EP1709757A2 - Procede et appareil de controle en service d'un systeme de transmission optique sous-marin regional au moyen d'un cotdr - Google Patents

Procede et appareil de controle en service d'un systeme de transmission optique sous-marin regional au moyen d'un cotdr

Info

Publication number
EP1709757A2
EP1709757A2 EP05705213A EP05705213A EP1709757A2 EP 1709757 A2 EP1709757 A2 EP 1709757A2 EP 05705213 A EP05705213 A EP 05705213A EP 05705213 A EP05705213 A EP 05705213A EP 1709757 A2 EP1709757 A2 EP 1709757A2
Authority
EP
European Patent Office
Prior art keywords
optical
cotdr
probe signal
signal
path
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Withdrawn
Application number
EP05705213A
Other languages
German (de)
English (en)
Inventor
William David Cornwell
Jr. Stephen G. Evangelides
Jonathan A. Nagel
Nigel Hunt Taylor
Stephen Arthur Hughes Smith
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
Ahern Glenn John
Red Sky Systems Inc
Original Assignee
Ahern Glenn John
Red Sky Systems Inc
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Ahern Glenn John, Red Sky Systems Inc filed Critical Ahern Glenn John
Publication of EP1709757A2 publication Critical patent/EP1709757A2/fr
Withdrawn legal-status Critical Current

Links

Classifications

    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04BTRANSMISSION
    • H04B10/00Transmission systems employing electromagnetic waves other than radio-waves, e.g. infrared, visible or ultraviolet light, or employing corpuscular radiation, e.g. quantum communication
    • H04B10/07Arrangements for monitoring or testing transmission systems; Arrangements for fault measurement of transmission systems
    • H04B10/071Arrangements for monitoring or testing transmission systems; Arrangements for fault measurement of transmission systems using a reflected signal, e.g. using optical time domain reflectometers [OTDR]

Definitions

  • the present invention relates generally to optical transmission systems, and more particularly to the use of an arrangement to allow coherent optical time domain reflectometry (COTDR) to be used to detect faults in the optical transmission path of an optical transmission system consisting of multiple spans of fiber and optical amplifiers.
  • COTDR coherent optical time domain reflectometry
  • a typical long-range optical transmission system includes a pair of unidirectional optical fibers that support optical signals traveling in opposite directions.
  • An optical signal is attenuated over long distances. Therefore, the optical transmission line will typically include repeaters that restore the signal power lost due to fiber attenuation and are spaced along the transmission line at some appropriate distance from one another.
  • the repeaters include optical amplifiers .
  • the repeaters also include an optical isolator that limits the propagation of the optical signal to a single direction.
  • COTDR Coherent optical time domain reflectometry
  • COTDR In COTDR, an optical pulse is launched into an optical fiber and backscattered signals returning to the launch end are monitored. In the event that there are discontinuities such as faults or splices in the fiber, the amount of backscattering generally changes and such change is detected in the monitored signals. Backscattering and reflection also occur from discrete elements such as couplers, which create a unique signature.
  • the link's health or performance is determined by comparing the monitored COTDR with a reference record. New peaks and other changes in the monitored signal level being indicative of changes in the fiber path, normally indicating a fault.
  • each repeater includes a bidirectional coupler connecting that repeater to a similar coupler in the opposite-going fiber, thus providing an optical path for the backscattered light so that it can be returned to the COTDRunit.
  • the time between pulse launch and receipt of a backscattered signal is proportional to the distance along the fiber to the source of the backscattering, thus allowing the fault to be located. Accordingly, the duty cycle of the pulses must be greater than their individual round trip transit times in the transmission line to obtain an unambiguous return signal.
  • the pulses are typically short in duration (e.g., between a few and tens of microseconds) and high in intensity (e.g., tens of milliwatts peak power) to get a good signal to noise ratio.
  • the problems caused by FWM and XPM can be alleviated by locating the COTDR at a wavelength that is sufficiently far from the nearest signal wavelength.
  • the appropriate separation generally will depend on the specifics of the dispersion map, the system length and the customer traffic signal levels.
  • Another reason why it is problematic to use COTDR in-service is because the COTDR pulses give rise to gain fluctuations that cause transient behavior in the optical amplifiers. This in turn effects the signal carrying channels. In general this effect is known as cross gain coupling.
  • the optical amplifiers generally use erbium as the active element to supply gain.
  • the optical amplifiers treat the COTDR pulses as transients because the duty cycle of the COTDR pulses (for any transmission span of realistic length) is longer than the lifetime of the erbium ions in their excited state, which defines the characteristic response time of the amplifier. (Such transient behavior will also occur if Raman optical amplifiers or semiconductor optical amplifiers are employed, since they have characteristic lifetimes on the order of femtoseconds, and nanoseconds, respectively). For example, the round-trip travel time for a COTDR pulse in a 500 km transmission span is approximately 5 milliseconds, whereas the erbium lifetime is approximately 300 microseconds.
  • a method and apparatus for obtaining status information concerning an optical transmission path. The method begins by generating a COTDR probe signal having a prescribed wavelength and transmitting optical traffic signals and the COTDR probe signal over an optical transmission path having a length corresponding to those used in regional undersea market applications.
  • the prescribed wavelength of the COTDR probe signal is separated from wavelengths at which the optical traffic signals are located by a distance at least equal to a predetermined guard band.
  • a backscattered and/or reflected portion of the COTDR probe signal in which status information concerning the optical path is embodied is received over the optical path.
  • the backscattered and/or reflected portion of the COTDR probe signal is detected to obtain the status information.
  • the length of the optical transmission path is less than about 5,000 km.
  • the predetermined guard band is equal to or greater than about 200 GHz.
  • the COTDR probe signal is a pulsed signal.
  • the COTDR probe signal includes a saturating signal to reduce gain modulation.
  • FIG. 1 shows a simplified block diagram of a transmission system that employs a COTDR arrangement in accordance with the present invention.
  • FIG. 2 is a block diagram showing one embodiment of a COTDR arrangement constructed in accordance with the present invention.
  • FIG. 3 is graph showing the COTDR performance penalty versus the nearest data channel for system length of 1400 km.
  • FIG. 4 is a graph showing the effect of COTDR pulsing on the system Q penalty.
  • COTDR techniques may be employed in an undersea optical transmission system while the system is in-service if the transmission system is of the type directed to the so-called regional undersea market.
  • the regional undersea market is approximately positioned between short-haul "repeater-less” (also known as the "festoon” market) and the long-haul transoceanic repeatered markets.
  • Short-haul, or repeater-less systems employ links without powered in-line amplification (hence the term repeater-"less").
  • Short-haul links typically rely on high optical signal launch power from shore to overcome any inherent loss in the line.
  • Repeater-less systems are generally limited to links of about 250 km in length.
  • a maximum upper limit of 400- 450 km is observed in practice because the line loss, which scales with distance, outstrips available line gain, the ability to launch more power into the line, and the ability of the system to resolve the received optical signal.
  • the long-haul undersea market segment which encompasses system lengths in excess of about 5,000 km, employs very sophisticated transmission techniques to maximize bandwidth capacity and system reach.
  • the present invention overcomes the aforementioned problems and limitations of conventional COTDR arrangements by recognizing that the conditions under which in- service COTDR monitoring can be performed are particularly compatible with system lengths corresponding to those used in the regional undersea market. Under these conditions the primary difficulties that ordinarily arise when using COTDR in-service can be overcome. As previously noted, these problems include the degradation of the COTDR signal by the traffic-carrying signals as a result of nonlinear effects that cause spectral broadening and a consequent loss of coherence. In addition, the presence of the COTDR signal degrades the traffic-carrying signals, either through loss in the optical signal-to- noise ratio and/or by gain modulation effects.
  • the COTDR monitor of the present invention can be used in-service, it can locate faults such as pump degradations, localized fiber loss increases in a cable, fiber aging and loop back failures, as well as the faults resulting in loss of service, such as cable cuts and repeater faults.
  • faults such as pump degradations, localized fiber loss increases in a cable, fiber aging and loop back failures, as well as the faults resulting in loss of service, such as cable cuts and repeater faults.
  • Through regular monitoring it should be possible to monitor the performance of both fibers and repeaters in the transmission path. Through regular monitoring it should also be possible to observe trends, with the objective of identifying or predicting potential faults before they occur. Since repeater telemetry is not required to locate pump failures and monitor amplifier performance, the complexity of the undersea plant is reduced.
  • inventive COTDR monitoring technique has the advantage of providing additional information about fiber performance that is not available from repeater telemetry.
  • FIG. 1 shows a simplified block diagram of an exemplary regional undersea optical transmission system that employs dense wavelength division multiplexing (DWDM) in accordance with the present invention.
  • the transmission system serves to transmit a plurality of optical channels over a pair of unidirectional optical fibers 306 and 308 between terminals 310 and 320, which are remotely located with respect to one another.
  • Terminals 310 and 320 each include a transmitting and receiving unit (not shown).
  • the transmitting unit generally includes a series of encoders and digital transmitters connected to a wavelength division multiplexer.
  • an encoder is connected to an optical source, which, in turn, is connected to the wavelength division multiplexer.
  • the receiving unit includes a series of decoders, digital receivers and a wavelength division demultiplexer.
  • Each terminal 310 and 320 includes a COTDR unit 305 and 307, respectively.
  • Optical amplifiers 312 are located along the fibers 306 and 308 to amplify the optical signals as they travel along the transmission path.
  • the optical amplifiers may be rare-earth doped optical amplifiers such as erbium doped fiber amplifiers that use erbium as the gain medium.
  • a pair of rare-earth doped optical amplifiers supporting opposite-traveling signals is often housed in a single unit known as a repeater 314.
  • the transmission path comprising optical fibers 306-308 are segmented into transmission spans 330 ⁇ -330 , which are concatenated by the repeaters 314. While only three repeaters 314 are depicted in FIG.
  • Each repeater 314 includes a coupler arrangement providing an optical path for use by the COTDR.
  • signals generated by reflection and scattering of the probe signal on fiber 306 between adjacent repeaters enter coupler 318 and are coupled onto the opposite-going fiber 308 via coupler 322.
  • the COTDR signal then travels along with the data on optical fiber 308.
  • COTDR 307 operates in a similar manner to generate COTDR signals that are reflected and scattered on fiber 308 so that they are returned to COTDR 307 along optical fiber 306. The signal arriving back at the COTDR is then used to provide information about the loss characteristics of each span.
  • FIG. 2 shows one embodiment of COTDR units 305 and 307.
  • COTDR unit 400 includes a COTDR probe signal generator 402, an optical homodyne detection type optical receiver 404, and signal processor 406.
  • Optical homodyne detection type optical receiver 404 includes an optical fiber coupler 410, an optical receiver 412, an electrical amplifier 414, and a low pass filter 416.
  • the branch port of the optical fiber coupler 410 and the branch port of the optical fiber coupler 418 are connected to each other.
  • the backscattered and reflected COTDR signal received on either optical fiber 306 or 308 is delivered to COTDR 400 and is received by the optical homodyne detection type optical receiver 410.
  • the backward-scattered probe light is mixed by the optical fiber coupler 410 with an oscillating light branched from the probe signal generator 402 by the optical fiber coupler 418, subjected to square-law detection by the optical receiver 412, and converted into a baseband signal having intensity information on the probe pulses.
  • the photoelectrically converted baseband signal deriving from the probe signal is amplified by the electrical amplifier 414, and reduced of its noise content by the low pass filter 416.
  • the signal processor 406 computes the reflecting position of the probe signal on the optical fiber from the arrival time of the homodyne detection signal and the loss characteristic of the optical fiber from the level of the homodyne detection signal.
  • the method of measuring the optical fibers using the probe light signal is that of the optical time domain reflectometer (COTDR) by a coherent method.
  • COTDR optical time domain reflectometer
  • is the fiber loss
  • D is the dispersion
  • is the modulation rate of the interfering signals
  • ⁇ 0 is the component of the induced phase that depends on the power P, of the interfering channels and the system length L.
  • Figure 1 shows the measured COTDR signal penalty as a function of the guard band to the nearest DWDM signals for a 1400 km system. For systems of 1000-2000 km, a guard band of 200 GHz spacing is sufficient, and for longer systems larger guard bands would be required.
  • the COTDR signal degrades the DWDM signals through reduction of the optical signal-to-noise ratio, gain modulation effects, and nonlinear interactions.
  • the gain modulation effect can be quite serious, and increases with system length. This occurs because the pulsed COTDR signal in the outbound path modulates the gain of the EDFA amplifiers. Reducing the COTDR signal level can control the degradation. Unfortunately this only works for shorter systems ( ⁇ 1000 km) where less COTDR power is required. For longer systems, it is necessary to use methods that eliminate the COTDR gain modulation.
  • Figure 2 shows the mean Q penalty per DWDM channel caused by the COTDR signal for a pulsed COTDR, and a COTDR with a saturating signal that eliminates the gain modulation. The results shown below are for an 850 km system.

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  • Physics & Mathematics (AREA)
  • Electromagnetism (AREA)
  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Computer Networks & Wireless Communication (AREA)
  • Signal Processing (AREA)
  • Optical Communication System (AREA)
  • Testing Of Optical Devices Or Fibers (AREA)

Abstract

L'invention concerne un procédé et un appareil destinés à obtenir des informations d'état concernant un trajet de transmission optique. Le procédé commence par générer un signal de sonde COTDR à longueur d'onde recommandée et à transmettre des signaux de trafic optique et le signal de sonde COTDR via un trajet de transmission optique à longueur correspondant à celle utilisée dans les applications de marché sous-marin régional. La longueur d'onde recommandée du signal de sonde COTDR est séparée des longueurs d'onde auxquelles les signaux de trafic optique sont définis par une distance au moins égale à un anneau de garde prédéfini. Une partie rétrodiffusée et/ou réfléchie du signal de sonde COTDR est détectée afin d'obtenir les informations d'état.
EP05705213A 2004-01-07 2005-01-07 Procede et appareil de controle en service d'un systeme de transmission optique sous-marin regional au moyen d'un cotdr Withdrawn EP1709757A2 (fr)

Applications Claiming Priority (2)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US53513504P 2004-01-07 2004-01-07
PCT/US2005/000448 WO2005074660A2 (fr) 2004-01-07 2005-01-07 Procede et appareil de controle en service d'un systeme de transmission optique sous-marin regional au moyen d'un cotdr

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EP1709757A2 true EP1709757A2 (fr) 2006-10-11

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EP (1) EP1709757A2 (fr)
JP (1) JP2007518365A (fr)
CA (1) CA2552578A1 (fr)
WO (1) WO2005074660A2 (fr)

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Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
GB0803774D0 (en) * 2008-02-29 2008-04-09 Roke Manor Research Modulation scheme
CN113330694A (zh) 2018-11-16 2021-08-31 日本电气株式会社 光传输线监视装置、光传输线监视系统和光传输线监视方法
EP3754867A4 (fr) * 2019-03-06 2021-07-14 Hmn Technologies Co., Limited Dispositif de réseau sous-marin et système de câble sous-marin
EP3951311A4 (fr) 2019-04-05 2022-08-24 NEC Corporation Système de mesure et procédé de mesure
CN112019264A (zh) * 2019-05-31 2020-12-01 烽火通信科技股份有限公司 一种海底光缆线路故障检测系统及方法
CN110492927B (zh) * 2019-09-27 2024-02-20 中国电子科技集团公司第三十四研究所 一种基于岸基探测的有中继海底光缆扰动监测系统

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US6064514A (en) * 1995-10-30 2000-05-16 Nec Corporation Optical surge preventing method and system for use with or in a rare earth doped fiber circuit

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Title
See references of WO2005074660A2 *

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JP2007518365A (ja) 2007-07-05
WO2005074660A3 (fr) 2006-08-03
WO2005074660A2 (fr) 2005-08-18
CA2552578A1 (fr) 2005-08-18

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