Abstract

Millimeter-wave band signals have the advantage of a high capacity and have been used in fifth-generation (5G) mobile services. An analog radio over multi-mode fiber (A-RoMMF) employing a directly modulated vertical cavity surface emitting laser is a promising technology for relaying millimeter-wave band signals to its dead area because of the advantages of low latency, low cost, and low power consumption. One of the applications of A-RoMMF is a cascaded intermediate-frequency-over-fiber (IFoF)-based centralized radio access network (C-RAN) mobile fronthaul (MFH) system. We conducted two studies on A-RoMMF to extend the transmission distance and bandwidth to adapt it to the system. First, we evaluated the effect of employing a single-mode vertical cavity surface emitting laser (VCSEL) and a multi-mode VCSEL on the transmission characteristics of A-RoMMF. Next, we evaluated the transmission characteristics of A-RoMMF using a cost-efficient bias-tee consisting of an electrical circuit pattern, the frequency response of which has a slope inverse to that of A-RoMMF at the 28-GHz band, to suppress the channel power difference of two component carrier signals for a wide-bandwidth signal transmission. We conducted these evaluations using A-RoMMF itself and herein demonstrate its adaption to a cascaded IFoF-based C-RAN MFH system at the 28-GHz band. When employing it with a 200-m long multi-mode fiber, the system achieves 400-MHz/CC and two component carrier signal transmissions.

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