Lightwave Technology

Chapter 9 - WDM Systems

Chapter 9


WDM Systems

Chapter 8 focused on single-channel systems operating at 40 Gb/s or more through electrical and optical TDM. As discussed in Chapter 1, channels can also be multiplexed in the spectral domain through frequency-division multiplexing (FDM). Indeed, this technique is routinely used for radio waves and microwaves. Its extension to optical domain permits, in principle, the capacity of lightwave systems to exceed 10 Tb/s because of a large frequency associated with the optical carrier. Since the implementation of FDM in the optical domain requires multiple transmitters operating at different wavelengths, optical FDM is known as wavelength-division multiplexing (WDM). The WDM technique was first used in the 1980s when the capacity of existing fiber links operating at 1.3µmwas doubled by adding another channel operating near 1.55 µm. However, it was only after 1995 that WDM was used to transmit over the same fiber hundreds of optical channels in the 1.55-µm spectral region and to realize system capacities beyond 1 Tb/s. The design of such systems requires attention to many details related to the generation and propagation of multiple bit streams overlapping in the time domain. More specifically, interchannel nonlinear effects must be controlled to ensure that they do not limit system performance.

In this chapter the basic WDM scheme and related concepts are discussed first in Section 9.1. Section 9.2 is devoted to the linear mechanisms that can produce interchannel crosstalk. Sections 9.3 and 9.4 focus on several nonlinear mechanisms that cause crosstalk through interactions of bit streams in neighboring channels. Section 9.5 is devoted to various techniques that can be employed to reduce nonlinear crosstalk. The major design issues such as spectral efficiency are addressed in Section 9.6.

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