학술논문

Fiber Propagation-Induced Mode Partition Noise in Millimeter-Wave Radio-Over-Fiber Systems
Document Type
Periodical
Source
IEEE Photonics Technology Letters IEEE Photon. Technol. Lett. Photonics Technology Letters, IEEE. 30(22):1956-1959 Nov, 2018
Subject
Engineered Materials, Dielectrics and Plasmas
Photonics and Electrooptics
Optical noise
Optical mixing
High-speed optical techniques
Optical attenuators
Chromatic dispersion
Laser noise
Delay effects
millimeter-wave (mm-wave)
mode partition noise
passively mode-locked laser diode (PMLLD)
radio-over-fiber (RoF)
Language
ISSN
1041-1135
1941-0174
Abstract
In this letter, we study and demonstrate, for the first time, how chromatic dispersion causes laser mode partition noise at millimeter-wave (mm-wave) frequencies. A 60-GHz radio-over-fiber (RoF) transmission system employing an optical frequency comb is theoretically and experimentally investigated. Chromatic dispersion is a limiting factor in RoF systems, which induces power fading and phase noise on the resultant mm-wave beating carriers. Furthermore, experimental measurements in this letter show that when transmitting optical comb spectrum across kilometers of optical fiber, chromatic dispersion destroys partition noise compensation between modes. Therefore, the beat note carrier suffers from intensity noise impairments that degrade the system performance.