|
1.IntroductionRadio over fiber (ROF) systems have been proposed as a possible next-generation broadband wireless access technology for picocellular and indoor wireless LAN applications, etc.1 The millimeter-wave band (16 to 19, 28, 38, 58, and 62 to ) is considered to be a promising solution owing to its large bandwidth, spectrum availability, and the compact size of radio frequency (rf) devices.2 As the key technique in an ROF system, all-optical frequency upconversion has become a hot research area. Recently, several new schemes3, 4 for realizing this function have been reported. In this letter, we demonstrate experimentally a scheme for upconversion by nonlinear polarization rotation (NPR) in a highly nonlinear fiber at the optical pulse clock frequency. The four channels of wavelength division multiplexing (WDM) signals are carried by 20-GHz optical pulses after upconversion. In our scheme, just a low-speed modulator with bandwidth and a passive highly nonlinear fiber are required. 2.Principle of UpconversionIn Fig. 1a the pump and WDM signals are linearly polarized at to each other at the input end, as shown in Fig. 1b. At the output end, the polarizer blocks WDM signal transmission in the absence of the pump beam. When the pump is turned on, the refractive indices for the parallel and perpendicular components of the WDM signals become different because of pump-induced birefringence. The phase difference between the two polarization components at the fiber output induces a change of polarization state for the WDM signals. If the change equals , the WDM signals will output through the polarizer. The change depends on the pump intensity and can be controlled. As a result, the pump will modulate the WDM signals at a switching speed of to realize frequency upconversion. 3.Experiment and ResultsThe experimental setup is showed in Fig. 2. A 1-km highly nonlinear dispersion-shifted fiber (HNLDSF) with a nonlinearity coefficient of , and a loss of is used for NPR. Four WDM signals, shown in Fig. 3a, are modulated by a 2.5-GHz -bit pseudorandom binary sequence through a Mach-Zehnder modulator. Their wavelengths are 1535.64, 1537.03, 1538.54, and . To generate a 20-GHz optical local oscillator (LO) signal, the pump laser is modulated by driving a Mach-Zehnder modulator biased at with an electrically amplified 10-GHz sinusoid waveform. The 20-GHz optical LO is shown in Fig. 3b. Its wavelength is . Both the optical LO signal and the WDM signals were amplified by erbium-doped fiber amplifiers, and their polarization directions were adjusted by the polarization controller (PC) before they were launched into the HNLDSF. The signal power is , and the pump power is . To get enough polarization rotation, the length of the HNLDSF is . A tunable bandpass filter was used to reject the LO signal and extract the desired channel signal. The filter’s 3-dB bandwidth is . Through the other PC and polarization beamsplitter (PBS), the best output polarization direction can be chosen. The extracted channel was then converted from optical to electrical by a pin diode with a 3-dB bandwidth of . The converted electrical signals were input to the rf port of the mixer. An electrical LO signal at was generated by using a frequency multiplier from 10 to and then amplified by a wideband electrical amplifier (EA) with a bandwidth of centered at . The LO signal is connected to the LO port of the mixer to downconvert the electrical millimeter-wave signal. The downconverted 2.5-Gbit/s signal filtered by a 2.5-GHz lowpass filter was amplified by the electrical amplifier. Eye diagrams were recorded by a high-speed oscilloscope. Figure 4 shows the output waveforms from the PBS and the eye diagrams of the downconversion signals from the mixer. Figure 4 shows that the measured optical signal-to-noise ratio (OSNR), defined at a noise bandwidth of , of each channel after upconversion is larger than , and clear downconverted eye diagrams are attained, which indicates that simultaneous upconversion of WDM to 20-GHz optical carrier has been performed successfully. AcknowledgmentThis work was supported by the National 863 Program of China under contract 2006AA01Z256, and by the Program for New Century Excellent Talents in University under contract NCET-06-0093. ReferencesJ. Hansen,
“A novel stochastic millimeter-wave indoor radio channel model,”
IEEE J. Sel. Areas Commun., 20
(6), 1240
–1246
(2002). 0733-8716 Google Scholar
L. M. Correia and
R. Prasad,
“An overview of wireless broadband communications,”
IEEE Commun. Mag., 35
(1), 28
–33
(1997). 0148-9615 Google Scholar
Y. Le Guennec,
G. Maury,
Yao Jianping, and
B. Cabon,
“New optical microwave upconversion solution in radio-over-fiber networks for 60-GHz wireless applications,”
J. Lightwave Technol., 24
(3), 1277
–1282
(2006). 0733-8724 Google Scholar
J. Yu,
J. Jia,
L. Yi,
Y. Su,
G.-K. Chang, and
T. Wang,
“Optical millimeter-wave generation or up-conversion using external modulators,”
IEEE Photonics Technol. Lett., 18 265
–267
(2006). https://doi.org/10.1109/LPT.2005.862006 1041-1135 Google Scholar
|