Abstract

We theoretically investigate nonlinear optimization of periodic phase modulation for suppression of stimulated Brillouin scattering (SBS) in single-mode optical fibers. We use nonlinear multiparameter Pareto optimization to find modulations that represent the best tradeoff between SBS and optical linewidth, as measured by its rms value. The optimization uses a temporal-amplitude-domain finite-difference Brillouin solver with noise initiation to find the best phase modulation patterns in the presence of coherent so-called cross-interactions. These can be important in short fibers, when the period is large enough to make the frequency-domain separation of the modulated signal comparable to, or smaller than, the Brillouin gain linewidth. We calculate the SBS threshold for the optimized modulation patterns and find that smaller spectral line spacing improves the SBS threshold for the same linewidth. By contrast, whereas the maximum modulation depth and modulation frequency influence the range of accessible linewidths, they do not significantly alter the threshold for a given linewidth. We investigate the dependence on fiber length and find that while shorter fibers have a higher threshold, the increase is smaller than the often-assumed inverse dependence on length. Furthermore, we find that optimized formats are superior in terms of SBS threshold as well as in terms of linewidth control, compared to random modulation.

Highlights

  • S TIMULATED Brillouin scattering (SBS) is the lowestthreshold nonlinear effect in optical fibers in case of continuous-wave light at narrow linewidth [1]

  • We theoretically investigated suppression of SBS in singlemode optical fibers through periodic phase-modulation

  • We used multiparameter Pareto optimization to find modulations that represent the best trade-off between SBS suppression and the optical linewidth, as measured by its RMS value

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Summary

Introduction

S TIMULATED Brillouin scattering (SBS) is the lowestthreshold nonlinear effect in optical fibers in case of continuous-wave light at narrow linewidth (e.g., below 1 GHz) [1]. Such light, which is often the desired signal or laser output of an optical fiber, will act as a Brillouin pump in the SBS process. Manuscript received April 18, 2017; revised July 18, 2017 and August 30, 2017; accepted September 8, 2017. Date of publication September 15, 2017; date of current version October 10, 2017.

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