Abstract

The introduction of the space domain in optical communications, collectively referred as space division multiplexing (SDM), have recently gained a lot of research attention motivated by the capacity exhaustion of conventional wavelength division multiplexing (WDM) systems. SDM not only increases the capacity, but also introduces new challenges and opportunities owing to the properties of the spatial channels in the form of fiber cores, modes or a combination of both. One promising application of SDM systems could be in future edge optical networks, where multi-core fibers (MCFs) with low inter-core crosstalk may be used with packet spatial super-channels (pSSCs) and core-joint SDM optical switches in a time-slotted network. We first briefly review the state-of-the-art of SDM transmission systems and other important technologies for edge networks such as burst-mode transmission. Finally, we focus on two recent experimental demonstration of such a switching system, achieving a capacity of 53.3 Tb/s for 7 spatial channels and QPSK modulation formant and an upgraded version with 8 spatial channels and 8PSK modulation format that achieves 83.33 Tb/s.

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