Abstract

An improved neural network-based equalization method is proposed and experimentally demonstrated. The up-to-137 Gb/s transmission of four level pulse amplitude modulation (PAM-4) signals with 25 G class 850 nm optical devices is achieved over an in-house fabricated 40 cm optical backplane. An in-depth investigation is conducted regarding the impact of delayed taps and spans on equalization performance. A performance comparison of the proposed method with the traditional maximum likelihood sequence estimation (MLSE) and decision feedback equalization (DFE) is also undertaken. For the bit rate from 80 to 100 Gb/s, the proposed method achieves an adopted hard-decision forward error correction (HD-FEC) requirement at a received optical power (RoP) of −9 and −8 dBm, while DFE and MLSE cannot meet the HD-FEC requirement. When the bit rate increases from 120 to 137 Gb/s, the proposed equalization method still successfully maintains the acceptable system performance at an RoP of −4 and −2.5 dBm. Furthermore, the specific bit error rate (BER) performances for varied maximum achievable bit rate under different RoPs by applying MLSE and the proposed method are also analyzed. This provides an important potential solution to realize the future data centers.

Highlights

  • Recent rapidly grown data traffic in the information and communication networks require high capacity short-reach (

  • The 850 nm laser-based transmissions of 112 Gb/s PAM-4 over 100 m optical multi-mode 4 (OM4 ) multimode fiber (MMF) assisted by maximum likelihood sequence estimation (MLSE) was experimentally demonstrated in [19]

  • A N5227B Keysight project network analysis (PNA) network analyzer with a 67 GHz bandwidth was employed in the mentioned measurements

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Recent rapidly grown data traffic in the information and communication networks require high capacity short-reach (

Operation Principle of the Proposed NN-Based Equalization Scheme
Experimental Results and Discussions
Conclusions
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call