-QPSK-Datenübertragung in Echtzeit mit DFB-Lasern“, Proc.
ITG-Workshop Modellierung photonischer Komponenten und Systeme, July 17-18,
2006, Nürnberg, Germany
S. Hoffmann, T. Pfau, O. Adamczyk, R. Peveling, M. Porrmann, R. Noé, “Hardware-
Efficient and Phase Noise Tolerant Digital Synchronous QPSK Receiver Concept”,
Proc. OAA/COTA‘06, CThC6, June 25-30, 2006, Whistler, Canada
T. Pfau, S. Hoffmann, R. Peveling, S. Bhandare, S. K. Ibrahim, O. Adamczyk, M.
Porrmann, R. Noé, Y. Achiam, “Real-time Synchronous QPSK Transmission with
Standard DFB Lasers and Digital I&Q Receiver”, Proc. OAA/COTA‘06, CThC5,
June 25-30, 2006, Whistler, Canada
I
Table of contents
1 INTRODUCTION ................................................................................................................... 1
1.1 THE EUROPEAN SYNQPSK PROJECT ..................................................................................... 2
1.2 OUTLINE OF THE THESIS ........................................................................................................ 4
2 FUNDAMENTALS ................................................................................................................. 5
2.1 M-ARY QUADRATURE AMPLITUDE MODULATION ................................................................. 5
2.1.1 QAM constellations with equidistant-phases ............................................................... 5
2.1.2 Square QAM constellations .......................................................................................... 7
2.1.3 Differential encoding and decoding ............................................................................. 9
2.2 COHERENT OPTICAL QAM TRANSMISSION SYSTEM ............................................................ 11
2.2.1 Optical QAM transmitter ............................................................................................ 11
2.2.2 Polarization-multiplexed QAM transmitter ................................................................ 12
2.2.3 Optical transmission link impairments ....................................................................... 13
2.2.4 Coherent optical QAM receiver with digital signal processing ................................. 17
3 DIGITAL SIGNAL PROCESSING ALGORITHMS FOR COHERENT OPTICAL
RECEIVERS .......................................................................................................................... 23
3.1 CONSTRAINTS FOR ALGORITHMS IN DIGITAL RECEIVERS FOR COHERENT OPTICAL
COMMUNICATION ................................................................................................................ 23
3.1.1 Feasibility of parallel processing ............................................................................... 24
3.1.2 Hardware efficiency ................................................................................................... 25
3.1.3 Tolerance against feedback delays ............................................................................. 26
3.2 CLOCK RECOVERY ............................................................................................................... 29
3.3 POLARIZATION CONTROL & EQUALIZATION ....................................................................... 29
3.3.1 Non-data-aided polarization control .......................................................................... 30
3.3.2 Decision-directed polarization control ...................................................................... 31
3.3.3 Decision-directed ISI compensation
........................................................................... 32
3.4 FEED-FORWARD CARRIER RECOVERY ................................................................................. 34
3.4.1 Viterbi & Viterbi algorithm ........................................................................................ 35
3.4.2 Weighted Viterbi & Viterbi algorithm ........................................................................ 36
3.4.3 Barycenter algorithm.................................................................................................. 37
3.4.4 Feed-forward carrier recovery for arbitrary QAM constellations ............................. 41
3.4.5 Hardware effort .......................................................................................................... 45
3.5 DATA RECOVERY ................................................................................................................. 46
3.5.1 Data recovery for QAM constellations with equidistant-phases ................................ 46
3.5.2 Data recovery for square QAM constellations ........................................................... 47
3.6 INTERMEDIATE FREQUENCY CONTROL ................................................................................ 48
3.6.1 External LO frequency control ................................................................................... 48
3.6.2 Internal intermediate frequency compensation .......................................................... 48
4 SIMULATION RESULTS .................................................................................................... 49
4.1 QPSK CARRIER RECOVERY ................................................................................................. 49
4.1.1 QPSK carrier phase estimator efficiency and mean squared error ........................... 50
4.1.2 QPSK phase noise tolerance ...................................................................................... 54
II
4.1.3 QPSK analog-to-digital converter resolution ............................................................ 60
4.1.4 QPSK phase resolution............................................................................................... 61
4.2 QAM CARRIER RECOVERY .................................................................................................. 63
4.2.1 Square QAM phase angle resolution
.......................................................................... 63
4.2.2 Square QAM phase estimator efficiency .................................................................... 64
4.2.3 Square QAM phase noise tolerance ........................................................................... 70
4.2.4 Square QAM analog-to-digital converter resolution ................................................. 73
4.2.5 Square QAM internal resolutions ............................................................................... 74
4.3 POLARIZATION CONTROL AND PMD COMPENSATION ......................................................... 75
4.3.1 Comparison of polarization control algorithms
......................................................... 75
4.3.2 Verification of the ISI compensation algorithm ......................................................... 78
5 IMPLEMENTATION OF A SYNCHRONOUS OPTICAL QPSK TRANSMISSION
SYSTEM WITH REAL-TIME COHERENT DIGITAL RECEIVER ............................ 87
5.1 SINGLE-POLARIZATION SYNCHRONOUS QPSK TRANSMISSION WITH REAL-TIME FPGA-
BASED COHERENT RECEIVER ............................................................................................... 87
5.1.1 Single-polarization synchronous QPSK transmission setup ...................................... 87
5.1.2 Self-homodyne experiment results at 800 Mb/s
.......................................................... 91
5.1.3 Intradyne experiment results at 800 Mb/s .................................................................. 92
5.1.4 Intradyne experiment results at 1.6 Gb/s .................................................................... 93
5.1.5 System optimizations & comparison of 90° hybrid with 3x3 coupler ......................... 94
5.1.6 Comparison of experimental with simulation results ................................................. 96
5.2 POLARIZATION-MULTIPLEXED SYNCHRONOUS QPSK TRANSMISSION WITH REAL-TIME
FPGA-BASED COHERENT RECEIVER .................................................................................... 97
5.2.1 Polarization-multiplexed QPSK transmission setup .................................................. 98
5.2.2 Influence of different carrier recovery filter widths ................................................. 104
5.2.3 Polarization tracking capability ............................................................................... 105
5.2.4 Polarization tracking capability with optimized VHDL code ................................... 108
5.2.5 Influence of PDL on the receiver sensitivity ............................................................. 109
5.3 POLARIZATION-MULTIPLEXED SYNCHRONOUS QPSK TRANSMISSION WITH REAL-TIME
ASIC BASED COHERENT RECEIVER ................................................................................... 110
5.3.1 Transmission with and without polarization crosstalk ............................................. 111
5.3.2 Influence of different carrier recovery filter widths ................................................. 112
5.3.3 Single-polarization vs. polarization-multiplexed QPSK transmission ..................... 113
6 DISCUSSION ....................................................................................................................... 115
7 SUMMARY .......................................................................................................................... 117
8 OUTLOOK .......................................................................................................................... 119
9 BIBLIOGRAPHY ................................................................................................................ 120
10 LIST OF FIGURES & TABLES ........................................................................................ 125
III
Glossary
Latin symbols
Variable Unit Description
a
~
V Electrical drive signal of upper MZM
b
~ V Electrical drive signal of lower MZM
sΔ rad Gaussian distributed random variable for continuous phase
noise
ϕ
ˆ rad Estimated carrier phase
fΔHz Sum laser linewidth
dB3
fΔ Hz Full width at half maximum
DFB
fΔHz DFB laser linewidth
ECL
fΔ Hz ECL linewidth
B Number of test carrier phase angles
bi i-th input bit sequence into the transmitter
bmin Index of minimum squared distance sum
B
r
Hz Reference bandwidth
c Constellation point in the complex plane
c m/s Light velocity
c
t
s Control time constant
c
k
Transmitted complex symbol
DCD s/m2 Chromatic dispersion parameter
di Distance of test sample to closest constellation point in
i-th block
DPMD ms Polarization mode dispersion parameter
e(NCR) Estimator efficiency for filter half width NCR
Ea V/m Output electrical field of the upper MZM
Eb V/m Output electrical field of the lower MZM
eCL
K
Clock phase error signal
EC
W
V/m Electrical field of the transmitter laser
Ei V/m Electrical field of i-th optical 90° hybrid output
E
l
V/m Input electrical field into the lower MZM
E
L
O V/m Electrical field of local oscillator signal
E
RX
V/m Input electrical field of the optical receiver
E
S
J Energy per symbol
ET
X
V/m Output electrical field of the optical transmitter
Eu V/m Input electrical field into the upper MZM
IV
F Differential coding penalty
fc Hz Carrier frequency
g Control gain
I
I
A Differential output current of inphase photodiodes
I
Q
A Differential output current of quadrature photodiodes
J Fiber Jones matrix
k Discrete time index
K V/A Transimpedance amplifier transfer ratio
l Number of pipeline stages
Lfibe
r
m Fiber length
LPMDE PMD emulator filter length
M QAM modulation level
(number of constellation points)
m Number of parallel modules
M Polarization control matrix
Mi Dispersion compensation matrix of i-th tap
n Refractive index
n Complex Gaussian noise variable
N0 W/Hz Noise power spectral density
na Amplitude number
NCR Carrier recovery filter half width
nd Differential half-plane/quadrant/sector number
ni Inphase number
n
j
Jump number
NPMDC PMD compensator filter half width
n
q
Quadrature number
n
t
Transmitter half-plane/quadrant/sector number
P W Optical power
p Number of sectors for equidistant-phase constellations
Pin W Fiber input power
P
L
O W Local oscillator power
P
N
W Optical noise power
Pou
t
W Fiber output power
P
S
W Optical signal power
Q Correlation matrix for polarization control
Qi Correlation matrix for i-th tap for dispersion compensation
R A/W Photodiode responsivity
Rb b/s Bit rate
R
S
baud Symbol/Baud rate
si Squared distance sum in i-th block
t s Time
C Optical 3 dB coupler transfer matrix
V
T Polarization control error matrix for CMA
Tb s Bit duration
T
S
s Symbol duration
u Power parameter for Viterbi & Viterbi carrier recovery
U Carrier recovery filter input
U
I
V Transimpedance amplifier output signal (inphase)
U
Q
V Transimpedance amplifier output signal (quadrature)
V Carrier recovery filter output
v
g
m/s Group velocity
vi i-th Wiener filter coefficient
W Number of averaged correlation matrices
X Discrete signal after carrier recovery
x FIR/IIR filter input signal
Y Discrete signal after polarization control and dispersion
compensation
y FIR/IIR filter output signal
Z Discrete signal after analog-to-digital converter
zi i-th output signal of 3x3 coupler
Greek symbols
Variable Unit Description
2
n
σ
Gaussian noise variance
ϑ
rad Modulation free symbol phase
φ
rad (S)MLPA filter cell output
γ
rad Symmetrie angle of constellation diagram
α Fiber attenuation coefficient
αi i-th FIR tap coefficient
αPDL PDL coefficient
β Propagation constant
βi i-th IIR tap coefficient
δ, ε rad Phase offset parameters of Jones matrix
Δ Processing delay
ΔτDGD s Differential group delay
Δψ rad Gaussian distributed random variable for discrete phase
noise
θ, ζrad (S)MLPA filter cell inputs
λ m Wavelength
υ rad Polarization cross-talk parameter of Jones matrix
φCL
K
rad Clock phase
VI
φi rad Test carrier phase of i-th block
χi Correlation factor between 0-th and i-th dispersion
compensation filter input
ψ
I
F rad Carrier phase
ψ
L
O rad Local oscillator phase
ψ
S
rad Signal phase
ω
I
F Hz Angular carrier frequency
ω
L
O Hz Angular local oscillator frequency
ω
S
Hz Angular signal frequency
Acronyms and Abbreviations
Abbreviation Description
100GbE 100 Gigabit Ethernet
ADC Analog-to-Digital Converter
ASE Amplified Spontaneous Emission
ASIC Application-specific Integrated Circuit
ASK Amplitude Shift Keying
AWG Arrayed-waveguide Grating
AWGN Additive White Gaussian Noise
BER Bit Error Rate
BERT Bit Error Rate Tester
Bit Binary digit
BPF Bandpass Filter
BPSK Binary Phase Shift Keying
CD Chromatic Dispersion
CMA Constant Modulus Algorithm
CMOS Complementary Metal–Oxide–Semiconductor
CORDIC Coordinate Rotation Digital Computer
CRLB Cramér-Rao Lower Bound
CW Continuous Wave
DAC Digital-to-Analog Converter
DBPSK Differential Binary Phase Shift Keying
DCF Dispersion Compensating Fiber
DD Decision-Directed
DEMUX Demultiplexer
DFB Distributed Feedback
DGD Differential Group Delay
DQPSK Differential Quadrature Phase Shift Keying
DSPU Digital Signal Processing Unit
VII
DWDM Dense Wavelength Division Multiplexing
ECL External-cavity Laser
ECOC European Conference on Optical Communication
EDFA Erbium-Doped Fiber Amplifier
FF Flip-Flop
FFT Fast Fourier Transform
FIR Finite Impulse Response
FP6 6th Framework Programme
FPGA Field-Programmable Gate Array
FWHM Full Width at Half Maximum
GVD Group Velocity Dispersion
HWP Half-Wave Plate
IEEE Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers
IF Intermediate Frequency
IFFT Inverse Fast Fourier Transform
IIR Infinite Impulse Response
ISI Intersymbol Interference
ITU-T International Telecommunication Union - Telecommunication
Standardization Sector
LO Local Oscillator
LUT Loop-Up Table
MGT Multi-Gigabit Transceiver
MLPA Maximum Likelihood Phase Approximation
M-QAM M-ary Quadrature Amplitude Modulation
MSE Mean Squared Error
MUX Multiplexer
MZM Mach-Zehnder-Modulator
NDA Non-Data-Aided
NFOEC National Fiber Optic Engineers Conference
OFC Optical Fiber Communication Conference and Exposition
OFDM Orthogonal Frequency Division Multiplexing
ONT Optische Nachtichtentechnik und Hochfrequenztechnik
(Optical Communication and High Frequency Engineering)
OOK On-Off-Keying
OSNR Optical Signal-to-Noise Ration
PBC Polarization beam combiner
PBS Polarization beam splitter
PC Personal Computer
PDG Polarization-dependent Gain
PDL Polarization-dependent Loss
PLL Phase-locked Loop
PMD Polarization Mode Dispersion
VIII
PMDC Polarization Mode Dispersion Compensator
PMDE Polarization Mode Dispersion Emulator
PM-QPSK Polarization-Multiplexed Quadrature Phase Shift Keying
PRBS Pseudo-Random Binary Sequence
PSK Phase Shift Keying
QAM Quadrature Amplitude Modulation
QPSK Quadrature Phase Shift Keying
QWP Quarter-Wave Plate
RTL Register Transfer Level
SCT Schaltungstechnik (System and Circuit Technology)
SMF Single-Mode fiber
SMLPA Selective Maximum Likelihood Phase Approximation
SNR Signal to Noise Ratio
SOP State of Polarization
SPM Self-Phase Modulation
V&V Viterbi & Viterbi
VCO Voltage-Controlled Oscillator
VHDL VHSIC Hardware Description Language
VHSIC Very High Speed Integrated Circuit
VOA Variable Optical Attenuator
WDM Wavelength Division Multiplexing
XPM Cross-Phase Modulation
1 Introduction
1
1 Introduction
Coherent optical receivers that use either homodyne or heterodyne detection have
significant advantages over traditional optical direct detection receivers because they
linearly down-convert the optical signal to electrical signals. Therefore the receiver
sensitivity is shot-noise limited, if the local oscillator (LO) power is sufficiently high.
In the 1980s this property of high receiver sensitivity directed a lot of research towards the
development and implementation of coherent long-distance optical transmission systems
without repeaters [1; 2; 3; 4]. But the invention of the erbium-doped fiber amplifier
(EDFA) and its fast deployment in commercial transmission systems dramatically reduced
the interest in coherent technologies [5; 6].
In EDFA-based systems amplified spontaneous emission (ASE) rather than shot noise
determines the signal-to-noise ratio (SNR), which made the shot-noise limited receiver
sensitivity of coherent receivers less significant. Additional technical difficulties inherent
in coherent receivers also prevented further investigations. The disadvantage of heterodyne
receivers is that an intermediate frequency (IF) higher than the symbol rate is required.
Thus the receiver bandwidth must be more than twice as large as for baseband and direct
detection receivers. The homodyne receiver operates at the baseband, but requires a stable
locking of the transmitter and local oscillator frequency and phase. With standard
distributed feedback (DFB) lasers stable locking using a phase-locked loop (PLL) could
not be demonstrated [7]. Coherent receivers with analog feed-forward carrier recovery
showed sufficient phase noise tolerance [8], but could not prevail over the less complex
direct detection receivers.
In contrast the EDFA technology revolutionized research in optical communication in the
1990s. Thanks to the large bandwidth of EDFAs wavelength division multiplexing (WDM)
techniques became possible and dramatically increased the transmission capacity of optical
fibers.
In recent years research about coherent receivers experienced a revival [9]. Due to the
ever-increasing bandwidth demand researchers are looking for ways to exploit the optical
bandwidth more efficiently by using coherent transmission with multilevel modulation
formats. The development thereby profited from the fact that over the past years the
bandwidth and clock frequencies for digital signal processing circuits increased faster than
the symbol rate for optical communication. Therefore the electrical signals in a coherent
receiver can now be processed in a digital signal processing unit (DSPU). By means of
feed-forward carrier recovery the inphase and quadrature component of the complex
amplitude of the optical carrier is recovered digitally and in a stable manner [10; 11].
1 Introduction
2
Moreover, all linear optical distortions (polarization transformations, polarization mode
dispersion, chromatic dispersion) can theoretically be equalized without any losses [12;
13].
The main research focus was laid on the investigation of synchronous optical quadrature
phase shift keying (QPSK) combined with polarization division multiplex. Compared to
standard on-off-keying (OOK) the line rate is 4 times lower, the needed number of photons
per bit less than half as high, the tolerance to chromatic dispersion about 5 times better, the
tolerance to polarization mode dispersion about 3 times better, and the tolerance against
fiber nonlinearities, in particular cross phase modulation, is excellent [14]. Therefore it is
an extremely attractive modulation format for metropolitan-area and long-haul fiber
communication. Distinct advantages exist also over other modulation formats, such as
duobinary modulation, differential binary phase shift keying (DBPSK) or differential
quadrature phase shift keying (DQPSK) [9; 15].
The first transmission experiments with coherent digital receivers were realized using
digital storage oscilloscopes and offline signal processing in a personal computer (PC)
[16]. The reason was that some key components to realize a real-time coherent digital
receiver did not exist yet. For this reason in 2004 the University of Paderborn, Photline
Technologies, CeLight Israel and the Innovative Processing AG started the synQPSK-
project, which aimed at the development these key components.
But not only QPSK attracts the attention of the research community, also higher level
quadrature amplitude modulation (QAM) with the main focus on square QAM
constellations is interesting as it allows to increase the spectral efficiency even beyond the
one of polarization-multiplexed QPSK [17; 18]. Although high-level QAM is more
susceptible to noise, which makes it less attractive for long-haul applications, but its
ultimate spectral efficiency makes QAM very interesting for metropolitan and regional
area networks, especially for next-generation networks beyond 100 Gb/s.
But as for coherent QPSK transmission the key components were missing in 2004, today
even the main key algorithm for coherent QAM transmission with high-level constellations
is not available: A feed-forward carrier recovery algorithm with a sufficiently high phase
noise tolerance that allows the employment of standard DFB lasers.
1.1 The European synQPSK project
The synQPSK project, funded by the European Commission within the 6th Framework
Programme (FP6) under the contract 004631, was started on July 1, 2004. The research
consortium was coordinated by the University of Paderborn from Germany with the
working groups ONT (Optical Communication and High Frequency Engineering) and SCT
(System and Circuit Technology). The additional partners were Photline Technologies
1 Introduction
3
from France, CeLight Israel and the Innovative Processing AG from Germany, which latter
was replaced after the first project year by the University of Duisburg-Essen, Germany.
The overall project goal was to develop all necessary components that could not be found
on the market for a synchronous optical QPSK transmission system combined with
polarization division multiplex, and to validate them in a 10 Gbaud, 40 Gb/s “synQPSK”
testbed.
The identified key components were LiNbO3 QPSK modulators required in the transmitter,
integrated coherent receiver frontends consisting of LiNbO3 optical 90° hybrids co-
packaged with InP balanced photoreceivers, and SiGe/CMOS integrated electronic circuits
for analog-to-digital conversion and digital signal processing. Figure 1.1 shows the layout
of the synQPSK project and links the consortium partners to their respective development
task.
TXlaser
Frontendwith common package
WDMtransmission
QPSKmodulators,
polarization multiplex
SiGe/CMOS
integrated
electrical
circuits
LOlaser
Optical90°
hybrids,
polarization
diversity
Balanced
photo‐
receivers
UPb University of Paderborn
PHT Photline Technologies
CIL CeLight Israel LTd.
IPAG/
UDE
Innovative Processing AG/
University of Duisburg-Essen
Figure 1.1: Simplified system schematic for the synQPSK project with partners’ contributions highlighted
Within the University of Paderborn the development tasks were distributed as follows: The
working group “Optical Communication and High Frequency Engineering” (ONT) headed
by Prof. Dr.-Ing. Reinhold Noé was responsible for algorithm development, system
simulations, development of high-speed analog-to-digital converters in SiGe technology
and the design of full-custom demultiplexers in CMOS. Additionally the working group
was responsible for the synQPSK testbed, i.e. the initial operation and validation of all
components and the assembly of a fully functional coherent polarization-multiplexed
QPSK transmission system.
The working group “System and Circuit Technology” (SCT) of Prof. Dr.-Ing. Ulrich
Rückert was responsible for the hardware implementation of the algorithms provided by
ONT, the integration of full custom demultiplexers in the DSPU standard cell design and
the backend development of the CMOS application-specific integrated circuits (ASIC).
Most of the work that is related to synchronous QPSK transmission and presented in this
dissertation was conducted in the framework of the synQPSK project.
1 Introduction
4
1.2 Outline of the thesis
At first the theoretical description of a fiber-optic transmission system with coherent
receiver and digital signal processing is presented. Starting from the specification of two
main classes of constellations for M-ary quadrature amplitude modulation (M-QAM), i.e.
QAM constellations with equidistant-phases and square QAM constellations, and their
generation in an optical transmitter is described. Then the main distortions that occur while
the optical signal is traveling though the fiber are summarized, and finally the coherent
detection of the signal in an optical polarization diversity receiver with subsequent analog-
to-digital conversion is explained.
Before going into detail in chapter 3 about the algorithms required in a digital signal
processing unit (DSPU) of a coherent optical receiver, chapter 3.1 summarizes the
constraints for these algorithms to be suitable for real-time implementation. Then the
algorithms for clock recovery, polarization control, dispersion compensation, carrier
recovery and intermediate frequency control are described. Two of the core elements of
this thesis are presented in this chapter: The dispersion compensation algorithm as well as
the carrier recovery for arbitrary QAM constellations were developed within this
dissertation.
In chapter 4 the simulation results for polarization control, dispersion compensation and
carrier recovery are presented. The purpose of the simulations is to demonstrate the
applicability and performance of the newly proposed algorithms, and for the QPSK carrier
recovery to compare the performance against state-of-the-art techniques. Additionally the
simulations were required to determine the key parameters for a hardware implementation
of a real-time synchronous QPSK receiver in the framework of the synQPSK project.
The setup for this hardware implementation and the measurement results derived from it
are finally outlined in chapter 5. The structure of this chapter follows the implementation
sequence of the system, from single-polarization QPSK transmission to polarization-
multiplexed QPSK transmission, both based on a field-programmable gate array (FPGA)
for digital signal processing, to the final polarization-multiplexed synchronous QPSK setup
with specifically developed SiGe and CMOS application-specific integrated circuits
(ASIC). A discussion of the achieved results followed by a summary and an outlook close
the thesis.
2 Fundamentals
5
2 Fundamentals
In digital communication systems information is sent from a source through a transmission
channel to a remote sink. In fiber-optic communication the source is represented by the
optical transmitter. According to the applied modulation format it maps the transmitted
sequence of binary digits (bit) with the bit rate bb TR 1
=
to symbols with the symbol or
baud rate SS TR 1=. Tb and TS are the bit and symbol duration, respectively. The ratio
Sb RR specifies the number of bits per symbol and is a measure for the spectral efficiency
of the modulation format. The symbols are impressed on a carrier signal that can be sent
through the optical fiber to the optical receiver. The receiver then recovers the symbols
from the received signal and reconstructs the bit sequence. Although there are different
types of optical receivers, this dissertation only considers coherent optical receivers. In the
following these different components of a fiber-optic transmission system are described in
more detail.
2.1 M-ary quadrature amplitude modulation
In quadrature amplitude modulation (QAM) data is transported by modulating the
amplitude of two carriers, which have the same frequency fc but are 90° out of phase. They
can therefore be called quadrature carriers – hence the name of the scheme [19]. A
convenient way to represent digital QAM schemes is the constellation diagram. Inphase
and quadrature modulation are represented as real and imaginary parts of a complex
number. The number of symbols M in the constellation diagram defines the order of a
digital QAM format, which can therefore be named M-ary QAM or M-QAM.
But to specify the order of a QAM constellation is not sufficient to uniquely qualify a M-
QAM format, because the M symbols can be arbitrarily distributed over the complex plane.
Thus also the shape of the QAM constellation must be considered. In this thesis I will
concentrate on the two most important kinds of shapes for QAM constellations, which are
mostly used in commercial transmission systems: Equidistant-phase constellations and
square QAM constellations.
2.1.1 QAM constellations with equidistant-phases
A QAM constellation scheme with equidistant-phases is also referred to as phase shift
keying (PSK), if the amplitude is constant, or combined amplitude and phase shift keying
(ASK-PSK), if also the amplitude is modulated. The most commonly used modulation
schemes of this QAM sub-class are binary phase shift keying (BPSK) with a spectral
2 Fundamentals
6
efficiency of 1 bit/symbol and quadrature phase shift keying (QPSK) with a spectral
efficiency of 2 bit/symbol. The constellation diagrams of the two schemes with the
corresponding Gray-coded bit assignments are depicted in Figure 2.1. The colored areas
represent the tolerable corruption by noise while the correspondent symbol is still detected
correctly at the receiver.
01
01 00
11 10
Re
Im
Re
Im
n
t
=0n
t
=1
n
t
=0n
t
=1
n
t
=3n
t
=2
Figure 2.1: BPSK (left) and QPSK (right) constellation diagrams
The symbols positions in the complex plane for BPSK are given by the formula
{
}
{
}
1 ,0exp
BPSK
∈
⋅
=tt nnjc
π
(2.1)
and for QPSK by
{}
3 ,2 ,1 ,0
42
exp2
QPSK ∈
⎭
⎬
⎫
⎩
⎨
⎧+= tt nnjc
ππ
. (2.2)
In case of BPSK nt can be regarded as a half-plane number, in case of QPSK as a quadrant
number. The bit-to-symbol assignment is calculated by converting the binary value of nt to
Gray-code [20].
Equation (2.1) and (2.2) imply that for QPSK twice the signal power is required compared
to BPSK to achieve the same distance between adjacent constellation points. Thus for the
same signal power the distance between adjacent symbols is reduced. This shows that
increasing the order of QAM allows the transmission of more bits per symbol, but at the
price of a less reliable detection at the receiver.
But also higher level modulation formats are possible. Figure 2.2 shows a ASK-8-PSK
constellation diagram for a spectral efficiency of 4 bit/symbol. The symbol positions in the
complex plane are given by
{
}
{}
7 ,... ,1 ,0
2 ,1
4
exp
PSK8ASK ∈
∈
⎭
⎬
⎫
⎩
⎨
⎧
=
−−
t
a
ta n
n
njnc
π
. (2.3)
2 Fundamentals
7
The bit-to-symbol assignment depends now on nt, which can be considered as a segment
number and determines the first three bits of a symbol. The amplitude number na
determines if the symbol is lying on the inner or outer circle represented by the last bit.
n
t
=5
0000
0010
0001
0011
0111
0100
0101
1101 1100
1110
1111
1000
1011
1001
n
t
=0
n
t
=1
n
t
=2
n
t
=3
n
t
=4
n
t
=6
n
t
=7
0110
1010
Re
Im
Figure 2.2: ASK-8-PSK constellation diagram
In Figure 2.2 the disadvantage of QAM constellation scheme with equidistant-phases for
higher-order constellations becomes obvious. The distances to adjacent symbols are
smaller for symbols on the inner circle than for the symbols on the outer circle. In systems
where phase noise is dominant, this does not matter, but for systems where additive white
Gaussian noise (AWGN) dominates, square QAM constellations are more tolerant against
noise than equidistant-phase constellations [21].
2.1.2 Square QAM constellations
In square QAM constellations the symbols are placed on a square grid with equal vertical
and horizontal spacing. Due to the uniform distribution square QAM constellations are less
susceptible to AWGN than QAM constellation scheme with equidistant-phases. Figure 2.3
shows different square QAM constellation diagrams ranging from 4-QAM, which is
equivalent to QPSK and has a spectral efficiency of 2 bit/symbol, to 256-QAM with a
spectral efficiency of 8 bit/symbol.
2 Fundamentals
8
Re
Im
4-QAM
64-QAM
256-QAM
128-QAM
32-QAM
16-QAM
Figure 2.3: Square QAM constellation diagrams
As QPSK is the simplest square QAM, it is straightforward to describe the positions of the
symbols for M-QAM by extending equation (2.2) by two new variables ni and nq, which
describe the additional amplitude modulation along the real (inphase) and imaginary
(quadrature) axis, respectively. If
(
)
M
2
log is an even number, then the number of
amplitude levels on the real and imaginary axis is M and the positions of constellation
points are given by
{}
[]
{}
[]
{
}
{}
.
12 ,... ,1 ,0
12 ,... ,1 ,0
Imsgn2Resgn2 QPSKQPSKQPSKQAM −∈
−∈
⋅++=
−Mn
Mn
ncjnccc
q
i
qiM (2.4)
As for QPSK nt can be considered as a quadrant number represented by two bits, and ni
and nq each represent half of the remaining bits. It is sufficient to separately Gray-encode
nt, ni and nq. The resulting constellation will also be Gray-encoded.
If
()
M
2
log is an odd number, then the constellation diagram is not an ideal square as can
be seen in Figure 2.3. But it can be easily constructed by extending the constellation
diagram of the 2M square QAM by adding 8M additional amplitude levels on the
real and imaginary axes. In this case the constellation points with simultaneous
8Mni≥ and 8Mnq≥ are unused.
2 Fundamentals
9
The bit-to-symbol assignment for square QAM constellations is exemplified for 16-QAM
in Figure 2.4. nt is represented by the first two bits, ni corresponds to the 3rd bit, nq to the 4th
bit. The colored areas show the tolerable corruption by noise while the corresponding
symbol is still detected correctly at the receiver.
0000
0001
0010
0011
0111
0100
0110
1110 1100
11011111
1000
1011
1010
n
t
=0
0101
1001
Re
Im
n
t
=1
n
t
=2 n
t
=3
n
q
=0
n
q
=1
n
i
=1
n
i
=0n
i
=0
n
i
=1
n
q
=1
n
q
=0
Figure 2.4: Square 16-QAM constellation diagram and bit-to-symbol assignment
By comparing Figure 2.4 to Figure 2.2 it becomes obvious why square QAM constellations
are preferable in AWGN-dominated transmission systems.
2.1.3 Differential encoding and decoding
A problem in QAM detection at the receiver is that the constellations are rotationally
symmetric by the angle t
n
π
2 . Due to this nt-fold phase ambiguity the absolute phase
rotation of the constellation introduced by the transmission channel cannot be recovered by
the receiver. To overcome this problem differential encoding at the transmitter and
corresponding differential decoding at the receiver can be applied [21]. Differential
encoding means that the information is contained in the phase difference between two
consecutive symbols rather than in the absolute phase. The drawback is that if one bit is
detected wrongly the differential decoding causes two consecutive bits to be wrong.
2 Fundamentals
10
Therefore it is desirable to apply differential encoding only to as few bits as possible. This
is referred to as partial differential encoding.
As the phase ambiguities of all QAM constellations presented in the sections 2.1.1 and
2.1.2 only depend on nt, it is sufficient to solely differentially encode nt
(
)
{
}
(
)
1maxmod
,1,,
+
+
=−tktkdkd nnnn , (2.5)
where k is the discrete time index and
{
}
1max
+
t
n is the possible number of values of nt.
Thus the range of values of nd and nt is the same. Differential decoding at the receiver
undoes the differential encoding by calculating
(
)
{
}
(
)
1maxmod
ˆˆˆ 1,,,
+
−
=−tkdkdkt nnnn . (2.6)
Figure 2.5 depicts the partial differential encoding process for a square 16-QAM
constellation. The encircled symbol pairs mark deviations from ideal Gray coding due to
the differential encoding process.
Re
Im
00
11
00
11
11
00
11
00
00
11 01
10
01
10
10
01
10
01
01
10
Figure 2.5: Partial differential encoding for a square 16-QAM constellation
Thus two effects degrade the performance of a transmission system if differential encoding
is applied: A symbol error causes at least two bit errors due to the comparisons used in the
differential decoding process described by equation (2.6), and additional errors may occur
due to the deviation from ideal Gray coding. Both effects are considered in the differential
coding penalty F defined as the bit error probability ratio of the differentially coded system
to the non-differentially coded system [21]. In [22] it is shown that for square QAM
constellations this coding penalty is given by
2 Fundamentals
11
(
)
()
12
log
12
−
+= M
M
F. (2.7)
Because the relative number of differentially encoded bits decreases as the total number of
bits per symbol increases, the differential coding penalty drops from 2 for QPSK to nearly
1 for high-order QAM formats (Table 2.1).
Table 2.1: Differential coding penalty for different square QAM constellations
Constellation Bits per symbol Differential coding penalty F
4-QAM 2 2.00 (3.0 dB)
16-QAM 4 1.67 (2.2 dB)
64-QAM 6 1.43 (1.5 dB)
256-QAM 8 1.27 (1.0 dB)
1024-QAM 10 1.16 (0.6 dB)
An alternative to the differential encoding/decoding process is it to use framing
information to resolve the phase ambiguity of the constellation diagram at the receiver
[23]. But in the simulations as well as in the experiments presented in this dissertation no
framing information is transmitted. Therefore differential encoding has to be applied.
2.2 Coherent optical QAM transmission system
2.2.1 Optical QAM transmitter
There are many possible implementations for an optical QAM transmitter. In this section I
present a transmitter architecture that is most commonly used and is compatible to
arbitrary QAM constellations. In literature it is often referred to as IQ-modulator or nested
Mach-Zehnder-modulator [24]. Figure 2.6 shows the schematic of such a transmitter.
…
k
b,0
k
b,1
{}
kM
b,1log2−
k
b,2
differential
encoding
CW laser
(
)
tES
Signal laser
DAC
DAC
QAM
constellation
mapping
3π/2
MZM
MZM
3 dB coupler 3 dB coupler
{}
k
cRe
{}
k
cIm
optical signals
electrical signals
(
)
ta
~
(
)
tb
~
(
)
tEu
(
)
tEl
()
tEa
()
tEb
(
)
tETX
Figure 2.6: Optical QAM transmitter structure
2 Fundamentals
12
The electrical field
()
(
)
(
)
ttj
S
CW
SS
ePtE
ψω
+
=2 generated by a continuous wave (CW) laser
is split by a directional coupler with the transfer matrix
⎥
⎦
⎤
⎢
⎣
⎡
=1
1
2
1
j
j
C (2.8)
into an upper path
()
(
)
SStj
S
uePtE
ψω
+
=2 and a lower path
()
(
)
SS tj
S
lePjtE
ψω
+
=2.
()
S
CW PE 221 2= is the power of the CW laser,
π
ω
2
S is the optical carrier frequency.
()
tEu in the upper path is modulated in a Mach-Zehnder modulator (MZM) by the
electrical driving signal
()
ta
~. In the lower path the electrical signal
()
tb
~
modulates
(
)
tEl
in a MZM. The continuous signals
(
)
ta
~ and
(
)
tb
~
correspond to the discrete samples
{}
k
cRe and
{}
k
cIm , respectively. The modulated optical signals in the upper and lower
paths can be written as
()
(
)
(
)
(
)
() ()
()()
ttj
S
b
ttj
S
a
SS
SS
ePtbtE
ePtatE
ψω
ψω
+
+
=
=
2
~
2
~
.
(2.9)
The additional phase shift of 23
π
in the lower path as depicted in Figure 2.6 is already
considered in the equation for
(
)
tEb. After combination in the following cross coupler we
obtain the optical signal
() () ()
[]
(
)
(
)
(
)
(
)
ttj
S
tj
S
TX
SSSS ePtcePtjbtatE
ψωψω
++ =+= . (2.10)
()
tETX is the output signal of the transmitter with the optical power PS. At the time instants
kTS with ...2 ,1 ,0
±
±=k and T being the symbol duration,
(
)
S
kTc corresponds to the
discrete symbol ck in the constellation diagram.
2.2.2 Polarization-multiplexed QAM transmitter
To generate a polarization-multiplexed transmission signal the electrical field from the CW
laser must be split by a polarization beam splitter (PBS) into two branches:
()
()
()()
ttj
S
S
yCW
xCW SS
e
P
P
tE
tE
ψω
+
⎥
⎥
⎦
⎤
⎢
⎢
⎣
⎡
=
⎥
⎦
⎤
⎢
⎣
⎡
2
2
2
1
,
,
(2.11)
Then the signals are fed into two parallel QAM transmitter as described above. After
modulation the signals are recombined in a polarization beam combiner (PBC) to form the
polarization-multiplexed transmission signal
2 Fundamentals
13
()
()
(
)
()
()()
ttj
S
y
x
yTX
xTX SS
eP
tc
tc
tE
tE
ψω
+
⎥
⎦
⎤
⎢
⎣
⎡
=
⎥
⎦
⎤
⎢
⎣
⎡
2
1
,
,. (2.12)
Figure 2.7 shows the structure of a polarization-multiplexed QAM transmitter.
CW laser
⎥
⎦
⎤
⎢
⎣
⎡
yCW
xCW
E
E
,
,
yS
E,
xS
E,
signal laser
PBS
Single polarization QAM transmitter
Single polarization QAM transmitter
PBC
xTX
E,
yTX
E,
⎥
⎦
⎤
⎢
⎣
⎡
yTX
xTX
E
E
,
,
Figure 2.7: Polarization-multiplexed QAM transmitter
2.2.3 Optical transmission link impairments
This section introduces the main optical transmission link impairments that alter the signal
while it travels through the fiber.
2.2.3.1 Attenuation
The attenuation caused by optical fibers limits the performance of fiber-optic
communication systems by reducing the average power that reaches the receiver [24].
Since optical receivers need a certain minimum amount of power to recover the signal
accurately, the transmission distance is inherently limited.
Under quite general conditions power attenuation inside an optical fiber is governed by
P
dz
dP
α
−= , (2.13)
where P is the optical power in the fiber. The attenuation coefficient α includes material
absorption as well as other sources of power attenuation. If Pin is the power launched at the
input of a fiber of length Lfiber, the output power Pout from (2.13) is given by
{
}
fiberinout exp LPP
α
−
=. (2.14)
It is customary to express α in the units of dB/km by using the relation
⎟
⎟
⎠
⎞
⎜
⎜
⎝
⎛
−=
out
in
10
fiber
kmdB log
10
P
P
L
α
(2.15)
and to refer to it as the fiber loss.
2.2.3.2 Polarization crosstalk & polarization-dependent loss
Variations in the shape of the core of a SMF cause random changes of the polarization of a
pulse travelling through the fiber [24]. Therefore the state of polarization (SOP) is arbitrary
2 Fundamentals
14
at the receiver of an optical transmission system. It is common to describe the change of
the SOP by a unitary Jones matrix [25] given by
() (){}
(
)
(
)
{
}
(
)
(){}
()
(){}
()
⎥
⎦
⎤
⎢
⎣
⎡−
=−
−
22
22
cossin
sincos
tjtj
tjtj
etet
etet
t
δε
εδ
υυ
υυ
J. (2.16)
The time-variant parameter υ(t) describes the cross-talk between the two polarization
modes, δ(t) and ε(t) denote the phase differences. The input signal to the receiver is then
given by the fiber input signal at the transmitter multiplied by the fiber Jones matrix.
()
() () ()
()
(
){}
(
)
(
)
(
)
{
}
(
)
()
(){}
()
() (){}
()
()
⎥
⎥
⎦
⎤
⎢
⎢
⎣
⎡
+
−
=
⎥
⎦
⎤
⎢
⎣
⎡
=
⎥
⎦
⎤
⎢
⎣
⎡
−
−
tEettEet
tEettEet
tE
tE
t
tE
tE
TX,y
tj
TX,x
tj
TX,y
tj
TX,x
tj
TX,y
TX,x
RX,y
RX,x
22
22
cossin
sincos
δε
εδ
υυ
υυ
J (2.17)
The Jones matrix J(t) is time-variant. Slow variations of J(t) are caused by temperature
drifts, but also very fast polarization change speeds with several krad/s on the Poincaré
sphere are possible. These fast fluctuations are caused by movements of the fiber, e.g. by
vibrations of DCF coils [26].
But not only the SOP changes while the signal is travelling through the fiber, the two
polarization modes can also suffer from different rates of loss due to asymmetries of the
fiber [24]. This effect is referred to as polarization-dependent loss (PDL). In an optical
transmission system it can be modeled by a lumped PDL element placed between 2 unitary
Jones matrices.
()
() () ()
(
)
()
⎥
⎦
⎤
⎢
⎣
⎡
⎟
⎟
⎠
⎞
⎜
⎜
⎝
⎛
=
⎥
⎦
⎤
⎢
⎣
⎡
tE
tE
tt
tE
tE
TX,y
TX,x
RX,y
RX,x
0
PDL
10
01 JJ
α
(2.18)
It is customary to express PDL in the unit of dB by using the relation
(
)
PDL10dBPDL, log20
α
α
=
. (2.19)
It is also possible that 1
PDL >
α
. In this case the effect is referred to as polarization-
dependent gain (PDG).
2.2.3.3 Chromatic dispersion
Dispersion is a major source of signal distortion in optical fiber transmission systems [24;
27]. Single-mode fibers (SMF) have the advantage that intermodal dispersion is absent
because the energy of the injected pulse is transported only by a Single-mode. However
pulse broadening does not disappear altogether due to chromatic dispersion.
Chromatic dispersion occurs because all optical signals have a finite spectral width, and
different spectral components travel with different speeds through the fiber. One cause of
this velocity difference is that the refractive index n(ω) of a SMF is frequency-dependent.
This is called material dispersion and it is the dominant source of chromatic dispersion in
2 Fundamentals
15
single-mode fibers. Another cause of dispersion is that the cross-sectional distribution of
light within the fiber also changes for different wavelengths. Shorter wavelengths are more
completely confined to the fiber core, while a larger portion of the optical power at longer
wavelengths propagates in the cladding. Since the index of the core is greater than the
index of the cladding, this difference in spatial distribution causes a change in propagation
velocity. This phenomenon is known as waveguide dispersion. Waveguide dispersion is
relatively small compared to material dispersion.
The chromatic dispersion property of an optical fiber is given by the group-velocity
dispersion parameter DCD, which is usually expressed in ps/nm/km [24]. In general, for a
signal with an angular frequency ω(β) at a propagation constant β, i.e. the electromagnetic
fields in the propagation direction z oscillate proportional to
(
)
tzj
e
ωβ
−, the dispersion
parameter DCD is defined as
ω
λ
π
ω
β
λ
π
d
dv
v
c
d
dc
Dg
g
222
2
2
CD 22 =−= . (2.20)
where
ω
π
λ
c2= is the vacuum wavelength and
β
ω
ddvg
=
is the group velocity.
2.2.3.4 Polarization mode dispersion
In realistic fibers random imperfections in the circular symmetry cause the two
polarizations within the fiber to travel at different speeds [24]. This phenomenon causes
pulse broadening and is called polarization mode dispersion. Due to the random
characteristic of the fiber imperfections the pulse broadening effect corresponds to a
random walk. Thus the differential group delay (DGD) ΔτDGD is proportional to the square
root of the fiber length Lfiber.
fiberPMDDGD LD=Δ
τ
(2.21)
The PMD parameter DPMD of the fiber is usually expressed in kmps and is a measure
for the asymmetry of the fiber. For a standard single-mode fiber (SMF) [ITU-T G.652] the
PMD parameter is kmps 1.0
PMD =D [28].
A good model to emulate PMD is to use the filter structure depicted in Figure 2.8 [29].
J
1
τ
1
J
L
τ
2
J
2
E
in,x
E
in,y
E
out,x
E
out,y
τ
L
Figure 2.8: Polarization mode dispersion emulator (PMDE)
The PMD emulator (PMDE) is given by a cascade, which consists alternately of a unitary
Jones matrix as described in equation (2.16) and a component that adds the additional