eLight (May 2025)

Free-space terabit/s coherent optical links via platicon frequency microcombs

  • Wenting Wang,
  • Hao Liu,
  • Jiagui Wu,
  • James F. McMillan,
  • Dong IL Lee,
  • Futai Hu,
  • Wenzheng Liu,
  • Jinghui Yang,
  • Hangbo Yang,
  • Abhinav Kumar Vinod,
  • Yahya H. Ezzeldin,
  • Christina Fragouli,
  • Mingbin Yu,
  • Patrick Guo-Qiang Lo,
  • Dim-Lee Kwong,
  • Devin S. Kahrs,
  • Ninghua Zhu,
  • Chee Wei Wong

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s43593-025-00082-0
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 5, no. 1
pp. 1 – 16

Abstract

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Abstract Coherent frequency microcombs, generated in nonlinear high-Q microresonators and driven by a single continuous-wave laser, have enabled several scientific breakthroughs in the past decade, thanks to their high intrinsic phase coherence and individual comb line powers. Here, we report terabit-per-second-scale coherent data communications over a free-space atmospheric link, using a platicon frequency microcomb, employing wavelength- and polarization-division multiplexing for next-generation optical wireless networks. Spanning more than 55 optical carriers with 115 GHz channel spacing, we report the first free-space coherent communication link using a frequency microcomb, achieving up to 8.21 Tbit/s aggregate data transmission at a 20 Gbaud symbol rate per carrier over 160 m, even under log-normal turbulent conditions. Utilizing 16-state quadrature amplitude modulation, we demonstrate retrieved constellation maps across the broad microcomb spectrum, achieving bit-error rates below both hard- and soft-decision thresholds for forward-error correction. Next, we examine a wavelength-division multiplexing free-space passive optical network as a baseline for free-space fronthaul, achieving an aggregate data rate of up to 5.21 Tbit/s and a field-tested spectral efficiency of 1.29 bit/s/Hz in the microcomb-based atmospheric link. We also quantify experimental power penalties of ≈ 3.8 dB at the error-correction threshold, relative to the theoretical additive white Gaussian noise limit. Furthermore, we introduce the first-ever demonstration of master–slave free-space carrier phase retrieval with frequency microcombs, and the compensation for turbulence-induced intensity scintillation and pointing error fluctuations, to improve end-to-end symbol error rates. This work provides a foundational platform for broadband vertical heterogeneous connectivity, terrestrial backbone links, and ground-satellite communication.

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