Abstract

The increasing demand of real-time applications poses a huge challenge to building next-generation radio access network (NG-RAN) with higher stability and lower system complexity. Parallel signal detection (PSD), which aggregates signals of different intermediate frequencies (IFs) on different wavelengths with a single photodiode (PD), becomes a promising candidate for uplink mobile fronthaul with the advantage of low-latency. However, high requirements on the transmitters inhibit the large-scale deployment of radio units (RU). In this paper, we propose an economical, low-latency, multipoint-to-point (MP2P) uplink fronthaul architecture capable of aggregating four end-users with commercial 25G-class optical modules and a single PD. With delta-sigma modulation (DSM), commercial off-the-shelf optical modules can replace analog transmitters in traditional systems. As a demonstration, we aggregated 4 × 380.16-MHz 5 G new radio (NR) orthogonal frequency division multiplexing (OFDM) signals in an IF band with a fixed interval of 400 MHz over 20 km fiber with 4 users.

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