Abstract

Polarization scramblers are widely employed to mitigate polarization fluctuation-related effects for optical signals propagating in fiber systems. We propose an all-optical polarization scrambler configuration based on a polarization beam splitting delayed fiber loop. By deteriorating the coherence of one beam, and controlling the intensity ratio of two orthogonal beams, the polarization scrambler operates in a chaotic regime. The effect on polarization scrambling of loop structure is tested by a home-made narrow-linewidth laser with linewidth of 500 Hz. We investigate the polarization scrambling performance for a commercial distributed feedback laser with linewidth of 3 MHz in various operating regimes. Scrambling speeds under chaotic regime reach 42 Mrad/s with a degree of polarization <0.1 at the maximum sampling rate of 100 MSa/s. We also characterize the dependence of the scrambling speed and average degree of polarization on delay fiber length and wavelengths within the C-band. The output performance of the proposed scrambler for scrambling 40 MHz and 6 GHz modulated signals are tested and waveform distortions are identified due to polarization scrambling.

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