US20170041077A1 - System and method for coherent detection with digital signal procession - Google Patents
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- H—ELECTRICITY
- H04—ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
- H04L—TRANSMISSION OF DIGITAL INFORMATION, e.g. TELEGRAPHIC COMMUNICATION
- H04L27/00—Modulated-carrier systems
- H04L27/26—Systems using multi-frequency codes
- H04L27/2601—Multicarrier modulation systems
- H04L27/2626—Arrangements specific to the transmitter only
- H04L27/2627—Modulators
- H04L27/2637—Modulators with direct modulation of individual subcarriers
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- H—ELECTRICITY
- H04—ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
- H04B—TRANSMISSION
- H04B10/00—Transmission systems employing electromagnetic waves other than radio-waves, e.g. infrared, visible or ultraviolet light, or employing corpuscular radiation, e.g. quantum communication
- H04B10/25—Arrangements specific to fibre transmission
- H04B10/2507—Arrangements specific to fibre transmission for the reduction or elimination of distortion or dispersion
- H04B10/2513—Arrangements specific to fibre transmission for the reduction or elimination of distortion or dispersion due to chromatic dispersion
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- H—ELECTRICITY
- H04—ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
- H04B—TRANSMISSION
- H04B10/00—Transmission systems employing electromagnetic waves other than radio-waves, e.g. infrared, visible or ultraviolet light, or employing corpuscular radiation, e.g. quantum communication
- H04B10/50—Transmitters
- H04B10/501—Structural aspects
- H04B10/503—Laser transmitters
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- H—ELECTRICITY
- H04—ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
- H04B—TRANSMISSION
- H04B10/00—Transmission systems employing electromagnetic waves other than radio-waves, e.g. infrared, visible or ultraviolet light, or employing corpuscular radiation, e.g. quantum communication
- H04B10/50—Transmitters
- H04B10/516—Details of coding or modulation
- H04B10/5161—Combination of different modulation schemes
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- H—ELECTRICITY
- H04—ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
- H04B—TRANSMISSION
- H04B10/00—Transmission systems employing electromagnetic waves other than radio-waves, e.g. infrared, visible or ultraviolet light, or employing corpuscular radiation, e.g. quantum communication
- H04B10/50—Transmitters
- H04B10/516—Details of coding or modulation
- H04B10/548—Phase or frequency modulation
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- H—ELECTRICITY
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- H04B10/00—Transmission systems employing electromagnetic waves other than radio-waves, e.g. infrared, visible or ultraviolet light, or employing corpuscular radiation, e.g. quantum communication
- H04B10/50—Transmitters
- H04B10/516—Details of coding or modulation
- H04B10/548—Phase or frequency modulation
- H04B10/556—Digital modulation, e.g. differential phase shift keying [DPSK] or frequency shift keying [FSK]
- H04B10/5561—Digital phase modulation
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- H—ELECTRICITY
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- H04B10/60—Receivers
- H04B10/61—Coherent receivers
- H04B10/613—Coherent receivers including phase diversity, e.g., having in-phase and quadrature branches, as in QPSK coherent receivers
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- H04B10/60—Receivers
- H04B10/61—Coherent receivers
- H04B10/614—Coherent receivers comprising one or more polarization beam splitters, e.g. polarization multiplexed [PolMux] X-PSK coherent receivers, polarization diversity heterodyne coherent receivers
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- H04B10/60—Receivers
- H04B10/61—Coherent receivers
- H04B10/616—Details of the electronic signal processing in coherent optical receivers
- H04B10/6161—Compensation of chromatic dispersion
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- H04J—MULTIPLEX COMMUNICATION
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- H04J14/02—Wavelength-division multiplex systems
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- H—ELECTRICITY
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- H04J—MULTIPLEX COMMUNICATION
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- H—ELECTRICITY
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- H04L—TRANSMISSION OF DIGITAL INFORMATION, e.g. TELEGRAPHIC COMMUNICATION
- H04L27/00—Modulated-carrier systems
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- H04L27/2601—Multicarrier modulation systems
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- H04L5/00—Arrangements affording multiple use of the transmission path
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- H04L5/0003—Two-dimensional division
- H04L5/0005—Time-frequency
- H04L5/0007—Time-frequency the frequencies being orthogonal, e.g. OFDM(A), DMT
Definitions
- the present invention relates to communication systems, and particularly, coherent detection with digital signal processing.
- each subcarrier of the OFDM signal is 25 Gbaud Quadrature Phase Shift Keyed (QPSK)
- the ADC bandwidth should be 50 GHz and the sample rate should be 100 GSa/s to obtain optimum results.
- QPSK Quadrature Phase Shift Keyed
- an ADC with these specifications may not be commercially available. Therefore it would be advantageous to reduce the ADC bandwidth and sample rate while maintaining the same performance.
- aspects of the present invention employ optical orthogonal frequency division multiplexing (O-OFDM) to transmit signals realizing high spectral efficiency over long distances.
- OFDM optical orthogonal frequency division multiplexing
- FIG. 1 illustrates a schematic diagram of a transmitter and receiver according to aspects of the present invention.
- FIG. 2 illustrates a schematic diagram of digital signal processing for a coherent receiver according to aspects of the present invention.
- FIG. 1 illustrates a schematic diagram of a transmitter and receiver according to aspects of the present invention.
- a laser 101 generates a continuous lightwave.
- the laser 101 may be a distributed feedback type laser diode (DFB-LD), which may have a wide line width. For a 100 Gbit/s QPSK for example, a line width smaller than 2 MHz may be used, although in embodiments line widths greater than 2 MHz may also be sufficient.
- the laser source 101 may be a tunable external laser with a narrow line width and low phase noise which may be preferred for high level modulation format signals.
- a multicarrier generator 102 receives the lightwave and generates a multicarrier signal.
- This multicarrier signal may be generated by a few different schemes, such as cascaded phase and intensity modulators driven by a sinusoidal wave source, or cascaded phase modulators. In an embodiment, ten subcarriers with fixed frequency spacing off may be generated, although another number of subcarriers may be generated.
- an optical demultiplexer may be employed 103 .
- This optical demultiplexer 103 may be an array waveguide grating, an optical fiber Bragg grating, or other optical demultiplexer as known in the art.
- Each subcarrier from the respective output ports of the optical demultiplexer 103 may be modulated by using an optical I/Q modulator 104 .
- the optical I/Q modulator 104 generates QPSK signals. These QPSK signals may have a non-return-to-zero or return-to-zero pulse shape. This signal may be a polarization multiplexed signal.
- the optical I/Q modulator 104 may be driven by four individual data signals, that is, In Phase (I) and Quadrature Phase (Q) for X polarization, and I and Q for Y polarization.
- the baud rate of the I or Q signals may preferably be f Gbaud/s.
- An optical multiplexer 105 with a 3 dB bandwidth off GHz may be used to combine the modulated signals from the optical I/Q modulator 104 as subchannels.
- the optical multiplexer 105 may be a regular WDM filter, a WDM coupler, an array waveguide grating (AWG), or other optical filter to combine all of the subchannels.
- An optical amplifier 106 may be used to compensate for subsequent transmission fiber loss. This optical amplifier 106 may be an Erbium doped fiber amplifier, Raman amplifier, or other amplifier to provide gain as is known in the art.
- the multiplexed signal may then be transmitted over a fiber 107 .
- the fiber 107 may be any transmission fiber.
- optical amplifier 106 may alternatively or additionally be placed at the receiving side of transmission fiber 107 .
- the transmitter disclosed in the foregoing is different from conventional optical OFDM signal generation at least in that, in contrast to the prior art, there is no time synchronization between the transmitter and the receiver. Moreover, optical couplers are not used to combine the subchannels as in the prior art. Instead, the disclosed transmitter uses an optical multiplexer such as arrayed waveguide grating to combine subchannels.
- the coherent detection technique employs the use of an optical local oscillator 108 , a 90 degree hybrid 109 , four balanced receivers, ADC chips and ASIC chips for digital signal processing.
- the frequency of the optical local oscillator 108 is preferably the same as the frequency of one of the subcarriers.
- the local oscillator 108 may be a distributed feedback laser (DFB) or an external cavity laser with a line width preferably smaller than a few MHz.
- the 90 degree hybrid 109 may be a regular optical 90 degree hybrid to demultiplex the I and Q signal.
- Digital coherent detection block 110 includes balanced or unbalanced photodiodes, high speed ADC and other electrical components such as ASIC, FEC, and the like.
- the receiver is different from prior art arrangements at least in that it does not require wideband ADC chips with high sampling rate to detect the received signal. Instead, commonly available ADC chips with low bandwidth may be used. In an exemplary embodiment, for subchannel spacing f GHz, an ADC bandwidth of about 0.5 f GHz is sufficient, and a sampling rate of about 1.5 f GSa/s or more is sufficient. Moreover, an additional DSP with one post filter and MLSE are employed for data detection.
- FIG. 2 illustrates a schematic of digital signal processing (DSP) for a coherent receiver with post filter and maximum likelihood sequence estimation (MLSE).
- a compensation module 200 may correct an I/Q imbalance of the received signal.
- a dispersion compensating unit 201 may compensate for chromatic dispersion.
- Sampling unit 202 samples and resamples the signal, and each bit is sampled twice.
- An offset module 204 compensates for a frequency offset of the demultiplexed signals in order to improve the quality of communication.
- Phase module 205 phase compensates the demultiplexed signal.
- a filter 206 post filters the phase compensated signal.
- the filter 206 may be a 2 tap filter.
- MLSE which may be two state, is applied to the filtered signals to recover data in the signals in data estimator 207 .
- a bit error rate may be calculated in BER calculator 208 .
- each subchannel has a channel spacing off GHz; each subchannel carries f Gbaud QPSK signal.
- coherent detection is employed in the receiver, with DSP to detect the signal.
- This DSP includes commonly available DSP hardware, with additional post filter and MLSE processing.
- the methods and devices of the present invention may be executed employing machines and apparatus including simple and complex computers.
- the architecture and methods described above can be stored, in part or in full, on tangible machine readable media.
- the operations of the present invention could be stored on media such as magnetic disks or optical disks, which are accessible via a disk drive (or computer-readable medium drive).
- the logic to perform the operations as discussed above could be implemented in additional computer and/or machine readable media, such as discrete hardware components as large-scale integrated circuits (LSI's), application-specific integrated circuits (ASICs), firmware such as electrically erasable programmable read-only only memory (EEPROMs); and the like. Implementations of certain embodiments may further take the form of machine-implemented, including web-implemented, computer software.
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Abstract
Methods and apparatus to realize high spectral efficiency in optical signals transmitted over long distances.
Description
- The present invention relates to communication systems, and particularly, coherent detection with digital signal processing.
- Increasing bandwidth demand has been driving communication systems to higher capacities. Therefore, there is a strong motivation to enhance spectral efficiency to increase the total capacity. Employing optical orthogonal frequency division multiplexing (O-OFDM) modulation to transmit signals can realize high-spectral efficiency and long distance transmission. To achieve high receiver sensitivity with coherent detection based on digital signal processing, the bandwidth of the analog to digital converter (ADC) and the sample rate may be high. Usually, the ADC bandwidth may have two times of the bit rate of the signal, and the sampling rate may be four times of the bit rate. For example, if each subcarrier of the OFDM signal is 25 Gbaud Quadrature Phase Shift Keyed (QPSK), the ADC bandwidth should be 50 GHz and the sample rate should be 100 GSa/s to obtain optimum results. However, an ADC with these specifications may not be commercially available. Therefore it would be advantageous to reduce the ADC bandwidth and sample rate while maintaining the same performance.
- Aspects of the present invention employ optical orthogonal frequency division multiplexing (O-OFDM) to transmit signals realizing high spectral efficiency over long distances.
- Aspects of the present invention include apparatus and methods for transmitting and receiving signals in a communication system. A multicarrier generator generates a multicarrier signal. An optical demultiplexer separates the multicarrier signal into separate subcarrier signals. Phase and QPSK modulators modulate signals from the separate subcarrier signals. An optical multiplexer combines the modulated subcarrier signals into a multiplexed signal. The multiplexed signal is then transmitted.
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FIG. 1 illustrates a schematic diagram of a transmitter and receiver according to aspects of the present invention. -
FIG. 2 illustrates a schematic diagram of digital signal processing for a coherent receiver according to aspects of the present invention. - Aspects of the present invention employ optical orthogonal frequency division multiplexing (O-OFDM) to transmit signals realizing high-spectral efficiency over long distances.
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FIG. 1 illustrates a schematic diagram of a transmitter and receiver according to aspects of the present invention. Alaser 101 generates a continuous lightwave. Thelaser 101 may be a distributed feedback type laser diode (DFB-LD), which may have a wide line width. For a 100 Gbit/s QPSK for example, a line width smaller than 2 MHz may be used, although in embodiments line widths greater than 2 MHz may also be sufficient. Alternatively, thelaser source 101 may be a tunable external laser with a narrow line width and low phase noise which may be preferred for high level modulation format signals. Amulticarrier generator 102 receives the lightwave and generates a multicarrier signal. This multicarrier signal may be generated by a few different schemes, such as cascaded phase and intensity modulators driven by a sinusoidal wave source, or cascaded phase modulators. In an embodiment, ten subcarriers with fixed frequency spacing off may be generated, although another number of subcarriers may be generated. - To separate the optical subcarriers for routing to respective ports, an optical demultiplexer may be employed 103. This
optical demultiplexer 103 may be an array waveguide grating, an optical fiber Bragg grating, or other optical demultiplexer as known in the art. Each subcarrier from the respective output ports of theoptical demultiplexer 103 may be modulated by using an optical I/Q modulator 104. In particular, the optical I/Q modulator 104 generates QPSK signals. These QPSK signals may have a non-return-to-zero or return-to-zero pulse shape. This signal may be a polarization multiplexed signal. The optical I/Q modulator 104 may be driven by four individual data signals, that is, In Phase (I) and Quadrature Phase (Q) for X polarization, and I and Q for Y polarization. The baud rate of the I or Q signals may preferably be f Gbaud/s. - An
optical multiplexer 105 with a 3 dB bandwidth off GHz may be used to combine the modulated signals from the optical I/Q modulator 104 as subchannels. Theoptical multiplexer 105 may be a regular WDM filter, a WDM coupler, an array waveguide grating (AWG), or other optical filter to combine all of the subchannels. Anoptical amplifier 106 may be used to compensate for subsequent transmission fiber loss. Thisoptical amplifier 106 may be an Erbium doped fiber amplifier, Raman amplifier, or other amplifier to provide gain as is known in the art. The multiplexed signal may then be transmitted over afiber 107. Thefiber 107 may be any transmission fiber. In embodiments,optical amplifier 106 may alternatively or additionally be placed at the receiving side oftransmission fiber 107. - The transmitter disclosed in the foregoing is different from conventional optical OFDM signal generation at least in that, in contrast to the prior art, there is no time synchronization between the transmitter and the receiver. Moreover, optical couplers are not used to combine the subchannels as in the prior art. Instead, the disclosed transmitter uses an optical multiplexer such as arrayed waveguide grating to combine subchannels.
- On the receiver side, coherent detection based on digital signal processing is used. The coherent detection technique employs the use of an optical
local oscillator 108, a 90degree hybrid 109, four balanced receivers, ADC chips and ASIC chips for digital signal processing. The frequency of the opticallocal oscillator 108 is preferably the same as the frequency of one of the subcarriers. Thelocal oscillator 108 may be a distributed feedback laser (DFB) or an external cavity laser with a line width preferably smaller than a few MHz. The 90degree hybrid 109 may be a regular optical 90 degree hybrid to demultiplex the I and Q signal. Digitalcoherent detection block 110 includes balanced or unbalanced photodiodes, high speed ADC and other electrical components such as ASIC, FEC, and the like. - The receiver is different from prior art arrangements at least in that it does not require wideband ADC chips with high sampling rate to detect the received signal. Instead, commonly available ADC chips with low bandwidth may be used. In an exemplary embodiment, for subchannel spacing f GHz, an ADC bandwidth of about 0.5 f GHz is sufficient, and a sampling rate of about 1.5 f GSa/s or more is sufficient. Moreover, an additional DSP with one post filter and MLSE are employed for data detection.
-
FIG. 2 illustrates a schematic of digital signal processing (DSP) for a coherent receiver with post filter and maximum likelihood sequence estimation (MLSE). Acompensation module 200 may correct an I/Q imbalance of the received signal. Adispersion compensating unit 201 may compensate for chromatic dispersion.Sampling unit 202 samples and resamples the signal, and each bit is sampled twice. Through the use ofadaptive equalizers 203, a polarization demultiplexer is realized that generates polarization demultiplexed signals. An offsetmodule 204 compensates for a frequency offset of the demultiplexed signals in order to improve the quality of communication.Phase module 205 phase compensates the demultiplexed signal. Afilter 206 post filters the phase compensated signal. Thefilter 206 may be a 2 tap filter. MLSE, which may be two state, is applied to the filtered signals to recover data in the signals indata estimator 207. A bit error rate may be calculated inBER calculator 208. - The foregoing discloses and describes novel methods and systems for coherent detection with digital signal processing. In the transmitter, there are several subchannels. Each subchannel has a channel spacing off GHz; each subchannel carries f Gbaud QPSK signal. After optical multiplexing and signal transmission in optical fiber, coherent detection is employed in the receiver, with DSP to detect the signal. This DSP includes commonly available DSP hardware, with additional post filter and MLSE processing.
- It should be understood that the methods and devices of the present invention may be executed employing machines and apparatus including simple and complex computers. Moreover, the architecture and methods described above can be stored, in part or in full, on tangible machine readable media. For example, the operations of the present invention could be stored on media such as magnetic disks or optical disks, which are accessible via a disk drive (or computer-readable medium drive). Alternatively, the logic to perform the operations as discussed above, could be implemented in additional computer and/or machine readable media, such as discrete hardware components as large-scale integrated circuits (LSI's), application-specific integrated circuits (ASICs), firmware such as electrically erasable programmable read-only only memory (EEPROMs); and the like. Implementations of certain embodiments may further take the form of machine-implemented, including web-implemented, computer software.
- While aspects of this invention have been shown and described, it will be apparent to those skilled in the art that many more modifications are possible without departing from the inventive concepts herein. The invention, therefore, is not to be restricted except in the spirit of the following claims.
Claims (20)
1. A method of generating a wide bandwidth multiplexed optical signal and transmitting it over an optical fiber, the method comprising:
generating, by a laser, a continuous lightwave;
generating, from the continuous lightwave, a multicarrier signal having a fixed channel spacing off GHz;
separating the multicarrier signal into a plurality of optical subcarriers;
routing each of the optical subcarriers to a respective I/Q modulator and modulating each of the subcarriers to carry f Gbaud of data as a QPSK signal by the corresponding I/Q modulator;
combining, in an optical multiplexer, the modulated optical subcarriers into a multiplexed optical signal; and
transmitting the multiplexed optical signal with no synchronization information over an optical fiber, so that blind data detection is required at the receiving end of the communication.
2. The method of claim 1 , wherein the continuous lightwave has a line width of about 2 MHz.
3. The method of claim 1 , wherein the laser is a tunable external laser with a line width narrower than 2 MHz and low phase noise.
4. The method of claim 1 wherein the multicarrier generator comprises cascaded phase and intensity modulators driven by a sinusoidal wave source.
5. The method of claim 1 , wherein at least ten subcarriers are generated.
6. The method of claim 1 , wherein the QPSK signals are polarization multiplexed together.
7. The method of claim 1 , wherein the optical I/Q modulator is driven by four data signals, including in phase (I) and quadrature phase (Q) for X polarization and I and Q for Y polarization.
8. The method of claim 1 , wherein the I signals and Q signals are each modulated to carry f Gbaud/s.
9. The method of claim 1 , wherein the multiplexer is one of a regular WDM filter, a WDM coupler, an array waveguide grating, and an optical fiber Bragg grating.
10. The method of claim 1 , wherein the optical multiplexer has a 3 dB bandwidth of −f GHz.
11. The method of claim 1 , wherein the modulated signals are polarization multiplexed.
12. The method of claim 1 , further comprising amplifying the multiplexed signal before it is transmitted to compensate for transmission loss in the optical fiber.
13. A method of blind detecting of data contained in a wide bandwidth multiplexed optical signal transmitted over optical fiber, the method comprising:
receiving, by a coherent optical receiver, a wide bandwidth multiplexed optical signal from an optical fiber;
applying a local oscillator having a frequency substantially equal to a subchannel spacing f of the received multiplexed optical signal to the received multiplexed optical signal to obtain a plurality of subcarriers;
polarization demultiplexing an X signal and a Y signal from each of the subcarriers;
demultiplexing an in phase (I) signal and a quadrature phase (Q) signal from each of the X and Y signals; and
coherently detecting data carried by each of the I and Q signals using:
an ADC with a bandwidth of about 0.5 f;
a signal sampler with a sampling frequency of about 1.5 f, and
a digital signal processor DSP configured to:
condition the sampled signals; and
apply maximum likelihood sequence estimation (MLSE) to the conditioned signals to estimate data carried on each of the I and Q signals.
14. The method of claim 13 , further comprising correcting an I/Q imbalance of the received signal.
15. The method of claim 13 , further comprising compensating for chromatic dispersion in the received signal.
16. The method of claim 13 , further comprising compensating for a frequency offset of the demultiplexed signals.
17. The method of claim 13 , further comprising phase compensating the demultiplexed signal.
18. The method of claim 17 , further comprising post filtering the phase compensated signal.
19. The method of claim 13 , further comprising calculating a bit error rate of the estimated data.
20. An apparatus for detecting data contained in an optical signal received from an optical transmission fiber, comprising:
a local oscillator having a frequency substantially equal to a subchannel spacing f separating a plurality of subchannels containing in the received optical signal, to obtain a plurality of subcarrier signals;
a polarization demultiplexer to obtain an X signal and a Y signal from each of the subcarrier signals;
an OFDM demultiplexer to obtain an in phase (I) signal and a quadrature phase (Q) signal from each of the X and Y signals;
an ADC with a bandwidth of about 0.5 f;
a signal sampler with a sampling frequency of about 1.5 f; and
a digital signal processor DSP configured to condition the sampled signals and apply maximum likelihood sequence estimation (MLSE) to the conditioned signals to estimate data carried on each of the I and Q signals.
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US15/850,782 US10256907B2 (en) | 2012-02-10 | 2017-12-21 | System and method for coherent detection with digital signal procession |
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Cited By (3)
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---|---|---|---|---|
US10862592B2 (en) * | 2017-08-02 | 2020-12-08 | Fujitsu Limited | Optical receiver, optical transmission system, and reception processing method |
US11356180B2 (en) * | 2019-10-10 | 2022-06-07 | Infinera Corporation | Hub-leaf laser synchronization |
US20230198626A1 (en) * | 2018-04-13 | 2023-06-22 | Infinera Corporation | Clock Recovery For Subcarriers In Optical Networks |
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US7580630B2 (en) * | 2004-06-07 | 2009-08-25 | Nortel Networks Limited | Spectral shaping for optical OFDM transmission |
CN101257349B (en) * | 2007-02-26 | 2011-05-11 | 富士通株式会社 | Digital phase estimating device, digital phase-locked loop and light coherent receiver |
US7693428B2 (en) * | 2007-02-27 | 2010-04-06 | Celight, Inc. | Optical orthogonal frequency division multiplexed communications with nonlinearity compensation |
US20100310256A1 (en) * | 2007-02-27 | 2010-12-09 | Celight, Inc. | Parallel optical receiver for optical systems |
US20100021166A1 (en) * | 2008-02-22 | 2010-01-28 | Way Winston I | Spectrally Efficient Parallel Optical WDM Channels for Long-Haul MAN and WAN Optical Networks |
CN101924722B (en) * | 2009-06-15 | 2013-06-26 | 华为技术有限公司 | Method and device for generating and receiving OOFDM (Orthogonal Frequency Division Multiplexing) signal and wavelength division multiplexing system |
US8180227B2 (en) * | 2009-09-23 | 2012-05-15 | Alcatel Lucent | Digital coherent detection of multi-carrier optical signal |
EP2813017A4 (en) * | 2012-02-10 | 2015-10-28 | Zte Usa Inc | System and method for coherent detection with digital signal procession |
-
2016
- 2016-10-18 US US15/296,200 patent/US20170041077A1/en not_active Abandoned
-
2017
- 2017-12-21 US US15/850,782 patent/US10256907B2/en not_active Expired - Fee Related
Cited By (4)
Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
---|---|---|---|---|
US10862592B2 (en) * | 2017-08-02 | 2020-12-08 | Fujitsu Limited | Optical receiver, optical transmission system, and reception processing method |
US20230198626A1 (en) * | 2018-04-13 | 2023-06-22 | Infinera Corporation | Clock Recovery For Subcarriers In Optical Networks |
US12132524B2 (en) * | 2018-04-13 | 2024-10-29 | Infinera Corporation | Clock recovery for subcarriers in optical networks |
US11356180B2 (en) * | 2019-10-10 | 2022-06-07 | Infinera Corporation | Hub-leaf laser synchronization |
Also Published As
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US20180294880A1 (en) | 2018-10-11 |
US10256907B2 (en) | 2019-04-09 |
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