Abstract

Limited-size receiver (Rx) apertures and transmitter-Rx (Tx-Rx) misalignments could induce power loss and modal crosstalk in a mode-multiplexed free-space link. We experimentally demonstrate the mitigation of these impairments in a 400 Gbit/s four-data-channel free-space optical link. To mitigate the above degradations, our approach of singular-value-decomposition-based (SVD-based) beam orthogonalization includes (1) measuring the transmission matrix H for the link given a limited-size aperture or misalignment; (2) performing SVD on the transmission matrix to find the U, Σ, and V complex matrices; (3) transmitting each data channel on a beam that is a combination of Laguerre-Gaussian modes with complex weights according to the V matrix; and (4) applying the U matrix to the channel demultiplexer at the Rx. Compared with the case of transmitting each channel on a beam using a single mode, our experimental results when transmitting multi-mode beams show that (a) with a limited-size aperture, the power loss and crosstalk could be reduced by ∼8 and ∼23dB, respectively; and (b) with misalignment, the power loss and crosstalk could be reduced by ∼15 and ∼40dB, respectively.

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