WDM System Design Optiwave
WDM System Design Optiwave
WDM System Design Optiwave
Outline
A basic WDM system Design parameters to consider Loss and gain Signal to noise ratio Dispersion and dispersion compensation schemes Fiber nonlinearities types interplay with dispersion / advantageous nonlinearities strategies for their control Summary
Design Parameters
Bit rate 2.5 Gbps (Point to Point) Parameters Loss, chromatic dispersion System limitation Loss limited without transmit amplifier Dispersion limited with transmit amplifiers Chromatic dispersion without dispersion compensation OSNR with dispersion compensation OSNR with dispersion compensation OSNR limited Eye distortion limited
2.5 Gbps (Optical link with optical amplifiers + WDM) 10 Gbps (Optical link with optical amplifiers + WDM)
Loss, chromatic dispersion, OSNR, four wave mixing (FWM) Loss, chromatic dispersion, OSNR, FWM, SPM, SPM, PMD
Parameters to Consider
Loss/gain Optical signal to noise ratio Dispersion Fiber nonlinearities Self phase modulation (SPM) Cross phase modulation (XPM) Four wave mixing (FWM) Stimulated Brillouin scattering (SBS) Stimulated Raman scattering (SRS) Polarization effects
Multi channel
Fiber loss dependent Splice loss Connector loss Component loss May have dependence Optical amplifiers Gain is highly dependent Gain tilt depends on input power Gain at a certain depends on input powers of other channels
Fiber loss
Loss (dB/km) Old AllWave Standard
Low loss windows: 0.8 micron 1.3 micron 1.55 micron (~0.25 dB/km)
Typical Values
Description Loss of a connector Loss of a splice Loss of the fiber span Loss of a multiplexer Loss of a demultiplexer Description 2.5 Gbps pin diode receiver sensitivity 10 Gbps pin diode receiver sensitivity 2.5 Gbps APD receiver sensitivity 10 Gbps APD receiver sensitivity Loss value 0.25 dB 0.15 dB 0.25 dB/km 4 dB 4 dB Receiver Sensitivity -23 dBm -16 dBm -38 dBm -30 dBm
State of the art bandwidths 75 nm, 18 dB gain +/- 1.5 dB 76 nm, 20 dB gain, +/- 1 dB 92 nm transparent bandwidth
EDFA Gain
8 channels
Pin
Pin = -13 dBm one amplifier Pin = 0 dBm Pin = 8 dBm two cascaded amplifiers
Gain variation
Loss = 18 dB
BR = 2.5 Gbps
~ 4 dB
f: bandwidth
Namp: number of amplifiers G: amplifier gain, assumed equal to span loss Values at the receiver:
- 40-50 dB is good - 30 dB is acceptable
Spontaneousspontaneous
Multi-channel Fiber dispersion slope Net dispersion for different channels Wavelength dependence of compensation element
In the Erbium window, fibers have different dispersion values and slopes, which heightens the dispersion-compensation challenge
J. Lively, Dealing with the critical problem of chromatic dispersion, Lightwave, September 1998.
1 L< 4B D
rms spectral width, a typical value is about 0.15 nm
2 c L< 16 D 2 B 2
G. P. Agrawal, Applications of nonlinear fiber optics, Academic Press, 2001. R. Ramaswami and K. N. Sivarajan, Optical Networks: A practical Perspective, Morgan Kaufmann, 1998.
Dispersion Compensators
Dispersion compensating fiber (DCF)
Uses large negative dispersion in 1.5 micrometer window Small effective area leading low nonlinear power threshold Dispersion slope does not match with that of transmission fiber
Gratings
Uses wavelength dependent reflective delay Low insertion loss Dispersion slope can be written on grating Nonlinear power threshold is same as transmission fiber Phase response is not smooth
J. Lively, Dealing with the critical problem of chromatic dispersion, Lightwave, September 1998.
6 span
DCF Calculation
Ch 1: 192.8 THz SMF 90 km D = 17 ps/nm/km at 1545 nm S = 0.09 ps/nm2/km DCF 19.6 km D = -80 ps/nm/km at 1545 nm S = -0.15 ps/nm2/km Residual D = 17.89 ps/nm/km TD/span = 1610.5 ps/nm Ch 4: 193.1 THz D = 17.67 ps/nm/km TD/span = 1590.9 ps/nm Ch 8: 193.5 THz D = 17.38 ps/nm/km TD/span = 1564.9 ps/nm
80 ps/nm
-94 ps/nm
OC-48 direct mod CD tolerance: ~1500 ps/nm OC-192 external mod without pre-chirp: ~600 ps/nm OC-192 external mod with pre-chirp: from 0 to 1500 ps/nm
-4 dBm
ch 1 ch 4 ch 8
-3 dBm
ch 1
1.5
ch 4
1 0.5
-14
-12
-10
-8
-6
-4
-2
ch 8
pre
post
symmetrical
M. I. Hayee and A. E. Willner, PTL 9, pp. 1271, 1997. Sebastian Biga et. al., PTL 11, pp. 605, 1999. Giovanni Bellotti et. al., PTL 11, pp.824, 1999.
Simulation results
Bit rate = 2.5 Gbps
post
pre
symmetrical
post/symmetrical
pre
D=0
3 3
3 3
Simulation results with post-compensation Higher powers and higher bit rate
1 1
3 3
2 2 1 1
3 3
Fiber nonlinearities
Single channel Related to the real part of Self phase modulation (SPM) the refractive index Related to the imaginary part of the refractive index Stimulated Brillouin scattering (SBS) Multi channel Cross phase modulation (XPM) Four wave mixing (FWM) Stimulated Raman scattering (SRS)
linear nonlinear
1.5 W 1km 1 For the fiber we used SPM effects can be negligible when the pick power is below 166 mW or 18 dBm average power If you use N A amplifiers along the link, the criteria becomes P0 < ( N A ) . If you use two amplifiers along the link, the maximum allowable power before the nonlinearity becomes effective decreases by 3 dB Dispersion management using DCF can reduce SPM
Optical Fiber Telecommunications IIIa, ed. by I. Kaminov and T. Koch, chapter Fiber Nonlinearities and Their Impact on Transmission Systems by F. Forghieri, R. Tkach and A. Chraplyvy
L=15 km
L=30 km
= 1 THz, FWHM = 10 ps
25 km SMF
D<0
Additional pulse broadening Positive power penalties
Optical Fiber Telecommunications IIIa, ed. by I. Kaminov and T. Koch, chapter Fiber Nonlinearities and Their Impact on Transmission Systems by F. Forghieri, R. Tkach and A. Chraplyvy
D<0
D>0
Optical Fiber Telecommunications IIIa, ed. by I. Kaminov and T. Koch, chapter Fiber Nonlinearities and Their Impact on Transmission Systems by F. Forghieri, R. Tkach and A. Chraplyvy
Example layout
Bit rate = 10 Gbps
EDFA G = 35 dB NF= 0 dB
distance distance
Total dispersion = 0
10 dBm 13 dBm
G. Bellotti et. al., Dependence of self-phase modulation impairments on residual dispersion in 10 Gb/s based terrestrial transmission using standard fiber, IEEE Photon. Tech. Lett. 11, pp. 824, 1999.
N where, ch is the number of channels For a two channel system, limiting power is approximately 56 mW (17.5 dBm). For a 10 wavelength system, the limit is about 10 mW (10 dBm) Under ideal conditions (group velocities matched) XPM is two times more effective than SPM Both similar and very different from SPM
L= 0
L= Lw
Results: The calculated results show that the disperion can lessen the efects of XPM It can also induce: pulse jitter parasitic frequency shifts
Optical Fiber Telecommunications IIIa, ed. by I. Kaminov and T. Koch, chapter Fiber Nonlinearities and Their Impact on Transmission Systems by F. Forghieri, R. Tkach and A. Chraplyvy
Signal spectra
Example 2: layout
Bit rate = 10 Gbps EDFA G = 35 dB NF= 0 dB
0 dBm/ch
input spectrum
t.d = 0 ps/nm
input spectrum
distance
10 dBm/ch
output spectrum output spectrum
13 dBm/ch
S. Bigo et. al., Investigation of cross-phase modulation limitation over various types of fiber infrastructures, IEEE Photon. Tech. Lett. 11, pp. 605, 1999. M. I. Hayee and A. E. Willner, Pre- and post-compensation of dispersion and nonlinearities in 10-Gb/s WDM systems, IEEE Photon. Tech. Lett. 9, pp. 1271, 1997.
H. Taga, Long distance transmission experiments using the WDM technology, J. Lightwave Tech. 14, pp. 1287, 1996.
Power spectrum
(a)
(b)
Simulation
Eye diagrams
ch 1, Q = 16.9
ch 2, Q = 15.9
ch 1, Q = 15.8
ch 2, Q = 14.9
ch 3, Q = 19.2
ch 4, Q = 17.9
ch 3, Q = 19.2
ch 4, Q = 13.5
Experiment
Simulation
H. Taga, Long distance transmission experiments using the WDM technology, J. Lightwave Tech. 14, pp. 1287, 1996.
Pth
16 Aeff
SRS is also a function of the number of the channels and the channel power For a single channel system, the Raman threshold is about g R = 1 10 13 m / W 500 mW near 1.55 micrometer if For a 20 channel system, Pth exceeds 10 mW Pth is around 1 mW for a 70 channel system SRS has little impact on system performance
Simulation results
The threshold value also depends on modulation format and duration of pulse Some values:
9 dBm for CW light 12 dBm for externally modulated transmitter >18 dBm for externally modulated transmitter with source wavelength dither
Modulation formats
Most common modulation formats are Non-Return-to-Zero (NRZ) and Return-to-Zero (RZ) Due to higher peak power, NRZ may suffer more from nonlinearities Due to shorter pulse width, RZ may suffer more from dispersion Studies show that 10 Gbps WDM systems, in general, operate better by using RZ modulation in high power regime It is hard to go give any specific guideline due to complex interaction between dispersion and nonlinear effects
J. Yu and P. Jeppesen, Investigation of cross-phase modulation in WDM systems with NRZ and RZ modulation formats, Opt. Comm. 184, pp. 367, 2000 M. I. Hayee and A. E. Willner, NRZ versus RZ on 10-40 Gb/s dispersion managed WDM transmission systems, IEEE Photon. Tech. Lett. 11, pp. 991, 1999
Project layout
Simulation results
Launch power -10 dBm -7 dBm NRZ RZ
0 dBm
10 dBm 15 dBm
Summary
During the design process consider SNR at low powers Nonlinear effects at high powers, WDM systems GVD at high bit rates Modulation format Several alternatives to compensate dispersion Symmetrical dispersion compensation preferred But post compensation can produce similar results Managed dispersion can reduce the effects of nonlinearities, but manipulating chromatic dispersion has both positive and negative influence on nonlinearities The nonlinearities can result in negative penalties if the system is operated in the proper regime