KEYWORDS: Signal detection, Frequency combs, Signal processing, Analog to digital converters, Optical filters, Tunable filters, Modulators, Electronic filtering, Detection theory, Signal filtering
This work discusses simulation results for signal deteriorations arising from a higher carrier in a 3-line optical frequency comb based high bandwidth sampling system in terms of the key performance indicators such as root-mean-square error (RMSE), signal-to-noise and distortion ratio (SINAD), and the effective number of bits (ENOB).
We present a new concept for generating wideband signals of higher spectral efficiency from signals of low-bandwidth and lower efficiency. With pure electronics, we are able to generate broad-bandwidth signals with low-modulation format from low-bandwidth sub-DACs. This is based on electrical orthogonal sampling with sinc-pulse sequences in N parallel branches. In photonics, a higher spectral efficiency can be achieved from M branches at different optical powers. The proposed method can be integrated into any silicon platform and might be of great interest for bandwidth, and data hungry applications.
Increasing data rates in the wireless access require high-bandwidth signal processing, which might be problematic for electronics. One solution is provided by high-bandwidth photonic signal processing in integrated silicon photonic devices. The transformation of electrical into optical signals and sometimes the photonic signal processing itself require a modulator. Especially silicon photonic ring modulators have the potential to significantly enhance the signal processing performance for large-scale integrated photonic circuits, since they have a very low footprint and power consumption. Nevertheless, densely packed integrated photonic devices show thermal crosstalk, which may lead to problems of heat dissemination in the chips. Here we will show, that a deep trench is a suitable method to avoid this problem. We present simulation results of crosstalk mitigation for ring modulators and show the improvement in the transmission characteristics.
KEYWORDS: Signal generators, Modulators, Analog electronics, Oscillators, Signal to noise ratio, Telecommunications, Interference (communication), Error analysis
The bandwidth and resolution of the electronic digital-to-analog converters (DAC) and analog-to-digital converters (ADC) of modern-day communication systems defines the link capacity to a large extent. For high analog bandwidths, the performance of state-of-the-art DACs is limited in terms of the effective number of bits (ENOB). A drastic improvement in ENOB might be realizable with photonic based DAC by employing integrated Mach- Zehnder modulators (MZM) and time-domain interleaving. Especially, the optical signal processing of Nyquist pulses with MZM might provide a possible solution to achieve high analog bandwidths with relatively low required electronic and photonic bandwidth. By using optical time interleaving and pulses synthesized by an MZM with a bandwidth of 100 GHz for the modulator and the electronics, sampling rates of 300 GS/s can be achieved. Thus, with standard silicon components available on the market, a compact and low-cost integrated photonic DAC module can easily be realized. The ENOB of such a system is limited by the quality of the Nyquist pulses, which in turn is affected by the jitter of the used signal generator (SG) and MZM nonlinearities. Here we present analytically that an ENOB of more than 8 can be achieved for analog bandwidths greater than 100 GHz by using a low phase noise SG. With experimental validation, we analyze the upper operation limit of such photonic DACs and their dependence on non-idealities of the Nyquist pulses.
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