Alcatel-Lucent demos dual-carrier Terabit transmission
Thursday, February 14, 2013 at 5:42PM
Roy Rubenstein in 16-QAM, Alcatel-Lucent, Bell Labs, CMOS, Paul Winzer, Photonic integration, Photonic service engine, dual-polarisation quadrature phase-shift keying, gazettabits, soft-decision FEC

"Without [photonic] integration you are doubling up your expensive opto-electronic components which doesn't scale"

Peter Winzer, Alcatel-Lucent's Bell Labs

 

Part 1: Terabit optical transmission

Alcatel-Lucent's research arm, Bell Labs, has used high-speed electronics to enable one Terabit long-haul optical transmission using two carriers only.

Several system vendors have demonstrated one Terabit transmission including Alcatel-Lucent but the company is claiming an industry first in using two multiplexed carriers only. In 2009, Alcatel-Lucent's first Terabit optical transmission used 24 sub-carriers.

"There is a tradeoff between the speed of electronics and the number of optical modulators and detectors you need," says Peter Winzer, director of optical transmission systems and networks research at Bell Labs. "In general it will be much cheaper doing it with fewer carriers at higher electronics speeds than doing it at a lower speed with many more carriers."

 

What has been done

In the lab-based demonstration, Bell Labs sent five, 1 Terabit-per-second (Tbps) signals over an equivalent distance of 3,200km. Each signal uses dual-polarisation 16-QAM (quadrature amplitude modulation) to achieve a 1.28Tbps signal. Thus each carrier holds 640Gbps: some 500Gbps data and the rest forward error correction (FEC) bits.

In current 100Gbps systems, dual-polarisation, quadrature phase-shift keying (DP-QPSK) modulation is used. Going from QPSK to 16-QAM doubles the bit rate. Bell Labs has also increased the symbol rate from some 30Gbaud to 80Gbaud using state-of-the-art high-speed electronics developed at Alcatel Thales III-V Lab. 

"To achieve these rates, you need special high-speed components - multiplexers - and also high-speed multi-level devices," says Winzer.  These are indium phosphide components, not CMOS and hence will not be deployed in commercial products for several years yet. "These things are realistic [in CMOS], just not for immediate product implementation," says Winzer.

Each carrier occupies 100GHz of channel bandwidth equating to 200GHz overall, or a 5.2b/s/Hz spectral efficiency. Current state-of-the-art 100Gbps systems use 50GHz channels, achieving 2b/s/Hz.

The 3,200km reach using 16-QAM technology is achieved in the lab, using good fibre and without any commercial product margins, says Winzer. Adding commercial product margins would reduce the optical link budget by 2-3dB and hence the overall reach.

Winzer says the one Terabit demonstration uses all the technologies employed in Alcatel-Lucent's photonic service engine (PSE) ASIC although the algorithms and soft-decision FEC used are more advanced, as expected in an R&D trial.

Before such one Terabit systems become commercial, progress in photonic integration will be needed as well as advances in CMOS process technology.

"Progress in photonic integration is needed to get opto-electronic costs down as it [one Terabit] is still going to need two-to-four sub-carriers," he says. A balance between parallelism and speed needs to be struck, and parallelism is best achieved using integration. "Without integration you are doubling up your expensive opto-electronic components which doesn't scale," says WInzer.

 

In Part 2: Space-division multiplexing: the final frontier

Article originally appeared on Gazettabyte (https://www.gazettabyte.com/).
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