Abstract

We propose for the first time to use a silicon photonics (SiP) solution for a passive optical network to both reduce signal-signal beat interference (SSBI) and recuperate a part of the downlink carrier for use in the uplink. The Kramers-Kronig (KK) receiver for direct detection of advanced modulation formats overcomes SSBI at the cost of a moderate carrier to signal ratio (>6 dB) and high oversampling (4×). We propose an optical SSBI solution that achieves better performance than KK and requires only standard sampling and low (3 dB) carrier to signal power ratio. The receiver is conceived for the downlink in passive optical networks, where carrier signal must be husbanded for re-use in the uplink. Using cost effective and power efficient SiP, the receiver filters the incoming signal, suppresses SSBI, and routes a portion of the carrier for use in the uplink. We experimentally examine the SSBI suppression in this paper. While previous demonstrations used bulky, discrete components, we achieve significant Q-factor improvement with a simple SiP solution. We examine the optimal frequency offset between the carrier and the microring resonator center frequency. The robustness to frequency drift, as well as the impact of imperfect filtering, is discussed and quantified.

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