Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
462352 Optical Fiber Technology 2016 12 Pages PDF
Abstract

•A filterless few wavelength source for S-BVTs based on SSB-SC frequency shifting.•λ tunable over C-band, symmetric and asymmetric carrier spacing (6.25–37.5 GHz).•The control on the number of carriers (increase/decrease), flexibility to the SBVT.•480 Gb/s transmission, comparison with standard lasers for different carrier spacing.•Finally, an integrated solution based on complementary FS for scalability and costs.

Multi-wavelength (MW) sources will probably replace discrete lasers or laser arrays in next generation multi-carrier transponders (e.g., 1 Tb/s), currently called multi-flow transponders or sliceable bandwidth variable transponders (SBVTs).We present design and experimental demonstration of a few wavelength (FW) source suitable for SBVTs in a flexgrid scenario. We refer to FW instead of MW since for an SBVT just few subcarriers are required (e.g., eight). The proposed FW source does not require optical filtering for subcarrier modulation. The design exploits frequency shifting in IQ modulators by using single side band suppressed carrier modulation. A reasonable number of lines can be provided depending on the chosen architecture, tunable in the whole C-band. The scheme is also capable of providing symmetric (equally spaced) and asymmetric subcarrier spacing arbitrarily tunable from 6.25 GHz to 37.5 GHz. The control on the number of subcarriers (increase/decrease depending on line rate) provides flexibility to the SBVT, being the spacing dependent on transmission parameters such as line rate or modulation format. Transmission performance has been tested and compared with an array of standard lasers considering a 480 Gb/s transmission for different carrier spacing. Additionally, an integrable solution based on complementary frequency shifter is also presented to improve scalability and costs. The impact on transceiver techno-economics and network performance is also discussed.

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Physical Sciences and Engineering Computer Science Computer Networks and Communications
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