A method and apparatus is provided for managing dispersion in a wdm optical transmission system so that transmission performance is improved. The usable optical bandwidth of the transmission system is divided into sub-bands that individually undergo dispersion compensation before being re-combined. Accordingly, in comparison to known dispersion mapping techniques, more wdm data channels reside near a wavelength corresponding to the average zero dispersion wavelength.
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0. 71. A method for compensating for dispersion in a wavelength division multiplexed optical communication system that includes optical signal having a prescribed bandwidth and a plurality of optical paths configured to carry said optical signal, said method comprising the steps of:
filtering the signals along each of said optical paths to divide the prescribed bandwidth of the signal into a plurality of distinct sub-bands; and compensating for dispersion at a prescribed wavelength within the distinct sub-bands.
0. 67. A dispersion compensator comprising:
a plurality of optical paths configured to carry a wavelength division multiplexed optical signals having a prescribed bandwidth; a bandpass filter disposed along each of said optical paths, said filters dividing the prescribed bandwidth of the signal into a plurality of distinct sub-bands; and a dispersion compensating element coupled to each of said bandpass filters, said dispersion compensating optical elements each substantially compensating for dispersion at a prescribed wavelength within the bandpass of its respective bandpass filter.
29. A method for compensating for dispersion in a wdm optical communication system that includes a transmitter, receiver, and an optical fiber transmission path coupling said transmitter to said receiver, said method comprising the steps of:
splitting a signal at an intermediate point along the transmission path to be directed onto a plurality of optical paths, said signal having a prescribed bandwidth; filtering the signals along each of said optical paths to divide the prescribed bandwidth of the signal into a plurality of distinct sub-bands; compensating for dispersion at a prescribed wavelength within the distinct sub-bands; recombining said distinct sub-bands and directing said recombined distinct sub-bands onto said optical fiber transmission path.
43. A wdm optical communications system, comprising:
a transmitter and a receiver; an optical fiber transmission path coupling said transmitter to said receiver, said transmission path including at least one optical amplifier; a dispersion compensator disposed at an intermediate point along said transmission path, said compensator including: a wavelength routing device for dividing a signal having a prescribed bandwidth into a plurality of distinct sub-bands; a plurality of output paths for respectively receiving said plurality of distinct sub-bands; a dispersion compensating optical element coupled to each of the output paths, said dispersion compensating optical elements each substantially compensating for dispersion at a prescribed wavelength within the bandpass of its respective sub-band; a coupler for recombining said distinct sub-bands and coupling said recombined distinct sub-bands onto said optical fiber transmission path. 1. A wdm optical communication system, comprising:
a transmitter and a receiver; an optical fiber transmission path coupling said transmitter to said receiver, said transmission path including at least one optical amplifier; a dispersion compensator disposed at an intermediate point along said transmission path, said compensator including: an optical splitter for dividing a signal introduced therein onto a plurality of optical paths, said signal having a prescribed bandwidth; a bandpass filter disposed along each of said optical paths, said filters dividing the prescribed bandwidth of the signal into a plurality of distinct sub-bands; a dispersion compensating element coupled to each of the bandpass filters, said dispersion compensating optical elements each substantially compensating for dispersion at a prescribed wavelength within the bandpass of its respective bandpass filter; a coupler for recombining said distinct sub-bands and coupling said recombined distinct sub-bands onto said optical fiber transmission path. 58. A wdm optical communication system, comprising:
a transmitter and a receiver; an optical fiber transmission path coupling said transmitter to said receiver, said transmission path including at least one optical amplifier; a dispersion compensator disposed at an intermediate point along said transmission path, said compensator including: a circulator having at least an input port for receiving optical signals from the transmission path, an output port for transmitting optical signals onto the transmission path, and a third port; a wavelength routing device coupled to said third port of the circulator for dividing a signal having a prescribed bandwidth into a plurality of distinct sub-bands; a plurality of output paths for respectively receiving said plurality of distinct sub-bands; a dispersion compensating optical element coupled to each of the output paths, said dispersion compensating optical elements each substantially compensating for dispersion at a prescribed wavelength within the bandpass of its respective sub-band; a faraday rotator mirror coupled to each of the dispersion compensating optical elements. 15. A dispersion compensator for use in a wdm optical communication system that includes a transmitter, receiver, and an optical fiber transmission path coupling said transmitter to said receiver, said transmission path including at least one optical amplifier, said dispersion compensator comprising:
an optical splitter for dividing a signal introduced therein onto a plurality of optical paths, said signal having a prescribed bandwidth, said optical splitter being adapted to receive said signal from an intermediate point along said optical fiber transmission path; a bandpass filter disposed along each of said optical paths, said filters dividing the prescribed bandwidth of the signal into a plurality of distinct sub-bands; a dispersion compensating optical element coupled to each of the bandpass filters, said dispersion compensating optical elements each substantially compensating for dispersion at a prescribed wavelength within the bandpass of its respective bandpass filter; a coupler for recombining said distinct sub-bands, said coupler being adapted to couple said recombined distinct sub-bands onto said optical fiber transmission path.
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The invention relates to the optical transmission of information and, more particularly, to a method and apparatus for compensating for chromatic dispersion that accrues over optical fiber transmission systems.
The availability of high performance optical amplifiers such as the Erbium-Doped Fiber-Amplifier (EDFA) has renewed interest in the use of wavelength division multiplexing (WDM) for optical transmission system. In a WDM transmission system, two or more optical data carrying channels are combined onto a common path for transmission to a remote receiver. Typically, in a long-haul optical fiber system, the set of wavelength channels would be amplified simultaneously in an optical amplifier based repeater. The Erbium-Doped Fiber-Amplifier is particularly useful for this purpose because of its ability to amplify multiple wavelength channels without crosstalk penalty.
Typically, it is advantageous to operate long-haul transmission systems at high data rates per channel. For example, useful data rates include multiples of the Synchronous Digital Hierarchy (SDH) standard, i.e., 2.5 and 10 Gb/s. As the bit rates increase through the gigabit per second range, the optical powers launched into the transmission fiber need to approach 1 mW per channel. As was demonstrated by Bergano et al. (European Conference on Optical Communications, Brussels, Belgium, paper Th.A. 3.1 Sept. (1995) the Non-Return-to-Zero (NRZ) transmission format is over optically amplified fiber paths. However, NRZ channels operating over long distances require sufficient control over the total amount of chromatic dispersion to ensure low dispersion penalties. Accordingly, the preferred transmission medium for such a system is dispersion shifted optical fibers.
Crosstalk, or the mixing of channels through the slight nonlinearity in the transmission fiber, may arise from the combination of long distance, low dispersion and high channel power. The transmission of many WDM channels over transoceanic distances may be limited by nonlinear interactions between channels, which in turn is affected by the amount of dispersion. This subject was reviewed by Tkach et al. (Journal of Lightwave Technology in Vol. 13, No. 5, May 1995 pp. 841-849). As discussed in Tkach et al., this problem may be overcome by a technique known as dispersion mapping, in which the generation of mixing products is reduced by offsetting the zero dispersion wavelengths of the transmitter. This technique employs a series of amplifier sections having dispersion shifted fiber spans with either positive or negative dispersion. The dispersion accumulates over multiple fiber spans of approximately 500 to 1000 km. The fiber spans of either positive or negative sign are followed by a dispersion-compensating fiber having dispersion of the opposite sign. This subsequent section of fiber is sufficient to reduce the average dispersion (averaged over the total length of the transmission system) substantially to zero. That is, a fiber of high negative (positive) dispersion permits compensation by a length of positive (negative) transmission fiber.
The efficacy of the dispersion mapping technique is limited because the amount of dispersion that occurs in a typical optical fiber depends on the operating wavelength that is employed. That is, only one given wavelength can operate at average zero dispersion. The wavelength dependence of the dispersion coefficient is sometimes referred to as the dispersion slope of the fiber. Accordingly, because of this characteristic of the dispersion slope, the various channels employed in a WDM system cannot all operate at the wavelength of average zero dispersion. This limitation can be overcome to a limited degree by using individual channel dispersion compensation at the receiver. However, since these systems are subject to nonlinear penalty, the ability to correct for the non-zero dispersion at the receiver terminal is limited.
In accordance with the present invention, a method and apparatus is provided for managing dispersion in a WDM optical transmission system so that transmission performance is improved. In accordance with the inventive method, the usable optical bandwidth of the transmission system is divided into sub-bands that individually undergo dispersion compensation before being re-combined. Accordingly, in comparison to known dispersion mapping techniques, more WDM data channels reside near a wavelength corresponding to the average zero dispersion wavelength.
In one embodiment of the invention, a WDM optical communication system is provided that includes a transmitter, receiver, an optical fiber transmission path coupling the transmitter to the receiver, and at least one optical amplifier. A dispersion compensator, which is disposed at an intermediate point along the transmission path, includes an optical splitter for dividing a signal introduced therein onto a plurality of optical paths. The signal has a prescribed bandwidth. A bandpass filter is disposed along each of the optical paths and divides the prescribed bandwidth of the signal into a plurality of distinct sub-bands. A dispersion compensating element is coupled to each of the bandpass filters. The dispersion compensating optical elements each substantially compensate for dispersion at a prescribed wavelength within the bandpass of its respective bandpass filter. A coupler is employed to recombine the distinct sub-bands and couple the recombined distinct sub-bands onto the optical fiber transmission path.
A simple linearized chromatic dispersion relationship between the signal wavelength λsig and the dispersion D is given in equation 1:
where the dispersion D is measured in units of ps/nm, the dispersion slope S is measured in units of ps/km-nm2, and the average zero dispersion wavelength λ0 of the transmission fiber is measured in units of nm. As equation 1 clearly indicates, the point of minimum dispersion only occurs at one particular wavelength λ0. Accordingly, as disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 5,559,920, if a set of WDM channels were transmitted along the transmission path 100, a dispersion compensating fiber could only translate one channel back to the zero dispersion wavelength. The remaining channels would accumulate dispersion. As previously noted, this problem can be alleviated with individual channel dispersion compensation at the receiver; however, since these systems are subject to nonlinear penalty, the ability to correct for the non-zero dispersion at the receiver terminal is limited. Thus, to transmit the channels with low dispersion penalty, there is an upper bound on the maximum amount of accumulated dispersion that each channel can tolerate, which is bit rate dependent. As the bit rate of each channel is increased, the allowable amount of accumulated dispersion per channel is reduced. This problem is overcome by the dispersion compensator shown in FIG. 2.
Compensating fiber 202 is optionally provided as a potential cost saving step to perform any dispersion compensation that is required by all of the N wavebands. For example, if the required amount of dispersion compensation ranged from -1000 ps/nm for band 1 to -500 ps/nm for band N, equalizing fiber 202 advantageously may provide -500 ps/nm of dispersion, which is required by each of the N wavebands. Accordingly, the amount of equalizing dispersion needed in the plurality of fibers 2051, 2052, 2053, . . . 205N would range from -500 ps/nm to 0 ps/nm. The equalizing fiber 202 may be directly incorporated into the transmission path itself, thus yielding a significant cost savings. For example, the equalizing fiber 202 may be an extension of the cable defining the transmission path.
When provided, the loss elements 2081, 2082, 2083, . . . 208N facilitate the equalization of the gain for the respective N wavebands. For example, an EDFA-based transmission system may required some degree of gain equalization when employed in wide-band applications. The loss elements 2081, 2082, 2083, . . . 208N may be selected to equalize the received signal-to-noise ratio of the transmitted WDM channels in the N wavebands.
In the embodiment of the invention shown in
The embodiments of the invention described prior to
In the previously described embodiments of the invention it was assumed that the transmission fiber had a negative dispersion and that the dispersion compensator had a positive dispersion. Of course, those skilled in the art will recognize that the invention alternatively could operate in connection with a transmission fiber having a positive dispersion and a dispersion compensator that has negative dispersion. Moreover, the invention is not limited to signals arranged in an NRZ transmission format. For example, the invention is also applicable to soliton transmission systems, particularly those systems that use sliding frequency-guiding jitter control. In such systems the optical powers should be directly tied to the average chromatic dispersion. The dispersion slope causes the different soliton WDM channels to operate at different optical powers. Accordingly, the present invention may advantageously equalize the optical powers by allowing the channels to operate at similar values of chromatic dispersion. Other soliton systems in which the invention may be advantageously employed include a dispersion managed soliton system in which accumulated jitter is minimized by periodically reducing dispersion with a dispersion equalizer.
In operation, the optical signal is received by the compensator on input fiber 901 and enters the common compensating fiber 902, if provided. The signal next enters port 910 of a three port circulator 903, exits on port 920 of circulator 903, and is received by wavelength routing device 904. The wavelength routing device 904 divides the signal into a plurality of output bands which are directed along distinct optical paths to a respective one of the dispersion compensating fibers 9051, 9052, 9053, . . . 905N and loss bands traverse the dispersion compensating fibers 9051, 9052, 9053, . . . 905N and loss elements 9061, 9062, 9063, . . . 906N, respectively, can be half of that imparted by the corresponding components in the embodiment of FIG. 3. The optical bands each enter a Faraday rotator mirror 907, which reflects the bands back on themselves with a state-of-polarization that is orthogonal to its respective input state. The Faraday rotator mirror may be, for example, of the type supplied by E-TEK Dynamics, Inc. (1885 Lundy Ave., San Jose, Calif. 95131) as model HSFM.
One of ordinary skill in the art will recognize that when an optical element such as the wavelength routing device is placed between a circulator and a Faraday rotator mirror, the polarization dependence of the optical element is effectively removed (or at least substantially reduced when observed from the input and output of the circulator). Accordingly, the embodiment of the invention shown in
The optical bands reflected by mirrors 907 once again traverse loss elements 9061, 9062, 9063, . . . 906N and dispersion compensating elements 9051, 9052, 9053, . . . 905N and are recombined onto a single fiber in the routing device 904. The recombined signal enters port 920 of circulator 903 and is returned to the transmission path of the system on fiber 908 by port 930 of circulator 903.
It should be appreciated by those skilled in the art that the common compensating fiber 902 may be alternatively located between port 920 of circulator 903 and the wavelength routing device 904. In this case the signal would traverse the compensating fiber twice, thus only requiring it to impart half the dispersion that would be required by the configuration shown in FIG. 9.
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