Abstract

We propose a simple and cost-effective method, using a direct frequency modulation (FM) and noncoherent detection (NCD) scheme, to suppress the nonlinear optical effects in dense wavelength division multiplexed (DWDM) optical communication. The FM transmitter comprises a directly modulated distributed feedback laser and a saturable semiconductor optical amplifier. In the NCD receiver, an optical slope filter as the FM to intensity modulation (IM) signal convertor is placed before a conventional photodetector. Because the FM signal has more evenly distributed optical power, bit-pattern-dependent nonlinear effects are consequently suppressed. After analyzing the nonlinear effects in the FM-NCD system and traditional IM direct detection (IM-DD) system, we found that the minimum achievable BER of the proposed FM-NCD scheme is 40 dB smaller. Moreover, a 2 Tbps (10 Gb/s × 200 channels) capacity was achieved by the FM-NCD system in 100 km DWDM passive optical networks (PONs), which is twice the capacity of the IM-DD system (10 Gb/s × 100 channels) under the same condition. These results indicate that WDM-PONs with the cost-effective FM-NCD scheme are strong candidates for future broad access networks and show great potential for the combination of optical access and metro networks for future generations of PONs.

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