Abstract

A bandwidth-tunable multiband microwave photonic filter (MPF) using a strongly coupled microring resonator (MRR) with optical phase modulation is demonstrated theoretically and experimentally. Two notches of the MRR adjacent to the optical carrier break the intrinsic balance of the phase-modulated signal and then two sub-MPFs are formed thanks to the conversion from phase modulation to intensity modulation (PM-IM). The frequency responses of the two sub-MPFs are superimposed to form a passband with a fixed center frequency. Due to the periodicity of the MRR transmission spectrum, multiple passbands separated by a certain spacing appear in the frequency domain and combine to form a multiband MPF, whose bandwidth can be adjusted by tuning the wavelength of the carrier. The tunable bandwidth and shape factors ranging from 0.73 GHz to 2.73 GHz and 5.06 to 1.38 are experimentally performed. The number of passbands can be reconfigured. The proposed multiband MPF has the potential to be employed in modern multi-standard wireless communication systems.

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