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160-Gbit/s OTDM Receiver Consisting of a PD-EAM Optical Gate and an MLLD-Based Optical Clock Recovery Device | IEEE Conference Publication | IEEE Xplore

160-Gbit/s OTDM Receiver Consisting of a PD-EAM Optical Gate and an MLLD-Based Optical Clock Recovery Device


Abstract:

We have developed a semiconductor-based OTDM receiver comprised of a PD-EAM optical gate and an MLLD-based optical clock recovery device, and achieved error-free 1:4 demu...Show More

Abstract:

We have developed a semiconductor-based OTDM receiver comprised of a PD-EAM optical gate and an MLLD-based optical clock recovery device, and achieved error-free 1:4 demultiplexing of a 160-Gbit/s data stream.
Date of Conference: 14-14 July 2005
Date Added to IEEE Xplore: 10 January 2006
Print ISBN:0-7803-9242-6
Conference Location: Tokyo, Japan
NTT Photonics Laboratories, NTT Corporation, Japan
NTT Photonics Laboratories, NTT Corporation, Japan
NTT Photonics Laboratories, NTT Corporation, Japan
NTT Photonics Laboratories, NTT Corporation, Japan
NTT Photonics Laboratories, NTT Corporation, Japan

Introduction

A 160-Gbit/s-transmission system employing optical time-division multiplexing (OTDM) is an attractive solution for future high-bit-rate fiber-optic communications systems [1]. As a compact and stable optical gate for the OTDM system, we have proposed a monolithic optical gate consisting of a uni-traveling-carrier photodiode (UTC-PD) and a traveling wave (TW) EAM (PD-EAM), and demonstrated error-free demultiplexing (DEMUX) operation up to 320-Gbit/s [2]. On the other hand, DEMUX also requires optical clock recovery at the reduced data rate. To effectively recover a fast optical clock, we have developed an optical clock recovery device that uses a regeneratively mode-locked laser diode (MLLD-OCR), and demonstrated successful recovery of a 40-GHz optical clock from a 160-Gbit/s data stream [3]. One of our goals is to construct a stable compact OTDM receiver employing these semiconductor-based optical devices. In this paper, we report the demultiplexing of a 160-Gbit/s data stream to 40-Gbit/s tributary data streams using a PD-EAM together with an MLLD-OCR.

NTT Photonics Laboratories, NTT Corporation, Japan
NTT Photonics Laboratories, NTT Corporation, Japan
NTT Photonics Laboratories, NTT Corporation, Japan
NTT Photonics Laboratories, NTT Corporation, Japan
NTT Photonics Laboratories, NTT Corporation, Japan

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References

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