Abstract

Low cost and low energy consumption are two important issues for the upgrade of next-generation passive optical network (PON). In this paper, we experimentally demonstrated a 40-Gb/s PON downstream transmission employing interleaved single carrier frequency-division multiplexing (I-SC-FDM) modulation and joint frequency-time domain equalization. At the transmitter, low peak-to-average power ratio and low-complexity signal is generated using simplified encoding structure of phase rotation and complex-to-real transform. At the receiver, the digital signal processing is of low computational complexity since very few taps of joint equalization are needed. 10G-class optics are used both in transmitter and receiver to maintain a low-cost system. Experimental results indicate that total 28.6 dB link power budget over 20 km transmission in C-band was successfully achieved without using any optical amplifier or optical dispersion compensation fiber, which supports up to $1:256$ optical splitter ratio in PON systems. The proposed scheme is of great reference significance in the next-generation PON systems.

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