Abstract

We present a novel configuration for broadband, wavelength-shift-free optical phase conjugation (OPC) utilizing four-wave mixing in a nonlinear fiber optical loop mirror (NOLM). In the proposed configuration, the input signals and the pump wave return to the input port of the NOLM whereas the phase-conjugated signals generated in the NOLM loop are transmitted through the output port. This allows the phase-conjugated copies to occupy the same wavelength band as the input signals, in line with the requirements for practical deployment of OPC in communication links. The demultiplexing of the phase conjugates from the input signals sharing the same band is achieved by imparting an asymmetric phase shift on the pump via a fiber Bragg grating. We experimentally demonstrate waveband-shift-free OPC with an extinction ratio between signals and conjugated copies at the NOLM output of 17 dB to 25 dB across a band of 35 nm. Whilst a 7-nm wide performance gap exists in the middle of the band, this is the record bandwidth for waveband-shift-free OPC in an all-fiber setup. We compare the experimental results with numerical simulations of the OPC-NOLM, identify the reason for the observed performance gap, and justify the route for further performance improvement.

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