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Lightwave Technology

Chapter 9.2 - Linear Degradation Mechanisms

9.2 Linear Degradation Mechanisms

The most important issue in designing WDM lightwave systems is the extent of interchannel crosstalk. The system performance degrades whenever crosstalk leads to transfer of power from one channel to another. Such a transfer can occur because of the nonlinear effects in optical fibers, a phenomenon referred to as nonlinear crosstalk as it depends on the nonlinear nature of the communication channel. However, some crosstalk occurs even in a perfectly linear channel because of the imperfect nature of various WDM components such as optical filters, demultiplexers, and switches. In this section we focus on the linear crosstalk mechanisms; nonlinear crosstalk is considered in Sections 9.3. and 9.4.

Linear crosstalk can be classified into two categories depending on its origin [14]-[16]. Optical filters and demultiplexers often let a fraction of the signal power from neighboring channels leak, which interferes with the detection process. Such crosstalk is called heterowavelength or out-of-band crosstalk. It is less of a problem because of its incoherent nature than the homowavelength or in-band crosstalk that occurs during routing of the WDM signal through multiple nodes. The concatenation of optical filters can also lead to signal distortion through spectral clipping and dispersion caused by a nonlinear phase response. Although this distortion is not due to crosstalk, we include it in the section because its origin is related to channel selection.

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