Vujicic, Vidak (2016) Optical multicarrier sources for spectrally efficient optical networks. PhD thesis, Dublin City University.
Abstract
During the last 30 years the capacity of commercial optical systems exceeded the network traffic requirements, mainly due to the extraordinary scalability of wavelength division multiplexing technology that has been successfully used to expand capacity in optical systems and meet increasing bandwidth requirements since the early 1990’s. Nevertheless, the rapid growth of network traffic inverted this situation and current trends show faster growing network traffic than system capacity.
To enable further and faster growth of optical communication network capacity, several breakthroughs occurred during the last decade. First, optical coherent communications, which were the subject of intensive research in the 1980’s, were revived. This triggered the employment of advanced modulation formats. Afterwards, with the introduction of orthogonal frequency division multiplexing (OFDM) and Nyquist WDM modulation techniques in optical communication systems, very efficient utilisation of the available spectral bandwidth was enabled. In such systems the spectral guard bands between neighbouring channels are minimised, at the expense of stricter requirements on the performance of optical sources, especially the frequency (or wavelength) stability. Attractive solutions to address the frequency stability issues are optical multicarrier sources which simultaneously generate multiple phase correlated optical carriers that ensure that the frequency difference between the carriers is fixed.
In this thesis, a number of optical multicarrier sources are presented and analysed, with special focus being on semiconductor mode-locked lasers and gain-switched comb sources. High capacity and spectrally efficient optical systems for short and medium reach applications (from 3 km up to 300 km), based on optical frequency combs as optical sources, advanced modulation formats (m-QAM) and modulation techniques (OFDM and Nyquist WDM) have been proposed and presented. Also, certain optoelectronic devices (i.e. semiconductor optical amplifier) and techniques (feed-forward heterodyne linewidth reduction scheme) have been utilised to enable the desired system performance.
Metadata
Item Type: | Thesis (PhD) |
---|---|
Date of Award: | March 2016 |
Refereed: | No |
Supervisor(s): | Barry, Liam P. |
Subjects: | Engineering > Optical communication Engineering > Signal processing Engineering > Telecommunication Engineering > Electronic engineering Physical Sciences > Lasers Physical Sciences > Photonics |
DCU Faculties and Centres: | DCU Faculties and Schools > Faculty of Engineering and Computing > School of Electronic Engineering Research Initiatives and Centres > Research Institute for Networks and Communications Engineering (RINCE) |
Use License: | This item is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-No Derivative Works 3.0 License. View License |
Funders: | Science Foundation Ireland |
ID Code: | 20981 |
Deposited On: | 13 Apr 2016 13:33 by Liam Barry . Last Modified 19 Jul 2018 15:07 |
Documents
Full text available as:
Preview |
PDF (PhD Thesis of Vidak Vujicic)
- Requires a PDF viewer such as GSview, Xpdf or Adobe Acrobat Reader
8MB |
Downloads
Downloads
Downloads per month over past year
Archive Staff Only: edit this record