Abstract

Bandwidth limitation in optoelectrical components and the chromatic dispersion-induced power fading phenomenon cause severe inter-symbol interference (ISI) in high-speed intensity modulation and direct detection (IM-DD) optical interconnects. While the equalizer implemented in the receiver's digital signal processing procedure can mitigate ISI, it also inevitably enhances the noise located in the decayed frequency region, known as equalization-enhanced colored noise (EECN). Additionally, the nonlinear impairments of the modulator and photodetector also deteriorate the performance of the IM-DD system, especially for high-order modulation formats. In this work, we propose a gradient-descent noise whitening (GD-NW) algorithm to address EECN and extend it by introducing nonlinear kernels to simultaneously mitigate EECN and nonlinear impairments. The proposed algorithms are compared with conventional counterparts in terms of the achievable baud rate and the receiver optical power sensitivity. As a proof-of-concept experiment, we validate the principles of the proposed algorithms by successfully transmitting 360-GBd on-off-keying (OOK) and 180-GBd 4-level pulse-amplitude-modulation (PAM-4) signals in the back-to-back case under a 62-GHz brick-wall bandwidth limitation. 280-GBd OOK and 150-GBd PAM-4 transmissions are also demonstrated over 1-km standard single-mode fiber with a bit error rate below 7% hard-decision forward error correction aided by the proposed approach.

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