scholarly journals Hybrid optical CDMA and DWDM system implemented under the influence of Non-linear effects

Author(s):  
Naif Alsowaidi ◽  
Tawfig Eltaif ◽  
Mohd Ridzuan Mokhtar

<span>A hybrid optical CDMA-DWDM system accommodating 12 optical CDMA users carried by 5 DWDM wavelengths at a data rate of 60Gb/s/wavelength with channel spacing of 0.4nm is implemented under the effect of four-wave mixing (FWM). It was found that the FWM effect could be minimized by the use of CDMA technology, where the energy of each bit is spread over the optical sequence code. Over a distance of 105.075km, significant performance of all optical CDMA users in terms of the BER is achieved. The results reveal that the inter-symbol interference (ISI) can be mitigated when the interval of optical signature sequence code is squeezed into 25% of the bit duration. </span>

2016 ◽  
Vol 2016 ◽  
pp. 1-8 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gaganpreet Kaur ◽  
Sanjay Sharma ◽  
Gurmeet Kaur

We demonstrate improved performance of parametric amplifier cascaded with Raman amplifier for gain of 54.79 dB. We report amplification of L-band using 100 × 10 Gbps Dense Wavelength Division Multiplexed (DWDM) system with 25 GHz channel spacing. The gain achieved is the highest reported so far with gain flatness of 3.38 dB without using any gain flattening technique. Hybrid modulated parametric pump is used for suppressing four-wave mixing (FWM) around pump region, resulting in improvement of gain flatness by 2.42 dB. The peak to peak variation of gain is achieved less than 1.6 dB. DWDM system with 16-channel, 25 GHz spaced system has been analyzed thoroughly with hybrid modulated parametric pump amplified Raman-FOPA amplifier for gain flatness and improved performance in terms of BER and Q-factor.


2017 ◽  
Vol 53 (19) ◽  
pp. 1321-1323 ◽  
Author(s):  
Wenchan Dong ◽  
Jie Hou ◽  
Xinliang Zhang

1996 ◽  
Vol 32 (13) ◽  
pp. 1154 ◽  
Author(s):  
J.-G. Zhang

2015 ◽  
Vol 36 (3) ◽  
Author(s):  
Veerpal Kaur ◽  
Kamaljit Singh Bhatia

AbstractIn this paper, we investigate the effect of channel spacing and chromatic dispersion on four wave mixing in WDM system. Dominating effect of four wave mixing is minimizing at maximum value of dispersion and channel spacing. Power of FWM, Q-factor, bit error rate and output spectrum is used to measure the performance of system.


2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
◽  
Jerrin Zachariah Mohan

In the current era, there is an ever-growing demand for data hungry applications and services that need large amounts of bandwidth to send digital information at very high speeds. In order to meet this challenge for higher bandwidth capacity, Dense Wave Division Multiplexing (DWDM) is used as the strategy to transmit multiple high-bit rate channels at extremely narrow channel spacings over a single fiber core. However, this gives rise to detrimental transmission impairments such as linear effects and non-linear effects. The dissertation minimises the impairments by optimally designing a new DWDM system that produces a detectable and acceptable quality of signal at the receiver. In this dissertation, a comparative analysis is performed on the simulative design of a 48-channel DWDM system that has a 25 Gb/s bit rate and a 100 km transmission distance. The research mitigates the effects of transmission impairments such that an error-free matched communication link is produced for equally spaced (ES) channels of 100 GHz, 50 GHz, 25 GHZ and 12.5 GHz and 6.25 GHz. Various design parameters are used to create the comparative analysis model to optimise the 48 channel DWDM network. The design is simulated using the Optisystem simulation platform and the signal analysis is based on the bit error rate (BER) and quality (Q) factor of the received signal’s eye diagrams. It is established in the desertion that modified networks with matched active components has ES frequency channels that are aligned to each other and has a higher optical signal to noise ratio (OSNR) than mismatched networks. The maximum signal power and OSNR of the 3-erbium doped fiber amplifier (EDFA)-post symmetric compensation technique is always higher than the 1-EDFA post compensation technique for all channel spacings in any type of network. Modified duobinary return to zero (MDRZ) when compared to non-return to zero (NRZ) and return to zero (RZ) has a greater dispersion tolerance, higher fiber non-linearity tolerance and a higher acceptable signal transmission over longer distances with the least amount of errors. The optimised design parameter configurations produce the highest signal performance (highest Q factor > 6 and lowest BER > 10-9) and the highest bandwidth efficiency for the RZ Modulation (at 100 GHz, 50 GHz and 25 GHz channel spacings) and MDRZ Modulation (at 12.5 and 6.25 GHz channel spacing).


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document