GB2552726B - Method for control of optical intensity and extinction ratio of laser modulation in an optical transmitter - Google Patents

Method for control of optical intensity and extinction ratio of laser modulation in an optical transmitter Download PDF

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GB2552726B
GB2552726B GB1701657.7A GB201701657A GB2552726B GB 2552726 B GB2552726 B GB 2552726B GB 201701657 A GB201701657 A GB 201701657A GB 2552726 B GB2552726 B GB 2552726B
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output
transimpedance amplifier
mean
control
circuitry
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GB201701657D0 (en
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Whitfiled Colin
Redman-White William
John Hutchins Derek
Coue Dominic
Rookes Christian
James Brocklehurst George
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Hilight Semiconductor Ltd
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Hilight Semiconductor Ltd
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Priority to US15/883,443 priority patent/US10535978B2/en
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    • 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
    • H04B10/075Arrangements for monitoring or testing transmission systems; Arrangements for fault measurement of transmission systems using an in-service signal
    • H04B10/079Arrangements for monitoring or testing transmission systems; Arrangements for fault measurement of transmission systems using an in-service signal using measurements of the data signal
    • H04B10/0795Performance monitoring; Measurement of transmission parameters
    • H04B10/07955Monitoring or measuring power
    • 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
    • H04B10/50Transmitters
    • H04B10/501Structural aspects
    • H04B10/503Laser transmitters
    • H04B10/504Laser transmitters using direct modulation
    • 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
    • H04B10/50Transmitters
    • H04B10/501Structural aspects
    • H04B10/503Laser transmitters
    • H04B10/505Laser transmitters using external modulation
    • H04B10/5057Laser transmitters using external modulation using a feedback signal generated by analysing the optical output
    • 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
    • H04B10/50Transmitters
    • H04B10/564Power control

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  • Physics & Mathematics (AREA)
  • Electromagnetism (AREA)
  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Computer Networks & Wireless Communication (AREA)
  • Signal Processing (AREA)
  • Optics & Photonics (AREA)
  • Optical Communication System (AREA)
  • Semiconductor Lasers (AREA)

Description

Method for Control of Optical intensity and Extinction Ratio of Laser Modulation in an Optical Transmitter Description of Invention in a fibre optical communications system it is desirable to be abie to control the modulation depth of the light generated by the transmitting laser device. In order to maintain fast switching between states and reduce noise, the transmitting laser is not switched to some defined power and then switched off, but for the low state its output is reduced to a low level. This modulation depth is also described as an extinction ratio (ER), the latter being ihe ratio of the optica! intensity when there is a data ‘1’ and the intensity when there is a data O'. The current required by the laser to deliver these high and low optica! outputs is not however constant and indeed is affected by the tolerances between individual laser devices, and also over time, due to the variation of a single iaser device’s characteristics due to heating and ageing. Such variations can occur in norma! operation as a device heats up in use.
Hence it is desired not only to be able to compensate automatically for manufacturing tolerances and parameter drift in the iaser itself, but aiso to be able to reach some defined target modulation levei where the data pattern has a random characteristic with only limited low frequency content.
There are several methods for controlling the modulation (or ER) are described in prior art. Usually these make assumptions about characteristics of the devices or data patterns that may not always be valid. Many methods are related to a technique presented by Smith (Electronics Letters, October 1978 pp775-776), wherein a low amplitude low frequency (LF) modulation is added to the normal laser current. The fluctuations in the optical output from the laser at the known LF modulation frequency permit the estimation of the zero and/or average optica! levels, and hence the slope of the laser current/optica! output characteristic can be calculated. Because this modulation is relatively low frequency, the system provided to monitor the optical output power does not have to have a high bandwidth, which is an attractive feature. Provided that the laser characteristic does not have excessive nonlinearity, it is thus possible to construct a feedback loop to maintain reasonable control over the modulation depth (or ER) provided that the feedback loop implied in this system has time to settie, as in the case of continuous mode operation. The main limitation with such systems is that there is an implied assumption that the laser's current vs optica! output characteristic is substantially linear. At higher operating power levels this is riot a safe assumption. A more direct approach is to attempt to measure the optical output levels that directly correspond to logical 1 and logical 0 states. There is normally provided a photodiode to sense the optical output power from the iaser. together with an associated monitor transimpedance amplifier, together hereinafter referred to as a monitor channel. The performance of this latter function places restrictions on the operation of any such controi ioop, since for cost and power reasons, the bandwidth of any monitor channel used to controi the system is frequently much less than that of the main communication channel.
The transmitted optical data will switch between its logical 1 and logical 0 levels at rates defined by system level requirements, and wii! remain substantially constant at these levels for the duration of the number of consecutive symbols of the same sign. This consecutive number is referred to as the run length, in many practical systems, the monitor channel bandwidth is sufficiently restricted as to cause its own output to settie only if the observed optical signal is constant for a relatively large number of symbols. Given that in a random data stream the probability of a given run length decreases as the length increases, it is clear that a monitor channel of restricted bandwidth will give only very infrequent outputs corresponding direciiy to the optical 1 and optical 0 levels.
In some prior art, attempts are made to achieve an accurate estimation of the logical 1 and 0 levels by gating the output of the monitor channel such that its value is only considered when a long run length is detected in the incoming data stream and hence the value observed via the monitor channel will have had time to settle. This approach has some merit, but it still places significant demands on the bandwidth of the monitor channel as a ratio of the symbol rate, with attendant increased power consumption likely in the monitor channel.
Hence some other methods are sought by which the optical 1 and 0 levels can be estimated or inferred from the outputs of a monitor channel having restricted bandwidth compared with the symbol rate.
Rather than consider the direct time-domain output from the monitor channel, one may instead look at the statistics of the monitor signal, and in particular at the probability density function (PDF) of this output. Consider the situation if the monitor channel were to have unlimited bandwidth. Since the optical output has a defined time to change between levels, and then remains at each level for the run length at some instant, it will be apparent that the PDF will have a bi-modal form, with a near constant level between the two peaks.
For a random data signal, the relative magnitudes of the peaks at each end of the PDF and the level in between will vary with the maximum run length used. As the bandwidth of the monitor channel is reduced beiow approximately 10% of the symbol rate, the bimoda! form is lost and becomes more Gaussian, and the values corresponding to the ideal logical 1 and logical 0 are not very evident in the PDF.
If the bandwidth is reduced stilf further below approximately 5% of the symbol rate, the tails of the Gaussian form of the PDF drop to near zero at the expected logical 1 and 0 values. However, the mean and standard deviation values do not depend strongly on the maximum run length of the data stream. The main determining factors for the standard deviation (relative to the mean value) are the ER of the optical signal and the bandwidth of the monitor channel. Hence if the bandwidth of the monitor channel can be accounted for in the measurement system, the standard deviation of the monitor output may be used to infer the ER.
Measuring the bandwidth of the monitor channel directly is possible but not very convenient in a complete optica! system as it depends on the capacitance of the photodiode used for the monitor function. It is also necessary to have knowledge of the absolute gain through the monitor channel so that the standard deviation observed can be appropriately scaled. An alternative and more practical method is to use a parallel replica signal path, whereby the effects of the gain and bandwidth on ideal data may be taken into account.
According to a first aspect there is provided a system for controlling the optical intensity and modulation of an optical data transmitter comprising: current driver circuitry configured to supply a drive current to a laser diode wherein said current comprises a fixed component and a modulated component, said modulated component having a magnitude related to an input data stream, and; monitor circuitry, said monitor circuitry comprising: a photodiode: and a first transimpedance amplifier coupled to said photodiode, wherein said monitor circuity is configured to provide an output signal related to an opticai intensity of said laser diode; repiica monitor circuitry, said replica monitor circuitry comprising: a second transimpedance amplifier, said second transimpedance amplifier configured to be substantially identical in construction to said first transimpedance amplifier: and replica control circuitry configured to control a gain and a bandwidth of said second transimpedance amplifier to be substantially identical to said first transimpedance amplifier; a current source configured to provide a fixed current and a modulated current to an input of said second transimpedance amplifier, said modulated current having a magnitude related to said input data stream: and current driver control circuitry configured to determine a mean and a standard deviation of outputs of said first and second transimpedance amplifiers, and generate at least one control signal to control said current driver circuitry to control an average and a modulation depth of the optical intensity of said laser diode based on said mean and said standard deviation of said outputs of said first and second transimpedance amplifiers.
Said current driver control circuitry may comprise: a first low pass filter coupled to receive an output of said first transimpedance amplifier and configured to generate a first mean output related to said mean of said output of said first transimpedarsce amplifier.
Said current driver control circuitry may comprise: a second low pass filter coupled to receive an output of said second transimpedance amplifier and configured to generate a second mean output related to said mean of said output of said second transimpedance amplifier.
Said current driver control circuitry may further comprise: a first high pass filter coupled to receive said output of said first transimpedance amplifier; a first root-mean-square (rms) detector coupled to receive an output of said first high pass filter; and a first rms low pass filter coupled to receive an output of said first root-mean-square detector and configured to generate an output related to the standard deviation of said output of said first transimpedance amplifier.
Said current driver control circuitry may further comprise: a second high pass filter coupled to receive said output of said second transimpedance amplifier; a second root-mean-square (rms) detector coupled to receive an output of said second high pass fitter; and a second rms iow pass filter coupled to receive an output of said second root-mean-square detector and configured to generate an output related to the standard deviation of said output of said second transimpedance amplifier.
Said current driver control circuitry may further comprise: first comparator circuitry configured to compare said mean output of said output of said first transimpedance amplifier with said mean output of said output of said second trarssimpedance amplifier.
Said current driver control circuitry may further comprise: second comparator circuitry configured to compare said standard deviation output of said output of said first transimpedance amplifier with said standard deviation output of said output of said second transimpedance amplifier.
Said current driver control circuitry may further comprise a signal generator configured to generate at least one bias and modulation current driver control signal based on said first comparator circuitry and said second comparator circuitry, said at least one bias and modulation current driver control signal configured to control said average optical intensity and to control said modulation depth of said laser diode.
Said replica control circuitry may be configured to control said bandwidth of said second transimpedance amplifier by altering a value of a capacitance connected to said input of said second transimpedance amplifier.
The system may further comprise an oscillator circuit configured to generate a frequency output, wherein said frequency output is used to compare said capacitance connected to said input of said second transimpedance amplifier with a capacitance connected to an input of said first transimpedance amplifier.
Said replica control circuitry may comprise a capacitor controller configured to receive said frequency output of said osciliator and adjust said capacitance connected to said second transimpedance amplifier such that it becomes substantially identical to said capacitance associated with said first transimpedance amplifier.
According to a second aspect there is provided a method for controlling the optical intensity and modulation of an optical data transmitter, the method comprising: supplying a drive current to a laser diode wherein said current comprises a fixed component and a modulated component, said modulated component having a magnitude related to an input data stream, arid; monitoring using monitor circuitry to provide an output signal related to an optica! intensity of said laser diode, said monitor circuitry comprising: a photodiode: and a first trarisimpedance amplifier coupled to said photodiode; replicating said monitoring circuitry, using replica monitor circuitry, said replica monitor circuitry comprising: a second trarisimpedance amplifier, said second transimpedance amplifier configured to be substantially identical in construction to said first transimpedance amplifier; and replica controi circuitry configured to control a gain and a bandwidth of said second transimpedance amplifier to be substantially identical to said first trarisimpedance amplifier; providing a fixed current and a modulated current to an input of said second trarisimpedance amplifier using a current source, said modulated current having a magnitude related to said input data stream; determining a mean and a standard deviation of outputs of the first and second transimpedance amplifiers: and generating at least one control signal to control said current driver circuitry to control an average and modulation depth of the optical intensity of said laser diode based on said mean and said standard deviation of the outputs of said first and second transimpedance amplifiers.
Said determining a mean and a standard deviation of outputs of the first and second transimpedance amplifiers may comprise: coupling a first low pass filter to receive an output of said first transimpedance amplifier and generating a first mean output related to said mean of said output of said first transimpedance amplifier.
Said determining a mean and a standard deviation of outputs of the first and second transimpedance amplifiers may comprise: coupling a second iow pass filter to receive an output of said second transimpedance amplifier and generating a second mean output related to said mean ot said output of said second transimpedance amplifier.
Determining a. mean and a standard deviation of outputs of the first and second transimpedance amplifiers may further comprise: coupling a first high pass filter to receive said output of said first transimpedance amplifier; coupling a first root-mean-square (rms) detector to receive an output of said first high pass filter: coupling a first rms low pass filter to receive an output of said first root-mean-square detector; and generating an output related to the standard deviation of said output of said first transimpedance amplifier.
Determining a mean and a standard deviation of outputs of the first and second transimpedance amplifiers rnay comprise: coupling a second high pass filter to receive said output of said second transimpedance amplifier; coupling a second root-mean-square (rms) detector to receive an output of said second high pass filter; coupling a second rms iow pass filter to receive an output of said second root-mean-square detector; and generating an output related to the standard deviation of said output of said second transimpedance amplifier.
Generating ai least one control signal to control said current driver circuitry to control an average and modulation depth of the optical intensity of said laser diode based on said mean and said standard deviation of the outputs of said first and second trarisimpedance amplifiers further may comprise: comparing said mean output of said output of said first transimpedance amplifier with said mean output of said output of said second transimpedance amplifier.
Generating at least one controi signal to control said current driver circuitry to controi an average and modulation depth of the optical intensity of said laser diode based on said mean and said standard deviation of the outputs of said first and second transimpedance amplifiers may further comprise: comparing said standard deviation output of said output of said first transimpedance amplifier with said standard deviation output of said output of said second transimpedance amplifier.
Generating at least one control signal to controi said current driver circuitry to control an average and modulation depth of the optica! intensity of said iaser diode based on said mean and said standard deviation of the outputs of said first and second transimpedance amplifiers may further comprise generating at least one bias and modulation current driver control signal based on said first comparator circuitry and said second comparator circuitry, said at least one bias and modulation current driver control signal configured to control said average optical intensity and to control said modulation depth of said laser diode.
Controlling said bandwidth of said second transimpedance amplifier may comprise altering a value of a capacitance connected to said input of said second transimpedance amplifier.
The method may further comprise generating a frequency output, wherein said frequency output is used to compare said capacitance connected to said input of said second transimpedance amplifier with a capacitance connected to an input of said first transimpedance amplifier.
Controlling a gain and a bandwidth of said second transimpedance amplifier to be substantially identical to said first transimpedance amplifier may comprise: receiving said frequency output of said oscillator: and adjusting said capacitance connected to said second transimpedance amplifier such that it becomes substantially identical to said capacitance associated with said first transimpedance amplifier.
According to a third aspect there is provided an apparatus for controlling the optical intensity and modulation of an optical data transmitter, said apparatus comprising: means for supplying a drive current to a laser diode wherein said current comprises a fixed component and a modulated component, said modulated component having a magnitude related to an input data stream, and; means for monitoring using monitor circuitry to provide an output signal related to ari optical intensity of said laser diode, said monitor circuitry comprising: a photodiode; and a first transimpedance amplifier coupled to said photodiode; means for replicating said monitoring circuitry, using repiica monitor circuitry, said replica monitor circuitry comprising: a second transimpedance amplifier, said second transimpedance amplifier configured to be substantially identical in construction to said first transimpedance amplifier; and repiica contra! circuitry configured to control a gain and a bandwidth of said second transimpedance amplifier to be substantially identical to said first transimpedance amplifier; means for providing a fixed current and a modulated current to an input of said second transimpedance amplifier using a current source, said modulated current having a magnitude related to said input data stream; means for determining a mean and a standard deviation of outputs of the first and second transimpedance amplifiers; and means for generating at least one control signal to control said current driver circuitry to control an average and modulation depth of the optical intensity of said laser diode based on said mean and said standard deviation of the outputs of said first and second transimpedance amplifiers.
Said means for determining a mean and a standard deviation of outputs of the first and second transimpedance amplifiers may comprise: first means for iow pass filtering an output of said first transimpedance amplifier and generating a first mean output related lo said mean of said output of said first transimpedance amplifier.
Said means for determining a mean and a standard deviation of outputs of the first and second transimpedance amplifiers may comprise: second means for low pass filtering an output of said second transimpedance amplifier and generating a second mean output related to said mean of said output of said second transimpedance amplifier.
Said means for determining a mean and a standard deviation of outputs of the first and second transimpedance amplifiers may comprise: first means for high pass filtering said output of said first transimpedance amplifier; first means for root-mean-square (rms) detecting an output of said first means for high pass filtering; first rms means for low pass filtering an output of said first means for root-mean-square detecting and generating an output related to the standard deviation of said output of said firsl transimpedance amplifier.
Said means for determining a mean and a standard deviation of outputs of the first and second transimpedance amplifiers may comprise: second means for high pass filtering said output of said second transimpedance amplifier: second means for root-mean-square (rms) detecting an output of said means for second high pass filtering; second rms means for low pass filtering to receive an output of said second means for root-mean-square detecting and generating an output related to the standard deviation of said output of said second transimpedance amplifier.
Said means for generating at least one control signal to control said current driver circuitry to control an average and modulation depth of the optical intensity of said laser diode based on said mean and said standard deviation of the outputs of said first and second transimpedance amplifiers may further comprise: means for comparing said mean output of said output of said first transimpedance amplifier with said mean output of said output of said second transimpedance amplifier.
Said means for generating at least one control signai to control said current driver circuitry to control an average and modulation depth of the optical intensify of said laser diode based on said mean and said standard deviation of the outputs of said first and second transimpedance amplifiers may further comprise: means for comparing said standard deviation output of said output of said first transimpedance amplifier with said standard deviation output of said output of said second transimpedance amplifier.
Said means for generating at least one control signal to control said current driver circuitry to control an average and modulation depth of the optica! intensity of said iaser diode based on said mean and said standard deviation of the outputs of said first and second transimpedance amplifiers may further comprise means for generating at feast one bias and modulation current driver control signal based on said first comparator circuitry and said second comparator circuitry, said at least one bias and modulation current driver control signal configured to control said average opticai intensity and to control said modulation depth of said laser diode.
Said means for controlling said bandwidth of said second transimpedance amplifier may comprise means for altering a value of a capacitance connected to said input of said second transimpedance amplifier.
The apparatus may further comprise means for generating a frequency output, wherein said frequency output is used to compare said capacitance connected to said input of said second transimpedance amplifier with a capacitance connected to an input of said first transimpedance amplifier.
Said means for controlling a gain arid a bandwidth of said second transimpedance amplifier to be substantially identical to said first transimpedance amplifier may comprise: means for receiving said frequency output of said oscillator; and means for adjusting said capacitance connected to said second transimpedance amplifier such that it becomes substantially identical to said capacitance associated with said first transimpedance amplifier.
Some embodiments will now be described solely by way of example and with reference to the accompanying drawings in which:
Figure 1 shows typical laser characteristics vs temperature.
Figure 2 shows an exemplar optica! transmitter and monitor channel architecture.
Figure 3 shows idealised and band-limited optical waveforms and eye diagrams.
Figure 4 shows simulation of ideal and band-limited opticai waveforms.
Figure 5 shows changes in the form of the PDF of a non-return-to- zero (NRZ) signal observed with different bandwidth restrictions.
Figure 6 shows the PDF of a simulated NRZ optical signal observed within limited BW examples.
Figure 7 shows an architecture for an optical transmitter including a replica of the monitor channel with average and root-mean-square (RMS) outputs.
Figure 8 shows a further architecture for an optical transmitter including a replica of the monitor channel with average and root-mean-square (RMS) outputs.
Figure 9 shows measurement of the capacitance at the monitor channel input due to the monitor photodiode.
Figure 10 shows an exemplar capacitance measurement arrangement for the monitor channel.
The description of the embodiments is not to be taken in a limiting sense but is made merely for the purposes of describing the general principles of the embodiments of the invention. For example, operations that are illustrated as being performed using digital signals and digital circuits may also be achieved using substantially analogue signals and analogue circuits. FIG. 1 is a diagrammatic representation of the characteristics of a typical iaser diode as is used in optical communications systems. When used to generate a modulated optical signal, the current through the laser diode is modulated such that, the minimum current 108 is above the threshold value 121 for the iaser, and the maximum current 109 is below the manufacturer’s ratings for the device. When a laser diode is cold, or the current levels are relatively low, a simple linear model 101 may suffice. However, when the iaser diode heats up, or as its characteristics change with age, the threshold current may change 122 and the relationship may exhibit a more curved shape 102. Thus, the minimum current 110 and the maximum current 111 should both be increased in such a way as to maintain the desired average optica! output 105 and the desired ER during operation. Maintaining such control over a system’s lifetime is not a trivial task. in any given practical system, the maximum current may be set so that the average operating power of the laser is set to a defined level with regard to the required signal level for reliable communications to be established. A critical parameter in such a system is the ratio of the maximum to minimum optical output, usually referred to as the Extinction Ratio (ER), as this affects the signal to noise levels for the receiver. The ER is a function of the minimum and maximum laser diode current values, and is sometimes represented as a simple linear relationship, but in reality this is not an accurate representation. FIG. 2 shows the typical arrangement in a transmitter suitable for an optical communications system. A laser diode 201 is provided with a current having a steady element and a variable element. This may be in the form of an average current with a bidirectional modulation current adding and subtracting current to create the optical maxima and minima; alternatively there may be a smaller steady bias current 221 with a modulation current 222 that is disconnected by means of a switching function 210 to indicate a logical low level in the modulation data input 211, or connected by said switching function 210 io add to said current 221 to indicate a logical high value. The latter variant is represented in figure 2. These currents 221 and 222 may be provided by digital-to-analogue converters 206 and 207 respectively having current outputs controlled by digital values 208 and 209 respectively that are set by the controller function 214.
The optical output of the laser diode 201 is sensed by a monitor photodiode 202 to create a current proportional to the sensed optical level and which may be converted to a voltage 205 with a trans-impedance amplifier 203. The combination of the monitor diode 202 and amplifier 203 typically have a bandwidth that is substantially less than that of the main data channel bandwidth. This monitor value 205 may be converted to digital form 213 by means of an analogue-to-digital converter 204 and these data may be used by the controller 214 to set the laser diode current levels (in this example 221 and 222) according to some mechanism. The bandwidth limitation of the monitor channel is very significant in the implementation of any transmit optical ievei control mechanism since it restricts the observability of the peak and trough values of the optica! signal. FIG. 3 depicts idealised waveforms representing the transmitted optical signal levels and the corresponding outputs from the monitor channel. The upper trace 301 represents typical ideal transmitted optical intensity levels. There are defined maximum and minimum levels that correspond to logical 1 and 0 values, and when the transmitted data have a number of consecutive identical values, the optical levels remain constant. When there is transition to the opposite value, this takes place with an approximately linear ramp and within a defined time interval, typically of the order of half of a unit symbol duration, if the monitor channel were to have a bandwidth larger than the data symbol rate, then the output of the monitor would be very similar to this ideal waveform. in the lower trace 302 there is an idealised representation of the response through a monitor channel whose bandwidth is significantly less than the symbol rate. The peak-to-peak (pk-pk) values of the monitor output are a strong function of the number of consecutive symbols of the same value (known as the run length), and the monitor output may only reach the ideal peak value when there is a very long run of identical symbols, which in a substantially random data stream is unlikely. Further, zero crossing instants are displaced in a similar manner.
Figure 4 shows a simulation of the effect of a restricted monitor channel bandwidth. The upper trace 401 is a stream of random binary data formatted as an idealised non-return-to-zero (NRZ) signal as is commonly used in optical communication systems. The speed of the transition between the 1 and 0 states and vice versa is set to a typical value, in this example 50% of the unit symbol time period. The lower trace 402 shows the effect of passing this signal through a first-order low pass response whose bandwidth is 4% of the symbol rate, a reasonable figure for a practical optical receiver system of this type. The reduction in the (pk-pk) value is evident, and the variation in the short-range average shows dependence on the data content. It is also evident that neither observation of the pk-pk value nor deriving an average value will be useful in estimating the actual pk-pk level of the transmitted optical signal for the purposes of controlling the operating conditions.
Figure 5 shows simulations of how the probability density function (PDF) of such an NRZ data signal is affected by the bandwidth of a channel through which is passes. The symbol rate has been set at 10Gb/s with a run length of 30 symbols. The PDF is obtained by quantising the channel output into 32 equal bins, whose scale is normalised with respect to the pk-pk value of the ideal un-iiltered signal. In these example simulations the channel bandwidths are set at 2GHz, 1GHz, 500MHz, 200MHz and 100MHz. The PDFs obtained for each bandwidth are shown with the highest channel bandwidth at the top of the plot. With the highest bandwidth of 2GHz, from the PDF 501 it can be seen that there is significant output at or near the ideal peak values in the bins at each end of the horizontal scale, and less output in the central bins as would be expected from a signal that spent most time at the stable 1 or 0 values. As the monitor channel bandwidth is reduced to 1GHz there is still significant output in the bins at the extremes of the normalised PDF range 502, which correspond to the idea! optical signal peak values, but there is more in the central bins. Reducing the bandwidth to 500MHz results in a PDF 503 where there is only a small output in the peak value bins, and the central bins begin to have the largest output. With a bandwidth of 200MHz the PDF 504 has a Gaussian appearance, with minimal output at the extremes of the normalised PDF range, which would correspond to the ideal peak values. As the bandwidth is reduced still further io 100MHz, there is little output away from the central bins and the form of the PDF 505 has a stronger Gaussian appearance.
Figure 6 shows comparisons between the PDF of simulated signals and an ideal Gaussian functions. The upper plot 601 shows the case for a 10Gb/'s NRZ signal as described above passed through a monitor channel bandwidth of 680MHz, representing 6.8% of the symbol rate. These simulation results show that ihe run length has little influence on the strong correspondence with the ideal Gaussian function. Further, the run length also has little influence on the outputs at the extremities of the PDF, which is very iow. The lower plot 602 shows the comparisons with a monitor channel bandwidth of 220MHz or 2.2% of the symbol rate. In this case the correspondence with an ideal Gaussian function is very close, and no significant changes are seen with variations in run length. With this quite low relative bandwidth, there is almost no output visible at the extremes of the normalised PDF range.
Note that this type behaviour is wel! documented, for example by Wonham and Fuller (Journal of Electronics and Control, Vol 4 1958, Issue 6). This behaviour is also used in the context of instrumentation and testing, where a pseudo-random binary sequence may be used to create a continuous analogue signal which approximates closely to band-limited Gaussian white noise. An example of such a test system is reported by Feth (Behavioural Research Methods and Instrumentation, 1970, Vol. 2(4)).
It will be apparent from the foregoing discussion that the output from a monitor channel having a restricted bandwidth has a mean value related to the average optical level, as is known in prior art. It is also apparent that the observed PDF of said monitor channel output has a Gaussian form and further that the standard deviation of same is linked directly to the pk-pk range of the optical signal being monitored and the bandwidth of the monitor channel. Hence if the bandwidth of this monitor channel is known, the mean and standard deviation of the observed PDF are directly linked to the average and pk-pk optical output to be controlled.
It is an aim of some embodiments to be able to contra! the average and ER of the transmitted optical signal where the monitor signal available via a monitor channel whose bandwidth is significantly less than the symbol rate of the transmitted signal. We may therefor use the abovementioned properties and relationships to provide information to a control system intended to control the average and pk-pk optical output (or in other terms, the ER or modulation depth) of the intended system.
Figure 7 shows some embodiments according to aspects of the invention employing determination of the mean and standard deviation values of the monitor channel output to provide control of the average and ER of an optical transmit system. In this example, the optical output from the laser 201 is monitored by means of a photodiode 202, whose current is converted to a voltage by means of a trans-impedance amplifier (TIA) 203. For reasons of cost and power, the bandwidth of the combination of this amplifier and the photodiode will typically be much less than the symbol rate of the transmitted optica! signal. Hence the output 205 of the monitor TIA 203 will have a PDF that is substantially Gaussian when the transmit data has a typical information payload. The output 205 of said TIA 203 is passed to a Sow pass filter 701 to provide a signal 703 that represents an estimate of the mean value of the optical output of the laser. This mean value may then be used to control the optical intensity of the transmit laser, by adjusting the bias 725 and modulation 726 currents that supply said laser. The output of this TIA is also passed to a high pass filter 702 to remove the DC content and then passed to a circuit 704 which gives an output signal proportional to the RMS value, which will be the same as the standard deviation. A low pass filter 705 smooths this RMS signal 706 which is then used to provide inputs for a controller function 720 to adjust the bias 725 and modulation 726 currents such that the ER is set to the desired value.
In order for the abovementioned feedback paths to be able to set the average and ER values to the requirements of the system user, some reference values may be either explicitly or implicitly included in the feedback loops. In figure 7 the mean reference value 713 and the RMS reference value 716 are provided by means of a replica signal channel. The input to this repiica channel is a current 700 representing the ideal current that would be created by a photodiode with a frequency response bandwidth equai to or greater than the symbol rate.
The incoming data stream 211 is applied to a replica modulator circuit 744 which either takes its other input in terms of a modulation current 738 which is combined with a bias current 737, or alternatively as an average current and modulation current. The former arrangement is shown in this example. This modulated current 700 is passed to a TIA 710 that is a replica of the monitor photodiode TIA. Further, the gain and bandwidth of this replica amplifier 710 can be configured such that they can be made substantially identical to as those of the monitor channel, in this way, if the current from the repiica channel modulator is the same as the current from the monitor photodiode, then the mean and standard deviation of the PDF of the output 717 of the replica TIA will be the same as the output 205 from the monitor channel TIA 203. Hence the repiica channel mean and standard deviation can be used as references for the control feedback systems. In the example arrangement in figure 7 the output of the replica channe! TIA 717 is passed to a low pass filter 711 to provide a replica average value 713. It is aiso passed to a high pass filter 712 to remove any DC component and then passed to a circuit 714 which gives an output signal proportional to the RMS value which wili he the same as the standard deviation. The output from the RMS detection circuitry is then smoothed by a iow pass filter 715 to provide a reference RMS or standard deviation signal 716. The mean value signal 703 of the monitor channel and the mean value signal 713 of the replica channel are passed to a comparison function 722 and the resulting error output signal passed to a control function 720. The standard deviation value signal from the monitor channel 706 and the standard deviation from the repiica channel 716 are passed to a comparison function 721 and the resulting error output signal passed to a controi function 720. Using these error signals, the control function 720 determines the required settings for the transmit iaser bias 725 and modulation 726 currents. This control function 720 may be provided by means of analogue to digital conversion, digital computation, and digita! to analogue conversion. Alternatively, the error signals may be used to control the transmit modulation and bias currents using substantially analogue circuitry.
In order for the comparison of the monitor and repiica channels to be representative of the difference between the desired average output and ER arid the actual average and ER of the optical signal it is essential that the gain and bandwidth of the replica TIA matches that of the monitor channel TIA. Thus in order for the proposed system to function with sufficient accuracy, it is necessary to calibrate the bandwidth and gain of the replica channel such that these match those of the monitor channel. The determination of the low frequency gain is relatively straightforward, and a simple DC measurement couid be used to get an estimate. In most embodiments it is sufficient to ensure that the TIA circuit and the feedback impedances associated therewith are made identica! for the monitor and replica paths. it is clear that even if the replica 710 and monitor TIA 203 circuits are identical, the bandwidth of the monitor channel wiii depend on the characteristics of the monitor photodiode 202 used in the particular application, and in particular the capacitances associated with said photodiode. The total capacitance may be comprised of the internal junction capacitance together with packaging and wiring capacitances. Figure 8 shows such capacitance 745 in an exemplar arrangement. Thus if the monitor and replica TIA circuits are identical, then if a capacitance 746 equal to that of the monitor photodiode etc. is placed at the input of the replica channel T!A, then the bandwidths of these two channels wii! be substantially identical. To achieve the goal of having the bandwidths of the monitor and the replica channels, it is therefore necessary to determine the value of the capacitance of the photodiode 202 and associated parasitic capacitances as incorporated into the monitor channel.
Figure 9 shows an example of some embodiments that have as their aim to make such a determination of the effective capacitance associated with the monitor photodiode and to provide a repiica capacitance at the input of the replica channel TIA. An oscillator circuit 801 is provided whose frequency of oscillation is determined by the capacitance connected to a defined circuit node via a selector switch 802. in a first configuration, the photodiode 202 and associated wiring is first connected to said oscillator circuit 801, whereupon the frequency of the output signal 808 from the osciiiator will be determined by the capacitance of the photodiode and its associated wiring. This first oscillator output frequency is then measured and stored by some means, for example in a counter/'frequency detector function 803. in a second configuration, the photodiode is disconnected from the oscillator circuit 801 and in its place the selector switch 802 connects the oscillator to an array of capacitors 805 of various sizes which may be individually connected or disconnected from the replica channel by switches 807 according to some digital control value 806. The vaiue of the oscillator’s output frequency is now determined by the total value of the capacitance on the replica channel input node, and can be varied according to which of the capacitors in the array 805 are connected. The capacitor array switches are set in some defined initial state and the osciiiator output signal frequency is measured by the aforementioned means 803, and this frequency is then compared with the frequency observed when the photodiode was connected in the first configuration in a controller function 804 for setting the capacitance array switches. Any difference between the two frequencies is used by the capacitance setting system 804. The capacitors in the array 805 are then connected or disconnected according to some algorithm such that the frequency in this second configuration becomes substantially the same as the frequency observed in the first configuration when the photodiode 202 was connected. The connection of the capacitors in the array may be set initially in any arbitrary state, but it wiil be apparent that some initial configurations may be more convenient than others for the purpose of expeditiously achieving the optimum setting of the capacitor array selection switches.
It will be apparent that when this convergence of operating frequencies in the first and second configurations is achieved, it can be deduced that the capacitance 745 at the input of the monitor TIA 203 due to the photodiode 202 and the capacitance 805 at the input of the replica TIA 710 due to the capacitor array are substantially identical It further follows that if the monitor and replica TIA circuits are designed to be substantially identical, then in this condition their operating bandwidths may be taken as substantially identical. In this way the operating conditions are satisfied such that the replica channel output may be used with the monitor channel output to compare their mean and standard deviation values respectively for the purposes of controlling the optical intensity and the ER of the transmitted optica! signal.
Figure 10 show an example of some embodiments of an oscillator circuit that may be used to perform the function of generating test signals whose frequencies are substantially inversely proportional to the capacitance connected to a specified circuit node. A defined charging current 901 is supplied to the capacitance connected to said node, and the voltage on the capacitance 900 rises at a substantially linear rate until it reaches a defined upper threshold voltage 903. When the voltage on the capacitance reaches the threshold this condition is sensed by a comparison function 905 and the event registered as a logical value in some simple sequential logic 907. A resulting logical value 908 is then used to efiect the disconnection of the charging current 901 from the connected capacitance and the connection of a defined discharging current 902 so that the voltage 900 on the capacitance now connected falls at a substantially linear rate until it reaches a defined lower threshold voltage 904. On reaching said lower threshold voltage, this is sensed by a comparison function 905 and the abovementioned logical value 908 reset. This change of logical state effects the disconnection of the discharging current 902 and the re-connection of the aforementioned charging current 901. Hence the oscillation frequency is determined by the charging and discharging current, the difference between the upper and lower threshold voltages and the magnitude of the capacitance connected to the oscillator. Thus the frequency of oscillation can be used as a measure of the capacitance of either the photodiode at the TIA input, or the bank of selectable capacitors.
Prior to operating the system with an optical signal it is therefore necessary to perform the capacitance measurement and hence the associated bandwidth calibration and bandwidth matching procedure before the optical intensity and ER control loops can operate as intended. This calibration and matching procedure may be done once as part of a factory testing procedure or it may be done periodically between periods of data transmission when deployed in some application to account for environmental changes and the effects of ageing.
Whilst this invention has been described with reference to particular examples and possible embodiments thereof these should not be interpreted as restricting the scope of the invention in any way. It is to be made clear that many other possible embodiments, modifications and improvements may be incorporated into or with the invention without departing from the scope and spirit of the invention as set out in the claims.

Claims (33)

Claims
1. A system for controlling the optical intensity and modulation of an optical data transmitter comprising: current driver circuitry configured to provide a drive current to a laser diode wherein said current comprises a fixed component and a modulated component, said modulated component having a magnitude related to an input data stream, and; monitor circuitry, said monitor circuitry comprising: a photodiode; and a first transimpedance amplifier coupled to said photodiode, wherein said monitor circuity is configured to provide an output signal related to an optical intensity of said laser diode; replica monitor circuitry, said replica monitor circuitry comprising: a second transimpedance amplifier, said second transimpedance amplifier configured to be substantially identical in construction to said first transimpedance amplifier; and replica control circuitry configured to control a gain and a bandwidth of said second transimpedance amplifier to be substantially identical to said first transimpedance amplifier; a current source configured to provide a fixed current and a modulated current to an input of said second transimpedance amplifier, said modulated current having a magnitude related to said input data stream; and current driver control circuitry configured to determine a mean and a standard deviation of outputs of said first and second transimpedance amplifiers, and generate at least one control signal to control said current driver circuitry to control an average and a modulation depth of the optical intensity of said laser diode based on said mean and said standard deviation of said outputs of said first and second transimpedance amplifiers.
2. The system as in claim 1, wherein said current driver control circuitry comprises: a first low pass filter coupled to receive an output of said first transimpedance amplifier and configured to generate a first mean output related to said mean of said output of said first transimpedance amplifier.
3. The system as in any of claims 1 or 2, wherein said current driver control circuitry comprises: a second low pass filter coupled to receive an output of said second transimpedance amplifier and configured to generate a second mean output related to said mean of said output of said second transimpedance amplifier.
4. The system as in any of claims 1 to 3, wherein said current driver control circuitry further comprises: a first high pass filter coupled to receive said output of said first transimpedance amplifier; a first root-mean-square (rms) detector coupled to receive an output of said first high pass filter; and a first rms low pass filter coupled to receive an output of said first root-mean-square detector and configured to generate an output related to the standard deviation of said output of said first transimpedance amplifier.
5. The system as in any of claims 1 to 4, wherein said current driver control circuitry further comprises: a second high pass filter coupled to receive said output of said second transimpedance amplifier; a second root-mean-square (rms) detector coupled to receive an output of said second high pass filter; and a second rms low pass filter coupled to receive an output of said second root-mean-square detector and configured to generate an output related to the standard deviation of said output of said second transimpedance amplifier.
6. The system as in any of claims 1 to 5, wherein said current driver control circuitry further comprises: first comparator circuitry configured to compare said mean output of said output of said first transimpedance amplifier with said mean output of said output of said second transimpedance amplifier.
7. The system as in claim 6, wherein said current driver control circuitry further comprises: second comparator circuitry configured to compare said standard deviation output of said output of said first transimpedance amplifier with said standard deviation output of said output of said second transimpedance amplifier.
8. The system as in claim 7, wherein said current driver control circuitry further comprises a signal generator configured to generate at least one bias and modulation current driver control signal based on said first comparator circuitry and said second comparator circuitry, said at least one bias and modulation current driver control signal configured to control said average optical intensity and to control said modulation depth of said laser diode.
9. The system as in any of claims 1 to 8, wherein said replica control circuitry is configured to control said bandwidth of said second transimpedance amplifier by altering a value of a capacitance connected to said input of said second transimpedance amplifier.
10. The system as in claim 8, further comprising an oscillator circuit configured to generate a frequency output, wherein said frequency output is used to compare said capacitance connected to said input of said second transimpedance amplifier with a capacitance connected to an input of said first transimpedance amplifier.
11. The system as in claim 10, wherein said replica control circuitry comprises a capacitor controller configured to receive said frequency output of said oscillator and adjust said capacitance connected to said second transimpedance amplifier such that it becomes substantially identical to said capacitance associated with said first transimpedance amplifier.
12. A method for controlling the optical intensity and modulation of an optical data transmitter, the method comprising: providing a drive current to a laser diode wherein said current comprises a fixed component and a modulated component, said modulated component having a magnitude related to an input data stream, and; monitoring using monitor circuitry to provide an output signal related to an optical intensity of said laser diode, said monitor circuitry comprising: a photodiode; and a first transimpedance amplifier coupled to said photodiode; replicating said monitoring circuitry, using replica monitor circuitry, said replica monitor circuitry comprising: a second transimpedance amplifier, said second transimpedance amplifier configured to be substantially identical in construction to said first transimpedance amplifier; and replica control circuitry configured to control a gain and a bandwidth of said second transimpedance amplifier to be substantially identical to said first transimpedance amplifier; providing a fixed current and a modulated current to an input of said second transimpedance amplifier using a current source, said modulated current having a magnitude related to said input data stream; determining a mean and a standard deviation of outputs of the first and second transimpedance amplifiers; and generating at least one control signal to control said current driver circuitry to control an average and modulation depth of the optical intensity of said laser diode based on said mean and said standard deviation of the outputs of said first and second transimpedance amplifiers.
13. The method as in claim 12, wherein said determining a mean and a standard deviation of outputs of the first and second transimpedance amplifiers comprises: coupling a first low pass filter to receive an output of said first transimpedance amplifier and generating a first mean output related to said mean of said output of said first transimpedance amplifier.
14. The method as in any of claims 12 or 13, wherein said determining a mean and a standard deviation of outputs of the first and second transimpedance amplifiers comprises: coupling a second low pass filter to receive an output of said second transimpedance amplifier and generating a second mean output related to said mean of said output of said second transimpedance amplifier.
15. The method as in any of claims 12 to 14, wherein determining a mean and a standard deviation of outputs of the first and second transimpedance amplifiers further comprises: coupling a first high pass filter to receive said output of said first transimpedance amplifier; coupling a first root-mean-square (rms) detector to receive an output of said first high pass filter; coupling a first rms low pass filter to receive an output of said first root-mean-square detector; and generating an output related to the standard deviation of said output of said first transimpedance amplifier.
16. The method as in any of claims 12 to 15, wherein said determining a mean and a standard deviation of outputs of the first and second transimpedance amplifiers comprises: coupling a second high pass filter to receive said output of said second transimpedance amplifier; coupling a second root-mean-square (rms) detector to receive an output of said second high pass filter; coupling a second rms low pass filter to receive an output of said second root-mean-square detector; and generating an output related to the standard deviation of said output of said second transimpedance amplifier.
17. The method as in any of claims 12 to 16, wherein generating at least one control signal to control said current driver circuitry to control an average and modulation depth of the optical intensity of said laser diode based on said mean and said standard deviation of the outputs of said first and second transimpedance amplifiers further comprises: comparing said mean output of said output of said first transimpedance amplifier with said mean output of said output of said second transimpedance amplifier.
18. The method as in claim 17, wherein generating at least one control signal to control said current driver circuitry to control an average and modulation depth of the optical intensity of said laser diode based on said mean and said standard deviation of the outputs of said first and second transimpedance amplifiers further comprises: comparing said standard deviation output of said output of said first transimpedance amplifier with said standard deviation output of said output of said second transimpedance amplifier.
19. The method as in claim 18, wherein generating at least one control signal to control said current driver circuitry to control an average and modulation depth of the optical intensity of said laser diode based on said mean and said standard deviation of the outputs of said first and second transimpedance amplifiers further comprises generating at least one bias and modulation current driver control signal based on said first comparator circuitry and said second comparator circuitry, said at least one bias and modulation current driver control signal configured to control said average optical intensity and to control said modulation depth of said laser diode.
20. The method as in any of claims 12 to 19, wherein controlling said bandwidth of said second transimpedance amplifier comprises altering a value of a capacitance connected to said input of said second transimpedance amplifier.
21. The method as in claim 19, further comprising generating a frequency output, wherein said frequency output is used to compare said capacitance connected to said input of said second transimpedance amplifier with a capacitance connected to an input of said first transimpedance amplifier.
22. The method as in claim 21, wherein controlling a gain and a bandwidth of said second transimpedance amplifier to be substantially identical to said first transimpedance amplifier comprises: receiving said frequency output of said oscillator; and adjusting said capacitance connected to said second transimpedance amplifier such that it becomes substantially identical to said capacitance associated with said first transimpedance amplifier.
23. An apparatus for controlling the optical intensity and modulation of an optical data transmitter, said apparatus comprising: means for providing a drive current to a laser diode wherein said current comprises a fixed component and a modulated component, said modulated component having a magnitude related to an input data stream, and; means for monitoring using monitor circuitry to provide an output signal related to an optical intensity of said laser diode, said monitor circuitry comprising: a photodiode; and a first transimpedance amplifier coupled to said photodiode; means for replicating said monitoring circuitry, using replica monitor circuitry, said replica monitor circuitry comprising: a second transimpedance amplifier, said second transimpedance amplifier configured to be substantially identical in construction to said first transimpedance amplifier; and replica control circuitry configured to control a gain and a bandwidth of said second transimpedance amplifier to be substantially identical to said first transimpedance amplifier; means for providing a fixed current and a modulated current to an input of said second transimpedance amplifier using a current source, said modulated current having a magnitude related to said input data stream; means for determining a mean and a standard deviation of outputs of the first and second transimpedance amplifiers; and means for generating at least one control signal to control said current driver circuitry to control an average and modulation depth of the optical intensity of said laser diode based on said mean and said standard deviation of the outputs of said first and second transimpedance amplifiers.
24. The apparatus as in claim 23, wherein said means for determining a mean and a standard deviation of outputs of the first and second transimpedance amplifiers comprises: first means for low pass filtering an output of said first transimpedance amplifier and generating a first mean output related to said mean of said output of said first transimpedance amplifier.
25. The apparatus as in any of claims 23 or 24, wherein said means for determining a mean and a standard deviation of outputs of the first and second transimpedance amplifiers comprises: second means for low pass filtering an output of said second transimpedance amplifier and generating a second mean output related to said mean of said output of said second transimpedance amplifier.
26. The apparatus as in any of claims 23 to 25, wherein means for determining a mean and a standard deviation of outputs of the first and second transimpedance amplifiers further comprises: first means for high pass filtering said output of said first transimpedance amplifier; first means for root-mean-square (rms) detecting an output of said first means for high pass filtering; first rms means for low pass filtering an output of said first means for root-mean-square detecting and generating an output related to the standard deviation of said output of said first transimpedance amplifier.
27. The apparatus as in any of claims 23 to 26, wherein said means for determining a mean and a standard deviation of outputs of the first and second transimpedance amplifiers comprises: second means for high pass filtering said output of said second transimpedance amplifier; second means for root-mean-square (rms) detecting an output of said means for second high pass filtering; second rms means for low pass filtering to receive an output of said second means for root-mean-square detecting and generating an output related to the standard deviation of said output of said second transimpedance amplifier.
28. The apparatus as in any of claims 23 to 27, wherein means for generating at least one control signal to control said current driver circuitry to control an average and modulation depth of the optical intensity of said laser diode based on said mean and said standard deviation of the outputs of said first and second transimpedance amplifiers further comprises: means for comparing said mean output of said output of said first transimpedance amplifier with said mean output of said output of said second transimpedance amplifier.
29. The apparatus as in claim 28, wherein means for generating at least one control signal to control said current driver circuitry to control an average and modulation depth of the optical intensity of said laser diode based on said mean and said standard deviation of the outputs of said first and second transimpedance amplifiers further comprises: means for comparing said standard deviation output of said output of said first transimpedance amplifier with said standard deviation output of said output of said second transimpedance amplifier.
30. The apparatus as in claim 29, wherein means for generating at least one control signal to control said current driver circuitry to control an average and modulation depth of the optical intensity of said laser diode based on said mean and said standard deviation of the outputs of said first and second transimpedance amplifiers further comprises means for generating at least one bias and modulation current driver control signal based on said first comparator circuitry and said second comparator circuitry, said at least one bias and modulation current driver control signal configured to control said average optical intensity and to control said modulation depth of said laser diode.
31. The apparatus as in any of claims 23 to 30, wherein means for controlling said bandwidth of said second transimpedance amplifier comprises means for altering a value of a capacitance connected to said input of said second transimpedance amplifier.
32. The apparatus as in claim 30, further comprising means for generating a frequency output, wherein said frequency output is used to compare said capacitance connected to said input of said second transimpedance amplifier with a capacitance connected to an input of said first transimpedance amplifier.
33. The apparatus as in claim 32, wherein means for controlling a gain and a bandwidth of said second transimpedance amplifier to be substantially identical to said first transimpedance amplifier comprises: means for receiving said frequency output of said oscillator; and means for adjusting said capacitance connected to said second transimpedance amplifier such that it becomes substantially identical to said capacitance associated with said first transimpedance amplifier.
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