Photonics (May 2023)

Surface Photonic Crystal Engineering of a Multi-Mode VCSEL for a Bit-Loaded Broadband QAM-OFDM Data Link at 99 Gbit/s

  • Yu-Hong Lin,
  • Chih-Hsien Cheng,
  • Cheng-Ting Tsai,
  • Wei-Li Wu,
  • Kent D. Choquette,
  • Gong-Ru Lin

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/photonics10050549
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 5
p. 549

Abstract

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Bit-loaded quadrature amplitude modulation-orthogonal frequency division multiplexing (QAM-OFDM) encoding and photonic-crystal-engineered multi-mode vertical-cavity surface-emitting lasers (MM-VCSELs) transmission performance are analyzed. Two different surface photonic-crystal designs are used to configure the core and cladding regions of MM-VCSELs, producing continuous-wave and digital-encoding outputs. These outputs are combined with the end-face-flattened OM5 multi-mode fiber (MMF) for 100 m short-reach transmission. The photonic-crystal (PhC) structure exhibits a spatial mode-filtering ability, supporting few or single-mode outputs from the MM-VCSEL. This helps reduce the modal dispersion during OM5-MMF transmission of the encoded data. Comparing the original MM-VCSEL with two different surface-photonic-crystal-configured MM-VCSELs, the allowable bit-loaded QAM-OFDM data rate can be increased from 60.7 (for the VCSEL without the PhC structure) to 85/65 Gbit/s (for the PhC VCSELs with 2-layer PhC structures in the cladding layer and the ones with a 1-layer PhC structure in the core layer and 2-layer PhC structures in the cladding layer, respectively) under back-to-back (BtB) encoding and enable the 100 m OM5-MMF transmission to increase from 58.5 (for the VCSEL without the PhC structure) to 81.2/64.6 Gbit/s (for the PhC VCSELs with 2-layer PhC structures in the cladding layer and the ones with a 1-layer PhC structure in the core layer and 2-layer PhC structures in the cladding layer), respectively. Furthermore, by comparing the 7°-titled and 0°-normalized vertical coupling conditions, it can be observed that the purely normalized vertical coupling can collect more output power, resulting in an improved signal-to-noise ratio. This significantly increases the allowable error-free data rate from 85 to 98.9 Gbit/s in the BtB case and from 81.2 Gbit/s to 95.3 Gbit/s in the 100 m OM5-MMF case.

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