US20030118303A1 - Waveguide fiber dispersion compensating regenerator - Google Patents

Waveguide fiber dispersion compensating regenerator Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US20030118303A1
US20030118303A1 US09/974,533 US97453301A US2003118303A1 US 20030118303 A1 US20030118303 A1 US 20030118303A1 US 97453301 A US97453301 A US 97453301A US 2003118303 A1 US2003118303 A1 US 2003118303A1
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
optical
dispersion
regenerator
waveguide fiber
fiber
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.)
Granted
Application number
US09/974,533
Other versions
US6587606B1 (en
Inventor
Alan Evans
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.)
Corning Inc
Original Assignee
Corning 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 Corning Inc filed Critical Corning Inc
Priority to US09/974,533 priority Critical patent/US6587606B1/en
Assigned to CORNING INCORPORATED reassignment CORNING INCORPORATED ASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST (SEE DOCUMENT FOR DETAILS). Assignors: EVANS, ALAN F.
Publication of US20030118303A1 publication Critical patent/US20030118303A1/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of US6587606B1 publication Critical patent/US6587606B1/en
Adjusted expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Fee Related legal-status Critical Current

Links

Images

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
    • H04B10/25Arrangements specific to fibre transmission
    • H04B10/2507Arrangements specific to fibre transmission for the reduction or elimination of distortion or dispersion
    • H04B10/25077Arrangements specific to fibre transmission for the reduction or elimination of distortion or dispersion using soliton propagation

Definitions

  • the present invention relates generally to a signal regenerator for use in an optical communication system, and particularly to such a regenerator that combines dispersion compensation with the saturable absorption properties of a nonlinear optical loop mirror or a nonlinear amplifying loop mirror.
  • Dispersion management is enabled by the property of waveguides fibers that allows adjustment of the waveguide dispersion by alteration of the optical waveguide fiber refractive index profile.
  • the waveguide dispersion can be made to substantially cancel, i.e., subtract from, the material dispersion to provide a waveguide fiber having a total dispersion near zero over an extended wavelength range.
  • the total dispersion of a waveguide fiber (also called the chromatic dispersion or the group velocity dispersion) is the algebraic sum of the waveguide dispersion and the material dispersion of the optical waveguide fiber.
  • the convention in the art is to assign a positive value to total dispersion if the total dispersion causes light of shorter wavelength to travel at a higher speed in the fiber in comparison to the speed of longer wavelength light. Conversely, negative total dispersion causes light of longer wavelength to travel at higher speed in the fiber.
  • the waveguide dispersion can be altered to provide waveguide fibers that have a zero dispersion wavelength at any point in a wide wavelength range.
  • zero dispersion wavelength of a waveguide fiber can be placed anywhere in the range from 200 nm to 2000 nm.
  • the slope of the total dispersion can be made positive or negative essentially independently of the placement of the zero dispersion wavelength.
  • the accumulated dispersion of a system is determined by adding the dispersion products of the waveguides that make up the system length and dividing by the total system length.
  • the dispersion product of a waveguide fiber is defined as the total dispersion of the waveguide fiber in ps/nm-km multiplied by the length of the fiber.
  • Dispersion management As a valuable adjunct to dispersion management is the optical amplifier, which is used to manage attenuation. Dispersion management combined with optical amplification raises the possibility of a dispersion and attenuation free system, having repeater spacing limited only by spontaneous noise from the amplifiers, frequency chirping of the signal source, and non-linear optical effects.
  • a signal regenerator module that, in addition to compensating dispersion and attenuation, also removed spontaneous noise, pulse timing jitter, and reduced or eliminated non-linear effects would serve to greatly decrease system cost by preserving signal pulse integrity in systems having larger regenerator spacing than is possible with present systems using standard regenerators.
  • timing jitter due to amplified spontaneous emission (ASE) is reduced, signal-to-noise-ratio in the receiver (SNR) is improved, the impact of discrete amplifier power perturbations is reduced, and the deleterious effects of signal collisions or multi-wavelength signal interactions is reduced.
  • SNR signal-to-noise-ratio in the receiver
  • the combination can be configured to further enhance the beneficial effect on the varying-soliton signals.
  • varying-soliton(s) is used to describe RZ (return to zero) signal pulse(s), i.e., soliton pulses whose amplitude, width, or shape are caused to vary along at least a portion of the waveguide fiber, in particular along the waveguide fibers of the dispersion compensating optical regenerator in accord with the invention.
  • RZ return to zero
  • This designation of varying-soliton distinguishes the signal pulses of the present application from those that propagate in systems designed to maintain ideal, i.e., invariant, soliton signals. It also distinguishes the signal pulses of the present application from non-return-to-zero pulses used in commercial systems today.
  • One aspect of the present invention is a dispersion compensating optical regenerator for use in a waveguide fiber telecommunications system.
  • This passive optical component combines the functions of dispersion compensation with signal regeneration, where signal regeneration includes recovering signal amplitude and shape.
  • the dispersion compensating optical regenerator system comprises a positive total dispersion waveguide fiber for the transmission fiber and a negative total dispersion waveguide fiber for dispersion compensation, where the negative dispersion waveguide fiber is a part of a non-linear optical loop mirror (NOLM) or a non-linear amplifying loop mirror (NALM).
  • NOLM non-linear optical loop mirror
  • NALM non-linear amplifying loop mirror
  • the respective positive and negative total dispersion waveguide fibers have respective lengths and total dispersion magnitudes selected to provide a pre-selected amount of dispersion compensation.
  • the waveguide fiber dispersion products i.e., the product obtained by multiplying fiber total dispersion by fiber length, of the respective waveguide fibers are added algebraically.
  • the respective fiber lengths and dispersions are chosen such that the magnitude of the algebraic sum is made to fall within a desired range.
  • An advantageous range is one that does not include zero, thereby limiting resonant non-linear phenomenon of four wave mixing.
  • Another advantageous range choice is one in which the algebraic sum is positive, thereby allowing for formation and propagation of soliton pulses.
  • the invention is particularly suited for use in varying-soliton transmission as will be pointed out in the detailed description below.
  • the upper limit of the algebraic sum should be small to limit dispersion power penalty.
  • a preferred range of total average dispersion of the system is 0.01 to 5.0 ps/nm-km and a more preferred range is 0.1 to 1 ps/nm-km.
  • the phase shifting means is an asymmetrical coupler that divides the signal pulses into counter-propagating pulses having different amplitude.
  • the higher amplitude pulses corresponding to one of the propagation directions will undergo a larger phase shift due to self phase modulation.
  • the respective amplitudes of the counter-propagating pulses are made asymmetric by an optical amplifier asymmetrically placed along the length of the optical waveguide fiber comprising the loop mirror.
  • An alternative statement of the asymmetric placement of the optical amplifier is that the length of the fiber of the loop mirror coupled to one port of the amplifier is different from the length coupled to the other port of the amplifier.
  • the optical amplifier has two ports, one for signal input and one for signal output, where the ports are symmetrical in that either port can be the input or output port.
  • the optical amplifier can be selected to amplify the varying-soliton signals coupled out of the loop mirror to an extent that the insertion loss due to the loop mirror (signal power lost in traversing the loop mirror) is compensated. This selection of amplifier obviates the need for a post-loop-mirror-amplifier sometimes used to compensate loop mirror insertion loss.
  • a polarization controller coupled in series with the waveguide fiber of the loop mirror can be used to insure that low intensities come out the input of the central coupler, i.e., are reflected, while high intensities come out the output of the central couple, i.e., are transmitted.
  • a polarization controller is known to produce a linear phase shift in signals passing therethrough such that it controls the fiber port through which the signal exits the loop.
  • a phase shift of 180 degrees ( ⁇ radians) between the counter-propagating signals is desirable, because the 180 degree phase shift insures maximum signal power is coupled out of the loop mirror.
  • the phase shifting means can be selected from the group consisting of an asymmetrical coupler or an asymmetrically placed optical amplifier, either a discrete erbium-doped fiber amplifier (EDFA) or a Raman optical amplifier. Any combination of these phase shifting means can be used to obtained the desired phase shift, which in most systems is a 180 degree ( ⁇ radians) phase shift.
  • EDFA discrete erbium-doped fiber amplifier
  • Raman optical amplifier any combination of these phase shifting means can be used to obtained the desired phase shift, which in most systems is a 180 degree ( ⁇ radians) phase shift.
  • an EDFA could be used together with an asymmetrical coupler, where the amplifier could be used to compensate for too high or two low an asymmetric power division of the signals by the coupler.
  • Asymmetric Raman amplification is created in the fiber loop by coupling pump light into the loop fiber in only one direction near the central coupler. Amplification is highest where the pump power is greatest. In fact, Raman gain in units of decibels is directly proportional to pump power in linear units of Watts.
  • the optical waveguide fiber of the loop mirror is selected to have a negative total dispersion in the range of ⁇ 70 ps/nm-km to ⁇ 100 ps/nm-km.
  • the negative dispersion waveguide fiber of the loop mirror has an effective area in the range 20 ⁇ m 2 to 40 ⁇ m 2 and a non-linear refractive index not less than 2 ⁇ 10 ⁇ 20 m 2 /Watt, where the watt refers to the signal pulse power.
  • the negative total dispersion of the fiber of the loop mirror is in the range ⁇ 80 ps/nm-km to ⁇ 90 ps/nm-km, the effective area is in the range 20 ⁇ m 2 to 30 ⁇ m 2 , and the non-linear refractive index is in the range 2.5 m 2 /W to 4 m 2 /W.
  • a further embodiment of the invention includes an optical preamplifier coupled to the regenerator to increase the amplitude of signals propagating from the preamplifier to the loop mirror such that the signal amplitude in the loop mirror is above the threshold amplitude at which the signal undergoes self phase modulation.
  • the present invention is an optical waveguide telecommunication system which includes a signal transmitter optically coupled to a signal receiver by means of an optical waveguide fiber.
  • a dispersion compensating optical regenerator as set forth in the first aspect of the invention.
  • the telecommunications system is particularly suited to varying-soliton pulse propagation because of the features of the dispersion compensating optical regenerator.
  • FIG. 1 and FIG. 2 are schematic illustrations of embodiments of the dispersion compensating optical regenerator in accord with the invention.
  • FIG. 3 is a schematic illustration of a telecommunications system incorporating a dispersion compensating optical regenerator in accord with the invention.
  • FIG. 1 An exemplary embodiment of the dispersion compensating optical regenerator of the present invention is shown in FIG. 1.
  • the dispersion compensating optical regenerator is installed following a first optical waveguide fiber 4 having positive dispersion.
  • Optical wavelength fiber 4 is the transmission fiber span.
  • the length of fiber 4 is measured from the output port of intensity dependent coupler 6 to the input port of the next intensity dependent coupler of the nearest NOLM or NALM and is typically 60 to 100 km.
  • a NOLM as defined in this document includes coupler 6 , negative total dispersion fiber 2 and an optional signal polarization controller 8 .
  • a NALM configuration is illustrated in FIG. 1 and incorporates the features of the NOLM and further includes optical amplifier 10 , which is asymmetrically located along loop fiber 2 .
  • fiber 2 included in the dispersion compensating optical regenerator in accord with the invention is typical single mode optical waveguide fiber.
  • the dispersion compensating optical regenerator can include waveguide fibers which support more than one mode for at least a part of the fiber length.
  • a fiber transmitting the fundamental mode and 2 or 3 higher order modes may be employed in the regenerator in accord with the invention.
  • FIG. 2 illustrates the simplest form of NOLM, which includes loop fiber 2 (extra length of fiber 2 being illustrated by fiber loops 12 ) and asymmetrical coupler 6 ′.
  • the relative phase shift between the counter-propagating varying-soliton signals of the NOLM is due to the asymmetry of coupler 6 ′, which divides the pulses into counter-propagating pulses of different amplitude.
  • Coupler 6 of the NALM of FIG. 1 may be symmetric or asymmetric because other phase shifting means, i.e., an asymmetrically placed optical amplifier and an optional polarization controller, are incorporated into the NALM.
  • pulses propagating in positive total dispersion waveguide fiber 4 are amplified at optional preamplifier 14 and proceed to respective intensity dependent couplers 6 or 6 ′.
  • Preamplifier 14 is required in those cases for which the signal pulse amplitude is below the signal amplitude needed for self phase modulation, the non-linear phenomenon which acts together with the linear dispersion of the fiber to form varying soliton pulses.
  • Preamplifier 14 can also be designed to lower the overall noise figure of the optical regenerator by acting as a low-noise preamplifier.
  • coupler 6 splits the signal pulses into counter-propagating pulses in loop fiber 2 .
  • the loop fiber 2 has a length measured from the input to the output port of coupler 6 .
  • the loops 12 which appear in each of FIGS. 1, 2, and 3 , schematically represent extra length of fiber 2 so that the length of fiber 2 will not to be construed as the circumference of the loop of fiber shown in the figures.
  • the counter-propagating pulses arrive back at coupler 6 after having undergone a relative phase shift in traversing fiber 2 of the NALM.
  • the counter-propagating pulses have undergone a relative phase shift of ⁇ radians, they will interfere constructively at coupler 6 and be coupled out of the loop into the positive total dispersion fiber 4 that is a part of the next transmission fiber span.
  • the signal power coupled out of the loop mirror decreases as the relative phase shift deviates farther and farther from the ideal relative phase shift of ⁇ radians.
  • Post-amplifier 16 compensates for signal power lost in traversing the loop mirror and sets the launch power into the next transmission fiber 4 .
  • Post-amplifier 16 is not needed if loop amplifier 10 is chosen to compensate for signal power lost in traversing the loop mirror and the pre-amplifier compensates for the loss of fiber 4
  • Pulses propagating in the NALM of FIG. 1 or in the NOLM of FIG. 2 having an amplitude too small to undergo a relative phase shift sufficiently close to ⁇ radians to couple out of the NALM or NOLM are reflected at respective couplers 6 or 6 ′ and so are separated from the signal coupled out of the NALM or NOLM.
  • ASE and lower amplitude wavelengths making up the signal pulse tails will be reflected in the NALM or NOLM.
  • the NALM serves to amplify and reshape the signal pulses propagating therethrough.
  • the NOLM reshapes the pulses propagating therethrough and the amplification function is carried out by pre- or post-amplifiers.
  • the full benefit provided by the dispersion compensating optical regenerator in accord with the invention can be understood by tracking the RZ varying-soliton signal pulse width as the signal traverses the dispersion compensating optical regenerator.
  • a varying-soliton is coupled into positive dispersion waveguide fiber 4 either from a light source or the output of a dispersion compensating optical regenerator upstream of fiber 4 .
  • the pulse will increase in width due to the increasing imbalance between self phase modulation and linear dispersion of fiber 4 .
  • the pulse Upon being amplified and coupled into the NALM the pulse begins to decrease in width due to the negative total dispersion of loop fiber 2 .
  • the decrease in width of the pulse will continue through the entire length of fiber 2 or the pulse will begin to increase in width after the negative dispersion of fiber 2 has canceled the width increasing effect of positive dispersion fiber 4 .
  • the varying-soliton RZ pulse will be reshaped by the NALM as described above.
  • the action of the dispersion compensating optical regenerator in accord with the invention is to cause the signal pulses to oscillate in width, (as described immediately above) amplitude, (pulse amplitude decreases when the pulse traverses the fiber and the pulse is increased in amplitude by the amplifiers), and in shape, (the original shape being changed due to the several sources of noise, dispersion, and attenuation, and then recovered in the NALM or NOLM).
  • the signal pulses return to their original width at the halfway point of each of the respective fibers.
  • the respective lengths of fibers 2 and 4 , L t and L loop are determined by the total dispersion of each of the fibers D t and D loop , and the desired average dispersion of the span ⁇ D>, the span being defined as the sum of the respective lengths of fibers 2 and 4 .
  • the equation relating these quantities is,
  • a typical span including a dispersion compensating optical regenerator in accord with the invention is one in which the desired average dispersion of the span, ⁇ D>, is 0.05 ps/nm-km, the dispersion of fiber 2 , D t , is 17 ps/nm-km and the length, L t is 80 km, and the dispersion of fiber 4 , is ⁇ 85 ps/nm-km.
  • is 3 to 5.
  • Optimum ⁇ for varying-soliton interactions is 3.52.
  • Gaussian pulses are the stable pulse shape for the dispersion compensating optical regenerator operating within the ⁇ range 3 to 20. Gaussian pulses have their characteristic smaller optical intensity tails which serve to reduce interactions between neighboring pulses (varying-solitons). The width oscillation of the varying-soliton signal pulses also average out Fourier terms in the pulse tails further reducing the interaction of neighboring pulses. Further, the high local dispersion in each of fibers 2 and 4 causes the non-linear RZ pulses, such as varying-soliton pulses, to rapidly sweep through one another, thereby limiting the interaction time between pulses in different, particularly adjacent, channels. Thus, the amount of non-linear four wave mixing (FWM) and cross phase modulation (XPM) are reduced.
  • FWM non-linear four wave mixing
  • XPM cross phase modulation
  • NOLM/NALM is single channel devices because inter-channel nonlinearities (FWM and XPM) significantly degrade the performance of the nonlinear optical switching of the loop.
  • the embodiments of this invention will not suffer from this problem and may be used for multi-signal channels.
  • the signal pulse width oscillation causes signal pulses in adjacent channels to sweep back and forth through one another many times, thereby increasing the interaction length.
  • An increase in interaction length serves to average out power fluctuations caused by distributed loss (fiber attenuation) and discrete amplification.
  • the non-linear RZ pulses (varying-solitons) which result from use of the dispersion compensating optical regenerator in accord with the invention, afford superior means for transmitting information through optical waveguide fibers as compared to the ideal soliton configuration in which the system design is directed to forming spatial and temporal invariant soliton pulses.
  • the desired configuration is one in which the gain of the dispersion compensating optical regenerator is equal to the sum of fiber losses and NALM or NOLM insertion loss. The regenerator balances the system loss and gain.
  • the desired gain may be calculated as follows.
  • a typical attenuation coefficient of fiber 2 is 0.20 dB/km and that of fiber 4 is 0.40 dB/km.
  • the insertion loss in the NALM or NOLM coupler is typically 0.5 dB.
  • This amplification can be provided by G pre the gain of the pre-amplifier 14 , G loop the gain of the loop amplifier 10 in the case of a NALM, and G post the gain of the post-amplifier 16 .
  • the total gain provided by the amplifiers in this case is,
  • desired gain provided by the pre-amplifier 14 and the loop amplifier 10 is sufficient to produce a phase shift in the NALM of 180 degrees ( ⁇ radians).
  • desired phase shift may be expressed as:
  • n 2 is the non-linear coefficient
  • L eff the effective length is given by (1 ⁇ exp( ⁇ loop L loop ⁇ 1), where ⁇ loop is the loop attenuation coefficient, P in in the peak power input to the dispersion compensating optical regenerator, and B is the power splitting ratio of coupler 6 .
  • the above equation may be solved in terms of G loop .
  • L loop 15.94 km
  • ⁇ loop 0.4 dB/km
  • n 2 3.0 ⁇ 10 ⁇ 20 m 2 /W
  • a eff 25 ⁇ m 2
  • B 0.5 (the phase shift is solely due to the asymmetric location of the loop amplifier) one obtains:
  • FIG. 3 is illustrated an example of a telecommunication system made using the dispersion compensating optical regenerator in accord with the invention.
  • the illustration in FIG. 3 shows the amplifiers as being optical fiber amplifiers (such as erbium doped fiber amplifiers) being pumped by laser light coupled into the fiber circuit by appropriate couplers.
  • FIG. 3 shows only a single regenerator in accord with the invention together with transmission fiber 4 that transmits the filtered and dispersion compensated pulses from the regenerator to receiver 22 .
  • a typical telecommunication system typically includes a plurality of dispersion compensating optical regenerator in accord with the invention. However, the action of the regenerators is repetitive so that one need only explain the operation of one such regenerator.
  • RZ signal pulses are launched into fiber 4 from transmitter 20 .
  • the RZ pulses behave as varying-solitons.
  • the varying-soliton pulses are amplified at preamplifier 14 which is pumped by a pump laser (not shown) coupled to fiber 4 via couple 24 .
  • the varying-soliton pulses are divided into counter-propagating pulses in negative dispersion fiber 2 by coupler 6 .
  • the counter-propagating varying-solitons are amplified by asymmetrically placed loop amplifier 10 which is pumped by a pump laser (not shown) coupled into fiber 2 via coupler 24 .
  • the counter-propagating signal pulses are phase shifted by ⁇ radians in the NALM.
  • the phase shift does not have to be exactly ⁇ radians to achieve coupling of the signal out of the loop mirror.
  • the switching of the varying-soliton pulses through the NALM is most efficient when the relative phase shift is ⁇ radians.
  • a tolerance of +/ ⁇ 10% about the desired ⁇ radian phase shift is acceptable.
  • the loop mirror serves its known purpose of filtering out lower amplitude noise thereby restoring the original pulse shape.
  • the source of the amplitude noise can be either amplified spontaneous emission from the EDFAs or Raman amplifiers or dispersive waves generated from frequency chirp in the transmitter, polarization mode dispersion or imperfections in the dispersion map.
  • the varying soliton signals are dispersion compensated as well.
  • a typical selection of respective lengths and dispersions of fibers 4 and 2 brings the varying soliton pulse back to its original shape near the middle of each length of positive and negative dispersion waveguide fiber.
  • the dispersion compensated, filtered varying-soliton pulses are coupled out of the NALM by coupler 6 and are transported through post amplifier 16 (pumped by a pump laser not shown via coupler 24 ) and into fiber 4 which is optically connected to receiver 22 .
  • the dispersion compensating optical regenerator in accord with the invention is suited for use in upgrading systems which use non-linear RZ pulses in that the variation of the pulses that occur as the pulse traverses the regenerator provide for beneficial dispersion effects and reduces impact of pulse collisions or interactions.
  • the dispersion compensating optical regenerator in accord with the invention is compatible with system designs which place the compensation waveguide fiber in the center of the system spans.

Abstract

Disclosed is a dispersion compensating optical regenerator that provides for enhanced performance of telecommunication systems employing varying-soliton signal propagation and dispersion compensation. Allowing the solitons to change in amplitude, width and shape while traversing the dispersion compensating optical regenerator provides for beneficial system performance including improved signal to noise ratio at the receiver, reduced impact of signal interactions, and longer regenerator spacing. The regenerator in accord with the invention combines the filtering features of a NOLM or NALM with the advantageous effects of dispersion compensation.

Description

    CROSS-REFERENCES TO RELATED APPLICATIONS
  • This application claims the benefit of and priority to U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 60/242,249, filed Oct. 20, 2000.[0001]
  • BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
  • 1. Field of the Invention [0002]
  • The present invention relates generally to a signal regenerator for use in an optical communication system, and particularly to such a regenerator that combines dispersion compensation with the saturable absorption properties of a nonlinear optical loop mirror or a nonlinear amplifying loop mirror. [0003]
  • 2. Technical Background [0004]
  • The concept of dispersion management emerged early in the development stages of optical waveguide systems. Dispersion management is enabled by the property of waveguides fibers that allows adjustment of the waveguide dispersion by alteration of the optical waveguide fiber refractive index profile. In particular, the waveguide dispersion can be made to substantially cancel, i.e., subtract from, the material dispersion to provide a waveguide fiber having a total dispersion near zero over an extended wavelength range. The total dispersion of a waveguide fiber (also called the chromatic dispersion or the group velocity dispersion) is the algebraic sum of the waveguide dispersion and the material dispersion of the optical waveguide fiber. The convention in the art is to assign a positive value to total dispersion if the total dispersion causes light of shorter wavelength to travel at a higher speed in the fiber in comparison to the speed of longer wavelength light. Conversely, negative total dispersion causes light of longer wavelength to travel at higher speed in the fiber. [0005]
  • The waveguide dispersion can be altered to provide waveguide fibers that have a zero dispersion wavelength at any point in a wide wavelength range. For example zero dispersion wavelength of a waveguide fiber can be placed anywhere in the range from 200 nm to 2000 nm. In addition, the slope of the total dispersion can be made positive or negative essentially independently of the placement of the zero dispersion wavelength. These capabilities allow dispersion compensation to be achieved by altering the sign of the total dispersion along the length of an individual waveguide fiber. Further, dispersion compensation can be achieved on an overall system basis by forming the system of positive and negative waveguide fibers. The accumulated dispersion of a system is determined by adding the dispersion products of the waveguides that make up the system length and dividing by the total system length. The dispersion product of a waveguide fiber is defined as the total dispersion of the waveguide fiber in ps/nm-km multiplied by the length of the fiber. [0006]
  • As a valuable adjunct to dispersion management is the optical amplifier, which is used to manage attenuation. Dispersion management combined with optical amplification raises the possibility of a dispersion and attenuation free system, having repeater spacing limited only by spontaneous noise from the amplifiers, frequency chirping of the signal source, and non-linear optical effects. [0007]
  • A signal regenerator module that, in addition to compensating dispersion and attenuation, also removed spontaneous noise, pulse timing jitter, and reduced or eliminated non-linear effects would serve to greatly decrease system cost by preserving signal pulse integrity in systems having larger regenerator spacing than is possible with present systems using standard regenerators. [0008]
  • Recent theoretical and experimental (PCT WO 98/36512; Golovchenko et al, Electronics Letters, v. 33, n. 9, p. 73, (1997); Nakawaw, et al, IEEE Photonics Technology Letters, v. 8, n. 8, p. 1088, 1996; F. Favre. Et al, Electronic Letters, v. 33, n. 25, p. 2135, (1997); T. Yu, Optics Letters, v. 22, n. 11, p. 793, (1997)) work in dispersion managed systems employing a return-to-zero (RZ) format for soliton signals has shown that allowing the RZ soliton signals to alternately broaden in highly dispersive optical waveguide fiber of one sign and then contract in highly dispersive optical waveguide fiber of the other sign has a beneficial impact on overall signal integrity. For example, the RZ soliton signals could broaden in positive dispersion optical fiber and then contract in negative dispersion optical fiber. In particular in varying-soliton signals, timing jitter due to amplified spontaneous emission (ASE) is reduced, signal-to-noise-ratio in the receiver (SNR) is improved, the impact of discrete amplifier power perturbations is reduced, and the deleterious effects of signal collisions or multi-wavelength signal interactions is reduced. [0009]
  • An opportunity therefore exists to exploit this advantageous combination in systems using an RZ format. Furthermore, the combination can be configured to further enhance the beneficial effect on the varying-soliton signals. [0010]
  • SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
  • Throughout this application the term varying-soliton(s) is used to describe RZ (return to zero) signal pulse(s), i.e., soliton pulses whose amplitude, width, or shape are caused to vary along at least a portion of the waveguide fiber, in particular along the waveguide fibers of the dispersion compensating optical regenerator in accord with the invention. This designation of varying-soliton distinguishes the signal pulses of the present application from those that propagate in systems designed to maintain ideal, i.e., invariant, soliton signals. It also distinguishes the signal pulses of the present application from non-return-to-zero pulses used in commercial systems today. [0011]
  • One aspect of the present invention is a dispersion compensating optical regenerator for use in a waveguide fiber telecommunications system. This passive optical component combines the functions of dispersion compensation with signal regeneration, where signal regeneration includes recovering signal amplitude and shape. The dispersion compensating optical regenerator system comprises a positive total dispersion waveguide fiber for the transmission fiber and a negative total dispersion waveguide fiber for dispersion compensation, where the negative dispersion waveguide fiber is a part of a non-linear optical loop mirror (NOLM) or a non-linear amplifying loop mirror (NALM). The respective positive and negative total dispersion waveguide fibers have respective lengths and total dispersion magnitudes selected to provide a pre-selected amount of dispersion compensation. In particular, the waveguide fiber dispersion products, i.e., the product obtained by multiplying fiber total dispersion by fiber length, of the respective waveguide fibers are added algebraically. The respective fiber lengths and dispersions are chosen such that the magnitude of the algebraic sum is made to fall within a desired range. [0012]
  • An advantageous range is one that does not include zero, thereby limiting resonant non-linear phenomenon of four wave mixing. Another advantageous range choice is one in which the algebraic sum is positive, thereby allowing for formation and propagation of soliton pulses. The invention is particularly suited for use in varying-soliton transmission as will be pointed out in the detailed description below. The upper limit of the algebraic sum should be small to limit dispersion power penalty. Thus a preferred range of total average dispersion of the system is 0.01 to 5.0 ps/nm-km and a more preferred range is 0.1 to 1 ps/nm-km. [0013]
  • In an embodiment of this first aspect of the invention, the phase shifting means is an asymmetrical coupler that divides the signal pulses into counter-propagating pulses having different amplitude. The higher amplitude pulses corresponding to one of the propagation directions will undergo a larger phase shift due to self phase modulation. [0014]
  • In another embodiment, the respective amplitudes of the counter-propagating pulses are made asymmetric by an optical amplifier asymmetrically placed along the length of the optical waveguide fiber comprising the loop mirror. An alternative statement of the asymmetric placement of the optical amplifier is that the length of the fiber of the loop mirror coupled to one port of the amplifier is different from the length coupled to the other port of the amplifier. In this case the optical amplifier has two ports, one for signal input and one for signal output, where the ports are symmetrical in that either port can be the input or output port. The optical amplifier can be selected to amplify the varying-soliton signals coupled out of the loop mirror to an extent that the insertion loss due to the loop mirror (signal power lost in traversing the loop mirror) is compensated. This selection of amplifier obviates the need for a post-loop-mirror-amplifier sometimes used to compensate loop mirror insertion loss. [0015]
  • In either of the above embodiments, a polarization controller coupled in series with the waveguide fiber of the loop mirror can be used to insure that low intensities come out the input of the central coupler, i.e., are reflected, while high intensities come out the output of the central couple, i.e., are transmitted. A polarization controller is known to produce a linear phase shift in signals passing therethrough such that it controls the fiber port through which the signal exits the loop. [0016]
  • In any of the preceding embodiments, a phase shift of 180 degrees (π radians) between the counter-propagating signals is desirable, because the 180 degree phase shift insures maximum signal power is coupled out of the loop mirror. [0017]
  • In a further embodiment of this first aspect of the invention the phase shifting means can be selected from the group consisting of an asymmetrical coupler or an asymmetrically placed optical amplifier, either a discrete erbium-doped fiber amplifier (EDFA) or a Raman optical amplifier. Any combination of these phase shifting means can be used to obtained the desired phase shift, which in most systems is a 180 degree (π radians) phase shift. For example, an EDFA could be used together with an asymmetrical coupler, where the amplifier could be used to compensate for too high or two low an asymmetric power division of the signals by the coupler. [0018]
  • Asymmetric Raman amplification is created in the fiber loop by coupling pump light into the loop fiber in only one direction near the central coupler. Amplification is highest where the pump power is greatest. In fact, Raman gain in units of decibels is directly proportional to pump power in linear units of Watts. [0019]
  • In an embodiment of this first aspect of the invention, the optical waveguide fiber of the loop mirror is selected to have a negative total dispersion in the range of −70 ps/nm-km to −100 ps/nm-km. Preferably the negative dispersion waveguide fiber of the loop mirror has an effective area in the range 20 μm[0020] 2 to 40 μm2 and a non-linear refractive index not less than 2×10−20 m2/Watt, where the watt refers to the signal pulse power. More preferably the negative total dispersion of the fiber of the loop mirror is in the range −80 ps/nm-km to −90 ps/nm-km, the effective area is in the range 20 μm2 to 30 μm2, and the non-linear refractive index is in the range 2.5 m2/W to 4 m2/W.
  • A further embodiment of the invention includes an optical preamplifier coupled to the regenerator to increase the amplitude of signals propagating from the preamplifier to the loop mirror such that the signal amplitude in the loop mirror is above the threshold amplitude at which the signal undergoes self phase modulation. [0021]
  • In another aspect, the present invention is an optical waveguide telecommunication system which includes a signal transmitter optically coupled to a signal receiver by means of an optical waveguide fiber. Incorporated in series arrangement into the waveguide fiber is a dispersion compensating optical regenerator as set forth in the first aspect of the invention. The telecommunications system is particularly suited to varying-soliton pulse propagation because of the features of the dispersion compensating optical regenerator. [0022]
  • Additional features and advantages of the invention will be set forth in the detailed description which follows, and in part will be readily apparent to those skilled in the art from that description or recognized by practicing the invention as described herein, including the detailed description which follows, the claims, as well as the appended drawings. [0023]
  • It is to be understood that both the foregoing general description and the following detailed description are merely exemplary of the invention, and are intended to provide an overview or framework for understanding the nature and character of the invention as it is claimed. The accompanying drawings are included to provide a further understanding of the invention, and are incorporated in and constitute a part of this specification. The drawings illustrate various embodiments of the invention, and together with the description serve to explain the principles and operation of the invention.[0024]
  • BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
  • FIG. 1 and FIG. 2 are schematic illustrations of embodiments of the dispersion compensating optical regenerator in accord with the invention. [0025]
  • FIG. 3 is a schematic illustration of a telecommunications system incorporating a dispersion compensating optical regenerator in accord with the invention.[0026]
  • DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
  • Reference will now be made in detail to the present preferred embodiments of the invention, examples of which are illustrated in the accompanying drawings. An exemplary embodiment of the dispersion compensating optical regenerator of the present invention is shown in FIG. 1. [0027]
  • In accord with the invention, the dispersion compensating optical regenerator is installed following a first [0028] optical waveguide fiber 4 having positive dispersion. Optical wavelength fiber 4 is the transmission fiber span. The length of fiber 4 is measured from the output port of intensity dependent coupler 6 to the input port of the next intensity dependent coupler of the nearest NOLM or NALM and is typically 60 to 100 km. A NOLM as defined in this document includes coupler 6, negative total dispersion fiber 2 and an optional signal polarization controller 8. A NALM configuration is illustrated in FIG. 1 and incorporates the features of the NOLM and further includes optical amplifier 10, which is asymmetrically located along loop fiber 2. It will be understood that fiber 2 included in the dispersion compensating optical regenerator in accord with the invention is typical single mode optical waveguide fiber. However the dispersion compensating optical regenerator can include waveguide fibers which support more than one mode for at least a part of the fiber length. For example, a fiber transmitting the fundamental mode and 2 or 3 higher order modes may be employed in the regenerator in accord with the invention.
  • FIG. 2 illustrates the simplest form of NOLM, which includes loop fiber [0029] 2 (extra length of fiber 2 being illustrated by fiber loops 12) and asymmetrical coupler 6′. The relative phase shift between the counter-propagating varying-soliton signals of the NOLM is due to the asymmetry of coupler 6′, which divides the pulses into counter-propagating pulses of different amplitude. Coupler 6 of the NALM of FIG. 1 may be symmetric or asymmetric because other phase shifting means, i.e., an asymmetrically placed optical amplifier and an optional polarization controller, are incorporated into the NALM.
  • In either the NOLM or NALM configuration, pulses propagating in positive total [0030] dispersion waveguide fiber 4 are amplified at optional preamplifier 14 and proceed to respective intensity dependent couplers 6 or 6′. Preamplifier 14 is required in those cases for which the signal pulse amplitude is below the signal amplitude needed for self phase modulation, the non-linear phenomenon which acts together with the linear dispersion of the fiber to form varying soliton pulses. Preamplifier 14 can also be designed to lower the overall noise figure of the optical regenerator by acting as a low-noise preamplifier.
  • Referring now to the NALM of FIG. 1, coupler [0031] 6 splits the signal pulses into counter-propagating pulses in loop fiber 2. The loop fiber 2 has a length measured from the input to the output port of coupler 6. The loops 12, which appear in each of FIGS. 1, 2, and 3, schematically represent extra length of fiber 2 so that the length of fiber 2 will not to be construed as the circumference of the loop of fiber shown in the figures. The counter-propagating pulses arrive back at coupler 6 after having undergone a relative phase shift in traversing fiber 2 of the NALM. If the counter-propagating pulses have undergone a relative phase shift of π radians, they will interfere constructively at coupler 6 and be coupled out of the loop into the positive total dispersion fiber 4 that is a part of the next transmission fiber span. The signal power coupled out of the loop mirror decreases as the relative phase shift deviates farther and farther from the ideal relative phase shift of π radians. Post-amplifier 16 compensates for signal power lost in traversing the loop mirror and sets the launch power into the next transmission fiber 4. Post-amplifier 16 is not needed if loop amplifier 10 is chosen to compensate for signal power lost in traversing the loop mirror and the pre-amplifier compensates for the loss of fiber 4
  • Pulses propagating in the NALM of FIG. 1 or in the NOLM of FIG. 2 having an amplitude too small to undergo a relative phase shift sufficiently close to π radians to couple out of the NALM or NOLM are reflected at respective couplers [0032] 6 or 6′ and so are separated from the signal coupled out of the NALM or NOLM. Thus ASE and lower amplitude wavelengths making up the signal pulse tails will be reflected in the NALM or NOLM. The NALM serves to amplify and reshape the signal pulses propagating therethrough. The NOLM reshapes the pulses propagating therethrough and the amplification function is carried out by pre- or post-amplifiers.
  • The full benefit provided by the dispersion compensating optical regenerator in accord with the invention can be understood by tracking the RZ varying-soliton signal pulse width as the signal traverses the dispersion compensating optical regenerator. Referring to FIG. 2, a varying-soliton, is coupled into positive [0033] dispersion waveguide fiber 4 either from a light source or the output of a dispersion compensating optical regenerator upstream of fiber 4. As the pulse becomes attenuated by losses in fiber 4, the pulse will increase in width due to the increasing imbalance between self phase modulation and linear dispersion of fiber 4. Upon being amplified and coupled into the NALM the pulse begins to decrease in width due to the negative total dispersion of loop fiber 2. Depending upon the length of fiber 2, the decrease in width of the pulse will continue through the entire length of fiber 2 or the pulse will begin to increase in width after the negative dispersion of fiber 2 has canceled the width increasing effect of positive dispersion fiber 4. In addition to the oscillation in width due to the total dispersion of respective fibers 2 and 4, for either length of fiber 2 the varying-soliton RZ pulse will be reshaped by the NALM as described above.
  • The action of the dispersion compensating optical regenerator in accord with the invention is to cause the signal pulses to oscillate in width, (as described immediately above) amplitude, (pulse amplitude decreases when the pulse traverses the fiber and the pulse is increased in amplitude by the amplifiers), and in shape, (the original shape being changed due to the several sources of noise, dispersion, and attenuation, and then recovered in the NALM or NOLM). [0034]
  • In one choice of respective relative lengths of the positive and negative dispersion fibers, the signal pulses return to their original width at the halfway point of each of the respective fibers. In this embodiment of the invention the respective lengths of [0035] fibers 2 and 4, Lt and Lloop, are determined by the total dispersion of each of the fibers Dt and Dloop, and the desired average dispersion of the span <D>, the span being defined as the sum of the respective lengths of fibers 2 and 4. The equation relating these quantities is,
  • L loop=(D t −<D>)L t/(<D>−D loop)).
  • EXAMPLE 1
  • A typical span including a dispersion compensating optical regenerator in accord with the invention is one in which the desired average dispersion of the span, <D>, is 0.05 ps/nm-km, the dispersion of [0036] fiber 2, Dt, is 17 ps/nm-km and the length, Lt is 80 km, and the dispersion of fiber 4, is −85 ps/nm-km. The length of fiber 4, Lloop, is to be determined. Substituting into the equation for Lloop, one finds, Lloop=15.94 km.
  • The fact that the average span dispersion is maintained low due to dispersion compensation between [0037] fibers 2 and 4 results in lower Gordon-Haus timing variation (jitter) and improves signal to noise ratio at the receiver. In addition, the benefits and advantages that result from the signal pulse oscillations, for example those that the pulses would undergo in the dispersion compensating optical regenerator of example 1, are significant. The alternate increasing and decreasing of the pulse width provides a larger effective pulse width and so allows large spacing of the optical amplifiers without creating dispersive waves. In the case of non-linear RZ pulses such as varying-solitons, the inter-pulse interaction can be reduced by choosing the oscillation strength, γ, to be in the range 3 to 20, where γ=2(βtLt−βloopLloop)/T2 and βt is the group velocity dispersion (total dispersion) of positive dispersion fiber 2, βloop is the group velocity dispersion of the negative fiber 4, and T is the full-width-at-half-maximum-amplitude of the pulse at launch. A preferred range for γ is 3 to 5. Optimum γ for varying-soliton interactions is 3.52. Gaussian pulses are the stable pulse shape for the dispersion compensating optical regenerator operating within the γ range 3 to 20. Gaussian pulses have their characteristic smaller optical intensity tails which serve to reduce interactions between neighboring pulses (varying-solitons). The width oscillation of the varying-soliton signal pulses also average out Fourier terms in the pulse tails further reducing the interaction of neighboring pulses. Further, the high local dispersion in each of fibers 2 and 4 causes the non-linear RZ pulses, such as varying-soliton pulses, to rapidly sweep through one another, thereby limiting the interaction time between pulses in different, particularly adjacent, channels. Thus, the amount of non-linear four wave mixing (FWM) and cross phase modulation (XPM) are reduced. This is especially important for the operation of the NOLM/NALM. Prior art embodiments of NOLM/NALMs are single channel devices because inter-channel nonlinearities (FWM and XPM) significantly degrade the performance of the nonlinear optical switching of the loop. The embodiments of this invention will not suffer from this problem and may be used for multi-signal channels.
  • Considering the overall system length, having a plurality of the dispersion compensating optical regenerators in accord with the invention, the signal pulse width oscillation causes signal pulses in adjacent channels to sweep back and forth through one another many times, thereby increasing the interaction length. An increase in interaction length serves to average out power fluctuations caused by distributed loss (fiber attenuation) and discrete amplification. [0038]
  • Thus, the non-linear RZ pulses (varying-solitons) which result from use of the dispersion compensating optical regenerator in accord with the invention, afford superior means for transmitting information through optical waveguide fibers as compared to the ideal soliton configuration in which the system design is directed to forming spatial and temporal invariant soliton pulses. [0039]
  • In addition to the length of the negative dispersion fiber length, and the oscillation strength, one needs to know the amplifier gain required in the dispersion compensating optical regenerator in accord with the invention. The desired configuration is one in which the gain of the dispersion compensating optical regenerator is equal to the sum of fiber losses and NALM or NOLM insertion loss. The regenerator balances the system loss and gain. [0040]
  • EXAMPLE 2
  • Using the configuration of example 1, the desired gain may be calculated as follows. A typical attenuation coefficient of [0041] fiber 2 is 0.20 dB/km and that of fiber 4 is 0.40 dB/km. The insertion loss in the NALM or NOLM coupler is typically 0.5 dB. Using the respective lengths Lt=80 km and Lloop=15.94 km, the desired amplification is 22.9 dB to balance the regenerator and transmission fiber losses. This amplification can be provided by Gpre the gain of the pre-amplifier 14, Gloop the gain of the loop amplifier 10 in the case of a NALM, and Gpost the gain of the post-amplifier 16. The total gain provided by the amplifiers in this case is,
  • 22.9=G pre +G loop +G post.
  • In the case of the NALM, desired gain provided by the [0042] pre-amplifier 14 and the loop amplifier 10 is sufficient to produce a phase shift in the NALM of 180 degrees (π radians). Using an equation known in the art and explained fully in N. J. Doran and David Wood, Optics Letters, v. 13, n. 1, p. 56, (1988), the desired phase shift may be expressed as:
  • π=(2πn 2 L eff P in G pre /λA eff)(B(1+G loop)−1),
  • where n[0043] 2 is the non-linear coefficient, Leff the effective length is given by (1−exp(αloopLloop−1), where αloop is the loop attenuation coefficient, Pin in the peak power input to the dispersion compensating optical regenerator, and B is the power splitting ratio of coupler 6. The above equation may be solved in terms of Gloop. Using the equation for Gloop, where Lloop=15.94 km, αloop=0.4 dB/km, n2=3.0×10−20 m2/W, Aeff=25 μm2, and B=0.5 (the phase shift is solely due to the asymmetric location of the loop amplifier) one obtains:
  • G loop=2((0.077/P in G pre)+1)−1,
  • from which one may choose the loop and the pre-amplifier gain based upon actual or target P[0044] in. A launch power into the system of 0 dBm is suitable for purposes of the example which in this case provides an input power of −16 dB to the regenerator. Assuming peak power is ten times average power and using the convention 0 dBm=1 mW, Pin=0.25 mW. In the case where a pre-amplifier is not used, Gpre=1 and Gloop=2.1 dB so that the post amplifier must provide a gain of 20.8 dB.
  • EXAMPLE 3
  • Using the same parameter values as in example 2, one may calculate the required splitting ratio for the case where there is no amplifier in the loop and the asymmetry of the loop coupler provides the difference in amplitude of the counter propagating pulses in the loop. In this case, the equation for G[0045] loop is solved for B, where Gloop is set equal to 1. Upon substitution of the given parameters, one finds, B=((0.077/PinGpre)+1)/2. For the case of no pre-amplifier (Gpre=1), B=0.65. If a preamplifier is used and provides Gpre=3 dB, then B=0.52.
  • It is desirable to maintain small the asymmetry in the loop, whether the asymmetry is due to the loop coupler or a loop amplifier, consistent with the desired π phase shift for optimum switching of pulse power through the loop. A smaller asymmetry will cause less temporal pulse distortion in the loop thereby providing for more effective constructive interference at the coupler after the pulses have traversed the loop. An added benefit accrued from the use of nonlinear RZ pulses or varying-solitons, is that the temporal distortion criteria may be greater in the varying-soliton, relative to that for ideal solitons, without loss of power switched through the loop mirror. [0046]
  • In FIG. 3 is illustrated an example of a telecommunication system made using the dispersion compensating optical regenerator in accord with the invention. The illustration in FIG. 3 shows the amplifiers as being optical fiber amplifiers (such as erbium doped fiber amplifiers) being pumped by laser light coupled into the fiber circuit by appropriate couplers. In addition, FIG. 3 shows only a single regenerator in accord with the invention together with [0047] transmission fiber 4 that transmits the filtered and dispersion compensated pulses from the regenerator to receiver 22. It will be understood that a typical telecommunication system typically includes a plurality of dispersion compensating optical regenerator in accord with the invention. However, the action of the regenerators is repetitive so that one need only explain the operation of one such regenerator. RZ signal pulses are launched into fiber 4 from transmitter 20. In the positive dispersion fiber 4, the RZ pulses behave as varying-solitons. The varying-soliton pulses are amplified at preamplifier 14 which is pumped by a pump laser (not shown) coupled to fiber 4 via couple 24. The varying-soliton pulses are divided into counter-propagating pulses in negative dispersion fiber 2 by coupler 6. The counter-propagating varying-solitons are amplified by asymmetrically placed loop amplifier 10 which is pumped by a pump laser (not shown) coupled into fiber 2 via coupler 24. The counter-propagating signal pulses are phase shifted by π radians in the NALM. The phase shift does not have to be exactly π radians to achieve coupling of the signal out of the loop mirror. However the switching of the varying-soliton pulses through the NALM is most efficient when the relative phase shift is π radians. A tolerance of +/−10% about the desired π radian phase shift is acceptable. In addition to phase shifting the counter-propagating pulses relative to one another, the loop mirror serves its known purpose of filtering out lower amplitude noise thereby restoring the original pulse shape. The source of the amplitude noise can be either amplified spontaneous emission from the EDFAs or Raman amplifiers or dispersive waves generated from frequency chirp in the transmitter, polarization mode dispersion or imperfections in the dispersion map. Because fiber 2 of the loop has a negative dispersion, the varying soliton signals are dispersion compensated as well. A typical selection of respective lengths and dispersions of fibers 4 and 2, brings the varying soliton pulse back to its original shape near the middle of each length of positive and negative dispersion waveguide fiber. The dispersion compensated, filtered varying-soliton pulses are coupled out of the NALM by coupler 6 and are transported through post amplifier 16 (pumped by a pump laser not shown via coupler 24) and into fiber 4 which is optically connected to receiver 22.
  • In summary, the dispersion compensating optical regenerator in accord with the invention is suited for use in upgrading systems which use non-linear RZ pulses in that the variation of the pulses that occur as the pulse traverses the regenerator provide for beneficial dispersion effects and reduces impact of pulse collisions or interactions. The dispersion compensating optical regenerator in accord with the invention is compatible with system designs which place the compensation waveguide fiber in the center of the system spans. [0048]
  • It will be apparent to those skilled in the art that various modifications and variations of the present invention can be made without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention. Thus, it is intended that the present invention include the modifications and variations of this invention provided they come within the scope of the appended claims and their equivalents. [0049]

Claims (22)

What is claimed is:
1. A dispersion compensating optical regenerator for use in a waveguide fiber telecommunications system comprising:
a first optical waveguide fiber having a positive total dispersion and a first length;
a second optical waveguide fiber for compensating dispersion of said first optical waveguide fiber, said second optical waveguide fiber having a second length and a negative total dispersion and being incorporated into a loop mirror, wherein
said second optical waveguide fiber carries counter-propagating varying-soliton signals in the loop mirror;
phase shifting means incorporated in the loop mirror to produce a phase shift between the counter-propagating varying-soliton signals in the loop mirror, the phase shift produced being sufficient to cause varying-soliton signals to be coupled out of the loop mirror; wherein,
the respective first and second lengths multiplied by the respective positive and negative total dispersions of the optical waveguide fibers provide respective dispersion products that add algebraically to provide an average total dispersion over the total length of optical waveguide fiber of the optical regenerator and said dispersion products are chosen to provide an average total dispersion of said dispersion compensating optical regenerator that is within a pre-selected range.
2. The optical regenerator of claim 1 wherein the average dispersion is within the pre-selected range of 0.01 ps/nm-km to 5 ps/nm-km.
3. The optical regenerator of claim 1 wherein the average dispersion is within the pre-selected range of 0.1 ps/nm-km to 1 ps/nm-km.
4. The optical regenerator of claim 1 wherein an oscillation strength is defined as 2(βtLt−βloopLloop)/T2, wherein βt is the group velocity dispersion of positive dispersion fiber 2, βloop is the group velocity dispersion of the negative fiber 4, and T is the full-width-at-half-maximum-amplitude of the pulse at launch and is in the range of 3 to 20.
5. The optical regenerator of claim 4 wherein the oscillation strength is in the range 3 to 5.
6. The optical regenerator of claim 1 wherein said phase shifting means is an asymmetrical coupler incorporated in the loop mirror for dividing varying-soliton signals input to the loop mirror into counter-propagating varying-soliton signals of different amplitude.
7. The optical regenerator of claim 1 wherein said phase shifting means is an optical amplifier optically coupled in series arrangement into the waveguide fiber of the loop mirror at a point along the length of the waveguide fiber which is asymmetrically located with respect to the waveguide fiber length.
8. The optical regenerator of claim 1 wherein said phase shifting means is a Raman amplifier.
9. The optical regenerator of any one of claims 6, 7, or 8 wherein the phase shifting means provides a phase shift between the counter-propagating varying-soliton signals of 180 degrees (π radians).
10. The optical regenerator of claim 7 wherein the respective amplitudes of the counter propagating varying-soliton signals are substantially equal before reaching the optical amplifier.
11. The optical regenerator of claim 7 wherein said optical amplifier has sufficient gain to offset signal power lost in traversing the loop mirror.
12. The optical regenerator of claim 1 wherein the phase shifting means is a combination of an asymmetrical coupler incorporated in the loop mirror for dividing varying-soliton signals input to the loop mirror into counter-propagating signals of different amplitude and an optical amplifier optically coupled in series arrangement into the waveguide fiber of the loop mirror at a point along the length of the waveguide fiber which is asymmetrically located with respect to the waveguide fiber length.
13. The optical regenerator of claim 12 further including a polarization controller coupled in series arrangement into the loop mirror.
14. The optical regenerator of claim 12 wherein the combination of phase shifting means provides a phase shift between the counter-propagating varying-soliton signals of 180 degrees (π radians).
15. The optical regenerator of claim 1 wherein said second optical waveguide fiber has a negative total dispersion in the range of −70 ps/nm-km to −100 ps/nm-km.
16. The optical regenerator of claim 13 wherein said second optical waveguide fiber has an effective area in the range 20 μm2 to 40 μm2 and a non-linear refractive index not less than 2×10−20 m2/W.
17. The optical regenerator of claim 16 wherein the negative total dispersion is in the range −80 ps/nm-km to −90 ps/nm-km, the effective area is in the range 20 μm2 to 30 μm2, and the non-linear refractive index is in the range 2.5 m2/W to 4 m2/W.
18. The optical regenerator of claim 1 further including a preamplifier optically coupled to the regenerator to increase the amplitude of varying-soliton signals propagating toward said preamplifier and on toward said loop mirror such that the signal amplitude is above the threshold amplitude at which the signal undergoes self phase modulation.
19. The optical regenerator of claim 1 further including a post-amplifier to amplify the signal back to the system designed launched power level.
20. An optical waveguide telecommunications system comprising:
an optical signal transmitter;
an optical signal receiver;
a length of optical waveguide fiber optically coupled between said optical signal transmitter and said optical signal receive; and, incorporated into said length of optical waveguide fiber,
an optical regenerator including a first optical waveguide fiber having a positive total dispersion and a first length;
a second optical waveguide fiber for compensating dispersion of said first optical waveguide fiber, said second optical waveguide fiber having a second length and a negative total dispersion and being incorporated into a loop mirror, wherein said second optical waveguide fiber carries counter-propagating varying-soliton signals in the loop mirror;
phase shifting means incorporated in the loop mirror to produce a phase shift between the counter-propagating varying-soliton signals in the loop mirror, the phase shift produced being sufficient to cause varying-soliton signals to be coupled out of the loop mirror; wherein,
the respective first and second lengths multiplied by the respective positive and negative total dispersions of the optical waveguide fibers provide respective dispersion products that add algebraically to provide an average total dispersion over the total length of optical waveguide fiber of the optical regenerator and said dispersion products are chosen to provide an average total dispersion of said dispersion compensating optical regenerator that is within a pre-selected range.
21. The optical waveguide fiber telecommunications system of claim 20 wherein said phase shifting means is selected from the group consisting of an erbium-doped fiber optical amplifier, a Raman optical amplifier and an asymmetrical coupler.
22. The optical waveguide fiber telecommunications system of claim 20 wherein said phase shifting means provides a phase shift in the optical varying-soliton signals of 180 degrees (π radians).
US09/974,533 2000-10-20 2001-10-09 Waveguide fiber dispersion compensating regenerator Expired - Fee Related US6587606B1 (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US09/974,533 US6587606B1 (en) 2000-10-20 2001-10-09 Waveguide fiber dispersion compensating regenerator

Applications Claiming Priority (2)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US24224900P 2000-10-20 2000-10-20
US09/974,533 US6587606B1 (en) 2000-10-20 2001-10-09 Waveguide fiber dispersion compensating regenerator

Publications (2)

Publication Number Publication Date
US20030118303A1 true US20030118303A1 (en) 2003-06-26
US6587606B1 US6587606B1 (en) 2003-07-01

Family

ID=26934944

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US09/974,533 Expired - Fee Related US6587606B1 (en) 2000-10-20 2001-10-09 Waveguide fiber dispersion compensating regenerator

Country Status (1)

Country Link
US (1) US6587606B1 (en)

Cited By (7)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US20050180758A1 (en) * 2004-02-05 2005-08-18 Alcatel Optical regenerator for high bit rate return-to-zero transmission
US20060204170A1 (en) * 2002-06-11 2006-09-14 The Furukawa Electric Co., Ltd. Wavelength division multiplex optical regeneration system and wavelength division multiplex optical regeneration method
US20080019638A1 (en) * 2006-07-18 2008-01-24 Oh Kee Kwon Long cavity single-mode laser diode
US20090028205A1 (en) * 2007-07-27 2009-01-29 Fujifilm Corporation Dispersion compensator, solid-state laser apparatus using the same, and dispersion compensation method
US20120093519A1 (en) * 2009-02-05 2012-04-19 Michal Lipson High-speed optical sampling by temporal stretching using four-wave mixing
US9323284B2 (en) 2008-10-14 2016-04-26 Cornell University Apparatus for imparting phase shift to input waveform
CN110676676A (en) * 2019-10-11 2020-01-10 电子科技大学 Pulse light source system and method for generating soliton explosion mode

Families Citing this family (8)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US6760509B2 (en) * 2000-02-14 2004-07-06 The Regents Of The University Of Michigan SNR booster for WDM systems
GB2371160B (en) * 2001-01-10 2004-06-30 Univ Aston Optical pulse regenerating transmission lines
JP4472222B2 (en) * 2001-09-28 2010-06-02 富士通株式会社 Method, apparatus and system for waveform shaping signal light
GB0402344D0 (en) * 2004-02-03 2004-03-10 Univ Aston Optical pulse regenerator
US7440180B2 (en) * 2004-02-13 2008-10-21 Tang Yin S Integration of rare-earth doped amplifiers into semiconductor structures and uses of same
US7680412B2 (en) * 2005-04-29 2010-03-16 National Ict Australia Limited Method and device for in-band optical performance monitoring
US7149407B1 (en) * 2006-02-28 2006-12-12 Lucent Technologies Inc. Orthogonal heterodyne optical signal-to-noise-ratio (OSNR) monitoring method and apparatus
US11295398B2 (en) 2019-10-02 2022-04-05 Snapwise Inc. Methods and systems to generate information about news source items describing news events or topics of interest

Family Cites Families (12)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
CA1298113C (en) 1986-10-20 1992-03-31 Nicholas John Doran Optical device
FR2700895B1 (en) * 1993-01-28 1995-03-03 Jean Debeau Method and device for generating optical pulses.
US5404413A (en) * 1993-12-14 1995-04-04 At&T Corp. Optical circulator for dispersion compensation
US5513194A (en) 1994-06-30 1996-04-30 Massachusetts Institute Of Technology Stretched-pulse fiber laser
US5532863A (en) * 1994-07-27 1996-07-02 U.S. Philips Corporation Optical signal-regenerating unit and transmission system comprising such a unit
FR2742887B1 (en) * 1995-12-21 1998-01-16 Alcatel Submarcom ADJUSTABLE OPTICAL MODULATOR OF AMPLITUDE AND PHASE, AND SOLITON REGENERATOR INCLUDING SUCH A MODULATOR
US5655039A (en) * 1995-12-22 1997-08-05 Corning, Inc. Nonlinear optical loop mirror device including dispersion decreasing fiber
FR2744246B1 (en) 1996-01-30 1998-03-13 Alcatel Nv POLARIZATION-INDEPENDENT KERR MODULATOR, AND ANY CLOCK OPTICAL RECOVERY DEVICE INCLUDING SUCH A MODULATOR
US6243181B1 (en) 1997-02-14 2001-06-05 University Of Maryland Baltimore County Reduction of collision induced timing jitter by periodic dispersion management in soliton WDM transmission
JP3989627B2 (en) * 1998-06-23 2007-10-10 富士通株式会社 Optical gate device, method of manufacturing the device, and system including the device
US20020075536A1 (en) * 1998-06-30 2002-06-20 Xiang-Dong Cao Multi-wavelength all-optical regenerators ( mars)
US6487352B1 (en) * 2000-02-18 2002-11-26 Corning Incorporated Electrical detector for adaptive control of chromatic dispersion in optical systems

Cited By (10)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US20060204170A1 (en) * 2002-06-11 2006-09-14 The Furukawa Electric Co., Ltd. Wavelength division multiplex optical regeneration system and wavelength division multiplex optical regeneration method
US8059966B2 (en) * 2002-06-11 2011-11-15 The Furukawa Electric Co., Ltd. Wavelength division multiplex optical regeneration system and wavelength division multiplex optical regeneration method
US20050180758A1 (en) * 2004-02-05 2005-08-18 Alcatel Optical regenerator for high bit rate return-to-zero transmission
US20080019638A1 (en) * 2006-07-18 2008-01-24 Oh Kee Kwon Long cavity single-mode laser diode
US7512296B2 (en) 2006-07-18 2009-03-31 Electronics And Telecommunications Research Institute Long cavity single-mode laser diode
US20090028205A1 (en) * 2007-07-27 2009-01-29 Fujifilm Corporation Dispersion compensator, solid-state laser apparatus using the same, and dispersion compensation method
US9323284B2 (en) 2008-10-14 2016-04-26 Cornell University Apparatus for imparting phase shift to input waveform
US20120093519A1 (en) * 2009-02-05 2012-04-19 Michal Lipson High-speed optical sampling by temporal stretching using four-wave mixing
US9291509B2 (en) * 2009-02-05 2016-03-22 Cornell University High-speed optical sampling by temporal stretching using four-wave mixing
CN110676676A (en) * 2019-10-11 2020-01-10 电子科技大学 Pulse light source system and method for generating soliton explosion mode

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
US6587606B1 (en) 2003-07-01

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
Cartaxo Cross-phase modulation in intensity modulation-direct detection WDM systems with multiple optical amplifiers and dispersion compensators
EP2083320B1 (en) Optical signal processing apparatus, optical receiving apparatus, and optical relay apparatus
US6608854B1 (en) Method, device, and system for waveform shaping of signal light
US6587606B1 (en) Waveguide fiber dispersion compensating regenerator
US6453082B1 (en) Device and system for waveform shaping
JP2001069080A (en) Method for optical fiber transmission, optical device and system
US6424455B1 (en) Wide bandwidth fiber raman amplifier
US5886804A (en) Optical transmission system employing single mode optical transmission fiber
US5966228A (en) Optical transmission system and optical repeater
JP2858400B2 (en) Apparatus and method for changing the spectral characteristics of an optical signal
US6188823B1 (en) Method and apparatus for providing dispersion and dispersion slope compensation in an optical communication system
US6529315B2 (en) Optical amplifier providing dispersion compensation
US6317238B1 (en) Chromatic dispersion management for optical wavelength division multiplexed transmission systems
Ohhira et al. Novel RZ signal format with alternate-chirp for suppression of nonlinear degradation in 40 Gb/s based WDM
US20020131132A1 (en) Optical transmission system
US20050063043A1 (en) Raman amplifier
US20040076373A1 (en) Optical pulse regenerating transmission lines
US6867905B1 (en) Reduced four-wave mixing and raman amplification architecture
US20040213577A1 (en) Optical transmission line and optical transmission system
US7218807B2 (en) Optical transmission system using an optical phase conjugation device
WO2002035270A9 (en) Waveguide fiber dispersion compensating regenerator
JP2001222036A (en) Raman amplification and optical signal transmission method utilizing the same
US5463489A (en) Soliton transmission system having sliding-frequency guiding filters with particular filter strengths and sliding rates
US7324721B2 (en) Optical communication line with dispersion intrachannel nonlinearities management
EP1161009A1 (en) Optical communication system

Legal Events

Date Code Title Description
AS Assignment

Owner name: CORNING INCORPORATED, NEW YORK

Free format text: ASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST;ASSIGNOR:EVANS, ALAN F.;REEL/FRAME:012260/0226

Effective date: 20010927

REMI Maintenance fee reminder mailed
LAPS Lapse for failure to pay maintenance fees
STCH Information on status: patent discontinuation

Free format text: PATENT EXPIRED DUE TO NONPAYMENT OF MAINTENANCE FEES UNDER 37 CFR 1.362

FP Lapsed due to failure to pay maintenance fee

Effective date: 20070701