Abstract

A reconfigurable optical-to-electrical signal aggregation is proposed, for the first time, using optical signal processing and photo-mixing technology. Two optically modulated quadrature phase-shift keying (QPSK) signals are aggregated into a single 16-quadrature amplitude modulation (16-QAM) signal and, simultaneously, carried over a 28-GHz millimeter wave (MMW) carrier using an optimized heterodyne beating process through a single photodiode. To demonstrate the system reconfigurability, aggregation of two optical binary phase-shift keying signals is mapped into MMW QPSK or four-level pulse amplitude modulation signals by controlling the relative phases and amplitudes, respectively, of the input signals. In addition, the aggregation of two 16-QAM signals into a 256-QAM signal and the aggregation of three QPSK signals into a 64-QAM format are achieved. Besides, we report the effect of laser phase noise on signal aggregation performance. The de-aggregation of the aggregated MMW signals is performed electrically using a successive interference cancellation algorithm. Moreover, a proof-of-concept experiment is conducted to validate the numerical simulations. Two 1-Gbaud BPSK (1 Gbps) and QPSK (2 Gbps) optical signals are optically transmitted over a 20-km single-mode fiber as MMW over fiber signals. Then, the signals are aggregated into QPSK (2 Gbps) and 16-QAM (4 Gbps) 28-GHz MMW signals, respectively. The aggregated signal is further transmitted over a 1-m wireless channel. The performance of the proposed system is evaluated using bit error rate and error vector magnitude metrics.

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