Photonics (Nov 2018)

Impact of Chirp in High-Capacity Optical Metro Networks Employing Directly-Modulated VCSELs

  • Mariangela Rapisarda,
  • Alberto Gatto,
  • Paolo Martelli,
  • Paola Parolari,
  • Christian Neumeyr,
  • Michela Svaluto Moreolo,
  • Josep M. Fabrega,
  • Laia Nadal,
  • Pierpaolo Boffi

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/photonics5040051
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 5, no. 4
p. 51

Abstract

Read online

Directly modulated long-wavelength vertical cavity surface emitting lasers (VCSELs) are considered for the implementation of sliceable bandwidth/bitrate variable transceivers for very high capacity transmission (higher than 50 Gb/s per wavelength) in metropolitan area systems characterized by reduced cost, power consumption, and footprint. The impact of the frequency chirp measured for InP VCSELs with different kinds of design (high-bandwidth very short cavity and widely-tunable with micro electro-mechanical systems (MEMS) top mirror) is analyzed in case of discrete multitone (DMT) direct modulation in combination with 25-GHz wavelength selective switch (WSS) filtering. The maximum transmitted capacity for both dual side- and single side-band DMT modulation is evaluated as a function of the number of crossed nodes in a mesh metro network, comparing VCSEL based transmitters performance also with the case of external electro-absorption modulator use. Finally, the maximum reach achieved based on the received optical signal to noise ratio (OSNR) and the fiber span length is discussed. The results confirm the possibility to use directly-modulated long-wavelength VCSELs for the realization of sliceable bandwidth/bitrate variable transmitters targeting 50-Gb/s capacity per polarization, also in the presence of 5 crossed WSSs for reaches of hundreds of kilometers in multi-span Erbium-doped fiber amplified (EDFA) metro links supported by coherent detection.

Keywords