Electrical and Electronic Engineering - Research Publications

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    Carrier assisted differential detection with a generalized transfer function
    Ji, H ; Sun, M ; Sun, C ; Shieh, W (Optica Publishing Group, 2020-11-23)
    Direct detection capable of optical field recovery not only enables high-order modulation for high spectral efficiency (SE) but also extends the transmission reach by digital compensation of linear channel impairments such as chromatic dispersion. Recently, to bridge the gap between direct detection and coherent detection, carrier assisted differential detection (CADD) has been proposed for the reception of complex-valued double-sideband signals. In this paper, we extend the concept CADD to a general selection of the transfer functions, beyond the originally-proposed delay interferometer. To validate the proposed CADD approach, we utilize an optical filter based on silicon photonics microring resonator (MRR) as one realization of the generalized transfer functions. With the MRR based optical filter, both the required carrier-to-signal power ratio (CSPR) and the optical signal-to-noise ratio (OSNR) sensitivity are drastically improved over the conventional CADD due to the significantly suppressed signal-signal beating interference (SSBI). In addition, the proposed CADD is resilient to the wavelength offset up to several GHz between the transmitter laser and the center wavelength of the MRR based optical filter. With the proposed transfer function, CADD provides a novel approach for achieving high-SE transmission with superior receiver sensitivity and could be potentially useful for inter-/intra-datacenter or mobile front haul applications.
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    Carrier-assisted differential detection
    Shieh, W ; Sun, C ; Ji, H (Springer Nature, 2020-02-10)
    To overcome power fading induced by chromatic dispersion in optical fiber communications, optical field recovery is a promising solution for direct detection short-reach applications, such as fast-evolving data center interconnects (DCIs). To date, various direct detection schemes capable of optical field recovery have been proposed, including Kramers-Kronig (KK) and signal-signal beat interference (SSBI) iterative cancellation (IC) receivers. However, they are all restricted to the single sideband (SSB) modulation format, thus conspicuously losing half of the electrical spectral efficiency (SE) compared with double sideband (DSB) modulation. Additionally, SSB suffers from the noise folding issue, requiring a precise optical filter that complicates the receiver design. As such, it is highly desirable to investigate the field recovery of DSB signals via direct detection. In this paper, for the first time, we propose a novel receiver scheme called carrier-assisted differential detection (CADD) to realize optical field recovery of complex-valued DSB signals via direct detection. First, CADD doubles the electrical SE compared with the KK and SSBI IC receivers by adopting DSB modulation without sacrificing receiver sensitivities. Furthermore, by using direct detection without needing a precise receiver optical filter, CADD can employ cost-effective uncooled lasers as opposed to expensive temperature-controlled lasers in coherent systems. Our proposed receiver architecture opens a new class of direct detection schemes that are suitable for photonic integration analogous to homodyne receivers in coherent detection.
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    Polarization-diversity receiver using remotely delivered local oscillator without optical polarization control.
    Ji, H ; Zhou, X ; Sun, C ; Shieh, W (Optical Society of America (OSA), 2020-07-20)
    Silicon photonics coherent transceivers have integrated all the necessary optics except the lasers. The laser source has become a major obstacle to further reduce the cost, footprint, power consumption of the coherent transceivers for short-reach optical interconnects. One solution is to utilize remotely delivered local oscillator (LO) from the transmitter, which has the benefits of relaxing the requirements of wavelength stability and laser linewidth and simplifying the digital signal processing (DSP) of carrier/phase recovery. However, a sophisticated adaptive polarization controller (APC) driven by a control loop in the electrical domain with a complicated algorithm is required to dynamically track and compensate for the polarization wandering of the received LO. In this paper, we propose a hybrid single-polarization coherent receiver and Stokes vector receiver (SVR) for polarization-diversity coherent detection without a need of optical polarization control for the remotely delivered LO. With such a scheme, we successfully received a 400-Gb/s dual-polarization constellation-shaped 64-QAM signal over 80-km fibers.
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    Carrier-assisted differential detection
    Shieh, W ; Sun, C ; Ji, H (Springer Nature, 2020-02-10)
    To overcome power fading induced by chromatic dispersion in optical fiber communications, optical field recovery is a promising solution for direct detection short-reach applications, such as fast-evolving data center interconnects (DCIs). To date, various direct detection schemes capable of optical field recovery have been proposed, including Kramers-Kronig (KK) and signal-signal beat interference (SSBI) iterative cancellation (IC) receivers. However, they are all restricted to the single sideband (SSB) modulation format, thus conspicuously losing half of the electrical spectral efficiency (SE) compared with double sideband (DSB) modulation. Additionally, SSB suffers from the noise folding issue, requiring a precise optical filter that complicates the receiver design. As such, it is highly desirable to investigate the field recovery of DSB signals via direct detection. In this paper, for the first time, we propose a novel receiver scheme called carrier-assisted differential detection (CADD) to realize optical field recovery of complex-valued DSB signals via direct detection. First, CADD doubles the electrical SE compared with the KK and SSBI IC receivers by adopting DSB modulation without sacrificing receiver sensitivities. Furthermore, by using direct detection without needing a precise receiver optical filter, CADD can employ cost-effective uncooled lasers as opposed to expensive temperature-controlled lasers in coherent systems. Our proposed receiver architecture opens a new class of direct detection schemes that are suitable for photonic integration analogous to homodyne receivers in coherent detection.
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    Computational complexity comparison of feedforward/radial basis function/recurrent neural network-based equalizer for a 50-Gb/s PAM4 direct-detection optical link
    Xu, Z ; Sun, C ; Ji, T ; Manton, JH ; Shieh, W (Optical Society of America (OSA), 2019-12-09)
    The computational complexity and system bit-error-rate (BER) performance of four types of neural-network-based nonlinear equalizers are analyzed for a 50-Gb/s pulse amplitude modulation (PAM)-4 direct-detection (DD) optical link. The four types are feedforward neural networks (F-NN), radial basis function neural networks (RBF-NN), auto-regressive recurrent neural networks (AR-RNN) and layer-recurrent neural networks (L-RNN). Numerical results show that, for a fixed BER threshold, the AR-RNN-based equalizers have the lowest computational complexity. Amongst all the nonlinear NN-based equalizers with the same number of inputs and hidden neurons, F-NN-based equalizers have the lowest computational complexity while the AR-RNN-based equalizers exhibit the best BER performance. Compared with F-NN or RNN, RBF-NN tends to require more hidden neurons with the increase of the number of inputs, making it not suitable for long fiber transmission distance. We also demonstrate that only a few tens of multiplications per symbol are needed for NN-based equalizers to guarantee a good BER performance. This relatively low computational complexity signifies that various NN-based equalizers can be potentially implemented in real time. More broadly, this paper provides guidelines for selecting a suitable NN-based equalizer based on BER and computational complexity requirements.