Abstract

Large-core silica multimode fibers, whose core diameters are generally 50 μm or 62.5 μm, form the bulk of short and medium haul optical fiber links in existence today, owing to their low cost and ease of deployment. However, modal dispersion significantly limits the maximum data rates that they support. Recently, the ability to multiplex several streams of data through optical fibers has spawned the development of few-mode multimode fibers. These fibers possess the low-dispersion characteristics of single-mode fibers and the ability to multiplex several data streams using multiple-input multiple-output (MIMO) techniques and mode-specific filtering to increase data rates. While fibers with larger core diameters possess a larger number of spatial modes, they do not support data rates as high as few-mode fibers. In this paper, we describe a simulation based approach to characterize the tradeoffs between fiber diameter, achievable data rates and alignment tolerances of coherent links that employ graded-index multimode fibers (MMFs) of various dimensions, using the information theoretic outage capacity as the metric. The simulations used fibers' intermodal coupling characteristics to measure its multiplexing abilities and dispersion limitations with mode-specific filters and launch and detection spatial filter arrays. The simulations indicate that the bandwidth-length product achievable over few-mode fibers with MIMO techniques can exceed 250 Gb/s-km, while heavy mode spreading and limited mode selectivity limits the bandwidth-length product to under 25 Gb/s-km in fibers core diameters larger than 50 μm.

Highlights

  • The advent of optical fiber communication has enabled the transmission of large amounts of data at speeds exceeding terabits-per-second over communication networks over the past few decades

  • Recent developments in fiber optics have enabled the use of coherent detection [1] along with polarization multiplexing over singlemode fibers (SMFs) [2] to enhance data rates over SMFs

  • In the multiple-input multiple-output (MIMO)-multimode fibers (MMFs) case, we restrict ourselves to considering the outage rate due to the fact that the channel variations are slow in comparison to the signaling rate through the fiber, making the outage capacity a more appropriate metric [40]

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Summary

Introduction

The advent of optical fiber communication has enabled the transmission of large amounts of data at speeds exceeding terabits-per-second over communication networks over the past few decades. We develop a simulation model that characterizes multiplexing benefits in graded-index multimode fibers of various diameters, and analyze the impact of system parameters such as spatial mode filters or laser/detector arrays on the fiber’s data carrying capacity. Prior studies on the variations in fiber performance based on fiber core diameter has generally been restricted to cases that involve incoherent modulation and single streams, as opposed to multiplexing [33]. While step-index fibers have a larger number of modes for the same core diameter, the larger group-delay dispersion limits data rates to lower values, when compared to graded-index MMFs. The rest of this paper is organized as follows: Section 2 discusses the propagation characteristics of silica multimode fibers of various diameters.

Properties of fiber modes
Propagation model
Metrics for evaluating performance
Description of simulations
Outage capacity μ
Sensitivity to coupling offsets
Discussions
Conclusion
Full Text
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