Title: EE 230: Optical Fiber Communication Lecture 15
1 EE 230 Optical Fiber Communication Lecture 15
WDM Components
From the movie Warriors of the Net
2ITU Grid
- Wavelengths for CWDM and frequencies for DWDM
defined by International Telecommunication Union,
a part of the United Nations located in Geneva - Central frequency is 193.1 THz, equivalent to
1552.52 nm - Frequencies for 50 GHz channel spacings are thus
defined as 193.1 0.05n THz where n is a
positive or negative integer
3Active vs. Passive Devices
- Passive requires no electrical power and
transfer function cannot be modified by user - Active allows user to manipulate what it does
to light pulses. Requires power.
4Platforms for WDM components
- Discrete optics thin-film filters,
microelectromechanical systems (MEMS), isolators,
circulators - All-fiber components couplers, Mach-Zehnder
interferometers - Planar lightwave circuits (PLC)
arrayed-waveguide gratings (AWG), couplers, MZs,
etc.
5Coupler parameters
- Splitting ratio P2/(P1P2)
- Excess loss 10 log (P0/P1P2)
- Insertion loss 10 log (Pin/Pout)
- Crosstalk 10 log (P3/P0)
6Coupling as function of length
7Mach-Zehnder Interferometer
- where neff is determined from the Pcore/P graphs
8Multiplexing/demultiplexing criterion
- where ?L is the path length difference between
the two arms
9Wavelength dependence of MZ output
- For wavelengths ?1 entering at input port 1, and
?2 entering at input port 2, -
10Wavelength adjustment (trim)
- Coarse adjustment possible with fiber MZs by
heating and pulling shorter arm to increase
channel spacing - Fine adjustment for both fiber and PLCs done with
UV irradiation to line transmission peaks up with
ITU grid
11Example
- To multiplex four wavelengths separated by 50 GHz
(0.4 nm) - How many stages needed?
- (log2 W). How many total MZs?
- Two in one stage, one in the next.
- What is ?L for each stage?
12Example, continued
- If first frequency is ITU center, what are other
three, and their wavelengths? - 193.10, 193.15, 193.20, and 193.25 THz
- 1552.52, 1552.12, 1551.72, and 1551.32 nm
- If neff1.45, determine ?L values
13Example, continued
- First stages have 100 GHz channel spacing, one
for even-numbered wavelengths and one for odd.
?L equals c/2n(100x109)1.0 mm - Second stages have 50 GHz channel spacing. ?L
c/2n(50x109)2.1 mm - As channel spacing gets smaller, it gets easier
to make MZs (larger ?L)!
14General MZ expression
- For a multiplexer or demultiplexer with N
wavelengths, you need nlog2N stages where the
path length difference for stage i is
15Arrayed-Waveguide Grating
16AWG channel spacing
- where nsinput/output waveguide index, nccentral
waveguide array index, and -
17Tuning an AWG
- Each input waveguide corresponds to a different
center wavelength and channel spacing. Several
waveguides around the center one will correspond
to the correct channel spacing within the
tolerance, and the peak wavelengths will vary
from one waveguide to another.
18WDM Muxes and Demuxes
19Grating Based Demultiplexer
20Optical Filters
21Interference Filter Based WDM
22Thermal drift in waveguide devices
- ?n/?T for silica7.5x10-6 per degree
- for silicon2.63 ppm per degree
- d?/dT 12 pm per degree (red shift)
- 2/3 due to thermooptic effect, 1/3 to CTE
23Effect of thermal drift
- Channel spacing100 GHz0.8 nm800 pm
- DWDM device completely transparent every 800 pm,
opaque between - Silica-on-silicon drifts 12 pm/?
- Device becomes a beam stop if temperature changes
by ? - 33?! Passive devices routinely T stabilized
customers unhappy
24Athermalization Techniques
- Mechanical compensation flex entire chip,
adjust point at which signal injected into device - Materials compensation design waveguide to be
inherently athermal