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High-Speed Pulse Sequences through Semiconductor Optical Nonlinear Amplification and Buried Fiber Propagation

Abstract

Microwave pulse bursts were obtained through optical domain intensity modulated microwave carriers, sliced by cascaded modulator technique, followed by non-linear semiconductor optical amplifier (SOA) pre-chirp. After 3 to 18 km of buried fiber propagation and photo detection, the microwave signals presented increased extinction ratio, up to 36 GHz, with pulse modulation windows from 166 to 1000 picoseconds, achieving rise times near to 10 ps.

Index Terms
electrooptic modulation; microwave photonics; pre-chirped pulses; semiconductor optical amplifier

I. INTRODUCTION

The light amplification using semiconductors diodes was proposed by Basov et al. [1[1] N. G. Basov, O. N. Kroknin, and Y. M. Popov, “Production of Negative-Temperature States in p-n Junctions of Degenerate Semiconductors,” Soviet Physics JETP, vol. 13, pp. 1320-1321, 1961.], using the electromagnetic energy generated by the recombination of electrical carriers in a p-n junction. For infrared wavelengths, gallium arsenide (Ga-As) was used for amplification [2[2] R. N. Hall, G. E. Fenner, J. D. Kingsley, T. J. Soltys, and R. O. Carlson, “Coherent Light Emission from GaAs Junctions,” Physical Review Letters, vol. 9, pp. 366-368, 1962.]. However, useful Semiconductor Optical Amplifiers (SOAs) were achieved with multiple quantum-well (MQW) active regions and one-pass traveling wave SOAs were obtained using anti-reflections facets with small mirror reflectivity around 10-4 [3[3] G. Eisenstein, “Semiconductor Optical Amplifiers,” IEEE Circuits and Devices Mag., vol. 5, pp. 25-30, 1989.], [4[4] K. Obermann, I. Koltchanov, K. Petermann, S. Diez, R. Ludvig, and H. G. Weber, “Noise Analysis of Frequency Converters Utilizing Semiconductor-Laser Amplifiers,” IEEE J. Quantum Electron., vol. 33, pp. 81-88, 1997.]. Theoretical analysis of MQW-SOAs have been performed including gain compression in polarization insensitive devices [5[5] A. Reale, A. D. Carlo, and P. Luigi, “Gain Dynamics in Traveling-Wave Semiconductor Optical Amplifiers,” in IEEE J. Select. Topics Quantum Electron., vol. 7, no. 2, pp. 293-299, 2001.], including injected current dynamics effects [6[6] T. Sutili, E. M. M. Barrientos, A. C. Bordonalli, C. M. Gallep, and E. Conforti, “Computational Model and Parameter Extraction of High Speed Semiconductor Optical Amplifier Space Switches,” Journal of Microwaves, Optoelectronics and Electromagnetic Applications, vol. 17, no. 4, pp. 646-660, 2018.], [7[7] P. Rocha, C. M. Gallep, T. Sutili, and E. Conforti, “Calibration of TLM Model for Semiconductor Optical Amplifier by Heuristic Parameters' Extraction,” Journal of Microwaves, Optoelectronics and Electromagnetic Applications, vol. 17, no. 2, pp. 260-267, 2018.]. In particular, when very short pulses are amplified, non-linear SOA effects of self-phase modulation (SPM) cause pulse spectral broadening and distortion [8[8] G.P. Agrawal, and N.A. Olsson, “Self-phase modulation and spectral broadening of optical pulses in semiconductor laser amplifiers”, IEEE J. Quantum Electr., vol. 25, no. 11, pp. 2297-2306, 1989.]–[10[10] J. Chung, N. Kikuchi, and S. Sasaki, “Generation of transform-limited optical pulses using a combination of a gain-switched diode laser and a semiconductor optical amplifier,” IEEE Photon. Technol. Lett., vol. 7, no. 8, pp. 860-862, 1995.]. Also, SPM introduces a pulse chirp (time-dependent instantaneous optical carrier frequency deviation) related to the SOA carrier lifetime, SOA saturation and gain [11[11] I. W. Marshall, and D. M. Spirit, “Observation of large-pulse compression by a saturated traveling wave semiconductor laser amplifier,” in. CLEO, Anaheim, Ca, USA, paper TUM64, 1988.]–[14[14] M. Matsuura, N. Iwatsu, K. Kitamura, and N. Kishi, “Time-Resolved Chirp Properties of SOAs Measured with an Optical Bandpass Filter,” IEEE Photonics Technology Letters, vol. 20, no. 23, pp. 2001-2003, Dec. 2008.]. The SOA chirping has been recently analyzed [15[15] M. J. Connelly, J. Romero-Vivas, J., L. Krzczanowicz, A. Meehan, , “Dynamic power and chirp measurements of amplified 19 ps pulses in traveling-wave and reflective semiconductor optical amplifiers using a linear pulse characterization technique,” Opt Quant Electron , vol. 51, no. pp. 248-1–248–10, 2019.] including experimentally amplified 19 ns width individual pulses. This work introduces SOA amplification of fast microwave pulse bursts aiming applications of photonic techniques for arbitrary waveform generation (AWG) of microwave and millimetric signals [15[15] M. J. Connelly, J. Romero-Vivas, J., L. Krzczanowicz, A. Meehan, , “Dynamic power and chirp measurements of amplified 19 ps pulses in traveling-wave and reflective semiconductor optical amplifiers using a linear pulse characterization technique,” Opt Quant Electron , vol. 51, no. pp. 248-1–248–10, 2019.]–[19[19] M. A. Romero and S. Arismar Cerqueira, “Microwave-Photonics and WDM-PON Fronthaul for 5G Mobile Systems: Research Activities in Brazil,” 2019 49th European Microwave Conference (EuMC), Paris, France, pp. 268-271, 2019.]. They are obtained through optical domain amplitude modulated microwave carriers, sliced by a pulse-gated modulator technique [16[16] E. M. M. Barrientos, C. S. Castelli, A. M. O. Ribeiro, and E. Conforti, “Microwave Carrier Modulated by Fast Synchronous Pulsed Transitions using Electro-Optical Gating Modulators,” 2009 IEEE MTT-S International Microwave Symposium Digest, Boston, MA, USA, June 5-11, paper TUPF-5, 2009. DOI 10.1109/MWSYM.2009.5165711
https://doi.org/10.1109/MWSYM.2009.51657...
]. The high power of the fast pulse bursts produces SOA gain saturation and chirping. So, proper SOA adjusted parameters produced nonlinear amplification of those short pulse's sequences (up to 10 ps rise times), imbedded in an adjustable window (from 333 ps to 1 ns). The SOA amplified chirped pulses were transmitted in optical fibers (from 3 up to 18 km) followed by photodetection. The tuned SOA and fiber parameters, followed by interaction of the pre-chirped pulses and fiber dispersion enhanced the received signal format, extinction ratio, or rise-time. By adjusting the fiber length, the optical input pulse power and width, plus the SOA bias current, an improvement on the output pulse shape may be achieved as shown in the following sections. Section II presents a succinct theoretical background of the optical fast pulse SOA amplification, highlighting the optical chirp increment behavior (during the pulse rise and fall) and its interaction with the fiber dispersion. Section III shows the experimental setup description including the employed devices parameters. Section IV presents the experimental results with a discussion of how the output pulse shape improvement can be obtained. The conclusions are on Section V.

II. Theoretical Background

The SOA amplification of fast pulses reaching the gain saturation produces nonlinear SPM effect. The time changing signal being amplified causes a dynamic carrier depletion, changing the SOA gain and the active region dielectric constant along the propagation axis (z). Those complex effects were simplified by Agrawal and Olsson. For the case of unchirped Gaussian input pulse [8[8] G.P. Agrawal, and N.A. Olsson, “Self-phase modulation and spectral broadening of optical pulses in semiconductor laser amplifiers”, IEEE J. Quantum Electr., vol. 25, no. 11, pp. 2297-2306, 1989.]:

(1) c h i r p = Δ v ( τ ) = ( ϕ / τ ) ( 1 / 2 π )

where Δv is the pulse chirp, ϕ is the optical phase, and τ is the time moving with a reference frame. After same simplifying assumptions, the chirp increment, δv, after SOA pulse amplification is given by [8[8] G.P. Agrawal, and N.A. Olsson, “Self-phase modulation and spectral broadening of optical pulses in semiconductor laser amplifiers”, IEEE J. Quantum Electr., vol. 25, no. 11, pp. 2297-2306, 1989.]:

(2) δ v ( τ ) = Δ v o u t ( τ ) Δ v i n ( τ ) = ( α / 4 π ) ( h / τ )

where ∆vout is the SOA output signal chirp, ∆vin is the SOA input signal chirp, α is the carrier induced index-change, h is the SOA gain.

The derivative of the chirp increment, Cd is given by:

(3) C d = [ δ v ( τ ) / τ ] = ( α / 4 π ) ( 2 h / τ 2 )

At the pulse beginning (zero amplitude), the SOA gain is at the its maximum value, h = G0, where G0 is the small signal SOA gain. Assuming instantaneous response of the SOA gain h, as soon as the pulse rises, the SOA gain decreases due to saturation. The chirp increment of (2) attains a negative (red-shift) value, since the gain time derivative is negative (∂h / ∂τ < 0). As the pulse continues to rise, the gain decreases even more (due to the increased saturation effect). When the maximum pulse intensity is reached, the SOA gain attains its minimum value (the gain second derivative 2 h / ∂τ2 >0), the first derivative is zero (∂ h / ∂τ = 0), and no chirp is produced. During the pulse fall, the SOA gain begins to increase (∂ h / ∂τ > 0) since the pulse signal is dropping, and the SOA saturation is decreasing. So, the chirp reaches a positive value.

However, in practice the SOA behavior is intricate. The SOA gain does not have an instantaneous response. The solution of (2) for a pulse rise time much faster than the SOA carrier lifetime, predicts a sharper pulse trailing edge, and a slower decay in the remaining pulse [8[8] G.P. Agrawal, and N.A. Olsson, “Self-phase modulation and spectral broadening of optical pulses in semiconductor laser amplifiers”, IEEE J. Quantum Electr., vol. 25, no. 11, pp. 2297-2306, 1989.]. Also, the output pulse spectrum has a red shift value whose peak decreases several GHz. At the pulse beginning (SOA bias of 70 mA), an experimental chirp value of δv = −30 GHz was obtained for a 19 ps amplified pulse width [15[15] M. J. Connelly, J. Romero-Vivas, J., L. Krzczanowicz, A. Meehan, , “Dynamic power and chirp measurements of amplified 19 ps pulses in traveling-wave and reflective semiconductor optical amplifiers using a linear pulse characterization technique,” Opt Quant Electron , vol. 51, no. pp. 248-1–248–10, 2019.]. Later, the chirp increment reached a value around δv = -12 GHz at the maximum pulse amplitude peak. And at the minimum amplitude (where the pulse ends) the chirp was around δv = +6 GHz. The SOA overall red shift was -12 GHz [15[15] M. J. Connelly, J. Romero-Vivas, J., L. Krzczanowicz, A. Meehan, , “Dynamic power and chirp measurements of amplified 19 ps pulses in traveling-wave and reflective semiconductor optical amplifiers using a linear pulse characterization technique,” Opt Quant Electron , vol. 51, no. pp. 248-1–248–10, 2019.]. Also, the chirp nonlinearity is more intense when the pulse intensity and the SOA bias increase [15[15] M. J. Connelly, J. Romero-Vivas, J., L. Krzczanowicz, A. Meehan, , “Dynamic power and chirp measurements of amplified 19 ps pulses in traveling-wave and reflective semiconductor optical amplifiers using a linear pulse characterization technique,” Opt Quant Electron , vol. 51, no. pp. 248-1–248–10, 2019.]. Likewise, the chirp increment δv and its time variation Cg depend on the SOA manufacture parameters, the SOA saturation level and bias current, the relation of the pulse width and the SOA carrier lifetime, plus the pulse shape and pre-chirp.

However, since the chirp increment δv (frequency variation) changes during the pulse rise and fall, the pulse shape can be improved after fiber propagation, since the fiber dispersion also changes with the light instantaneous carrier frequency. A standard 10 km fiber at 1550 nm has a dispersion of 170 ps/nm, or 2.1 ps/GHz of the instantaneous carrier frequency. A typical output SOA pulse has a negative chirp δv at pulse rising and a positive chirp at pulse decaying. During the hole pulse duration, the total chirp variation can be 36 GHz [15[15] M. J. Connelly, J. Romero-Vivas, J., L. Krzczanowicz, A. Meehan, , “Dynamic power and chirp measurements of amplified 19 ps pulses in traveling-wave and reflective semiconductor optical amplifiers using a linear pulse characterization technique,” Opt Quant Electron , vol. 51, no. pp. 248-1–248–10, 2019.] or more, and this frequency change is converted in a signal time variation (compression or enlargement) due to the fiber dispersion. Therefore, a 20 GHz chirp (frequency variation) during the pulse rising might reach up to 42 ps of pulse format variation in a 10 km fiber. By adjusting the fiber length, the optical input pulse power and width, plus the SOA bias current, an improvement on the output pulse shape may be achieved as shown in the following sections. The numerical analysis is out of the scope of this work.

III. Experimental Setup

The generation of the embedded optical pulse train employed a cascaded single-drive Mach-Zehnder modulators (MZM) [16[16] E. M. M. Barrientos, C. S. Castelli, A. M. O. Ribeiro, and E. Conforti, “Microwave Carrier Modulated by Fast Synchronous Pulsed Transitions using Electro-Optical Gating Modulators,” 2009 IEEE MTT-S International Microwave Symposium Digest, Boston, MA, USA, June 5-11, paper TUPF-5, 2009. DOI 10.1109/MWSYM.2009.5165711
https://doi.org/10.1109/MWSYM.2009.51657...
]. As shown in Fig. 1, the 40 GHz synthesized microwave generator (MG) drives (at 17 dBm) the first optical intensity modulator (MZM1), with a 3 dB bandwidth equal to 40 GHz. The MZM1 has zero chirp and insertion loss of 5 dB. The technique permits an arbitrary signal instead of the sinusoidal signal. However, optical intensity modulated harmonic signals are easier to analyze and were chosen here.

Fig. 1
Block diagram of the setup with external cavity laser (ECL), optical polarization controller (OPC), microwave generator (MG), Mach-Zehnder modulator (MZM), non-linear semiconductor optical amplifier (SOA) to produce chirped signal, optical isolator (OI), pulse generator (PG), photo receiver (PR), and oscilloscope. Optical paths have thicker lines.

The light carrier was provided by a continuous wave (CW) 1550 nm external cavity laser (ECL), 100 kHz linewidth, followed by an optical polarization controller (OPC). The modulated optical output carrier (3 dBm) was amplified by a SOA model XN-OEC-1550, ultra-nonlinear, from CIP (UK), with cavity length of 2 mm, optical output saturation power (Psat) of 15 dBm, and maximum gain around 38 dB (small signals, @500 mA). The device was biased at 220 mA to provide static optical gain around 12 dB, assuring a SOA operation under saturation regime to provide a proper SPM effect. No optical bandpass filter is inserted after the SOA since the chirped pulse could have its bandwidth altered. The SOA was followed by an optical isolator (OI), an OPC, and a cascaded second modulator (MZM2), zero chirp, with 3 dB bandwidth equal to 40 GHz. A 30 ps rise time pulse generator (PG) drives MZM2 to a level of 2.5 V (close to Vπ) converting the MZM2 as a gated switch (on-off operation). With a proper synchronization of MG and PG, the gated modulator embedded the MG chirped sinusoidal signal in a variable length square window. A 50% duty cycle was chosen with a window length of 333 ps up to 1 ns.

The embedded chirped signal was propagated in a test-bed of buried fibers using the “Kyatera Network”. This optical buried fiber facility connects optical communication laboratories throughout the State of São Paulo, Brazil. The results here employed a 1.5 km cable of 16 standard fibers with chromatic dispersion of 17 ps/(nm.km) at 1550 nm, with FC-APC connectors at each end. Finally, an 8 ps rise-time photonic receiver (PR) followed by a 40 GHz sampling scope was used, for the measurements before and after fiber propagation. The optical signal was also tested with an optical spectrum analyzer with sub nm resolution.

IV. EXPERIMENTAL RESULTS

A typical result obtained with the setup of Fig. 1 is shown in Fig. 2, where a 12 GHz microwave carrier was embedded in a gate-width of 250 ps with a pulse repetition frequency (PRF) of 2 Gb/s. Given a period of 83.3 ps for the 12 GHz sine wave, only 3 RF cycles can fit the 250 ps gate, as noted in Fig. 2. Also, the dotted line signal is the chirped pulse just after the SOA. The continuous line of Fig. 2 shows the same signal after the fiber propagation of 3 km. Note the typical distortion due to SPM [8[8] G.P. Agrawal, and N.A. Olsson, “Self-phase modulation and spectral broadening of optical pulses in semiconductor laser amplifiers”, IEEE J. Quantum Electr., vol. 25, no. 11, pp. 2297-2306, 1989.] of the dotted line chirped signal. After 3 km of fiber propagation, a discrete improvement on the signal format can be observed.

Fig. 2
Photo-detected signals for a 12 GHz microwave carrier after the SOA (dotted line) and after 3 km of fiber propagation (continuous line).

The same signals of Fig. 2 are shown in Fig. 3, but the fiber length is now 9 km. A better signal format now appears (continuous line) with an improvement on the extinction ratio and on the signal format. In addition, a good suppression of the microwave oscillation was obtained outside the 250 ps gate, but small microwave energy is still presented. The uncomplete suppression is due to insufficient extinction of MZM2. Also, the three pulses did not reach the zero level and the insufficient extinction ratio might be related to both MZM1 and MZM2 limited bandwidth.

Fig. 3
Photo-detected signals for a 12 GHz microwave carrier after the SOA (dotted line) and after 9 km of fiber propagation (continuous line).

The results for the same signals of Fig. 2 are shown in Fig. 4 for an overall fiber length of 18 km. Note the higher extinction ratio of the propagated signal (continuous line). However, the received signal has distortions during the rising time of the internal pulses, shown by the letters A and B in Fig. 4. This behavior might be due to an over correction of the pulse format, since the longer fiber has greater dispersion and additional attenuation given by the 18 connectors at the fiber endings.

Fig. 4
Photo-detected signals for a 12 GHz microwave carrier after the SOA (dotted line) and after 18 km of fiber propagation (continuous line).

Similarly, several results (not shown) present a similar behavior, denoting the existence of an interaction of the pulse (with embedded chirp due to the SOA non-linear behavior) and the fiber length, since the dispersion at 1550 nm in a standard fiber is around 17 ps/nm.km. Indeed, the SOA chirp can reach over 100 GHz for short pulses [8[8] G.P. Agrawal, and N.A. Olsson, “Self-phase modulation and spectral broadening of optical pulses in semiconductor laser amplifiers”, IEEE J. Quantum Electr., vol. 25, no. 11, pp. 2297-2306, 1989.]. However, the SOA chirp behavior is a complex feature and the analysis is out of the scope here. In general, the chirp intensity and its time format depend on the SOA itself, the bias current, the optical input pulse intensity, width, and format.

An experimental result for a 20 GHz microwave carrier and a 250 ps embedding window is shown in Fig. 5. The dotted line is the SOA chirped signal and the continuous line after 9 km fiber propagation. In this case, the improvement of the extinction ratio can be noted. However, the microwaves outside the embedding window were not suppressed entirely. This behavior might be related to the MZM2 gated switch insufficient action to suppress the higher 20 GHz modulated carrier signal inside it.

Fig. 5
Photo-detected signals for a 20 GHz microwave carrier and 250 ps window after the SOA (dotted line) and after 9 km of fiber propagation (continuous line).

The results for a 12 GHz microwave signal inside an embedded window of 166 ps are shown in Fig. 6 for 9 km of fiber propagation. The dotted line presents pulse distortions, shown by letters C and D. Also, the letters A and B represents the 10% and 90% signal levels of the continuous line after propagation. Those levels A and B were used to calculate the signal rise time as shown in Fig. 6. Also note the half cycle calculation in Fig. 6.

Fig. 6
Photo-detected signals for a 12 GHz microwave carrier in a 166 ps window after the SOA (dotted line) and after 9 km of fiber propagation (continuous line), with rise time and half cycle estimation.

Several measurements have been made with the microwave signals going from 12 GHz up to 36 GHz, including the embedded windows from 166 ps up to 500 ps, for fiber lengths of 3.0 km, 9.0 km, and 18 km.

The results of the mean rise and fall time of the same pulse are presented in Fig. 7 as a function of the half cycle. The theoretical values were calculated for an ideal sinusoidal wave (dotted line). The results for the chirped signal (no fiber propagation) is shown by a continuous line. The signal propagated mean rise-fall time after 3 km, 9 km, and 18 km are shown by the dotted-point line, the dotted-x line, and the dotted-o line, respectively. The 9 km line results showed improvements in relation to the no fiber propagation. The 18 km result is worse than no propagation and might be attributed to an over correction of the pulse format. The microwave signal and optical spectra were also measured (results not shown here).

Fig. 7
Results of the mean rise and fall time of several tested pulses as a function of the half cycle, including theoretical results (dotted line), no fiber propagation (continuous line), and after fiber propagation; 3 km (dotted-point line); 9 km (dotted-x line); and 18 km (dotted-o line).

V. CONCLUSION

A technique for the generation of fast chirped optical pulsed waveforms, including the format and extinction ratio measurements after the fiber propagation has been described. The chirped pulses have been produced by amplification and proper parameter adjustments of a nonlinear SOA with 2 mm length cavity. The experimental setup successfully regenerated gate embedded window microwave signals, with microwave carriers up to 36 GHz, minimum pulse windows of 166 ps, with reformatted pulse rise time approaching 10 ps. Further works are related to the extinction ratio improvement of the microwave signal, tests with different dispersions fibers and SOAs, and proper numerical evaluation.

VI. Acknowledgement

This work was supported in part by the Brazilian Agencies São Paulo Research Foundation (FAPESP – grants 2015/24517-8, 2015/50063-4, and 2007/56024-4), and National Council for Scientific and Technological Development (CNPq – grants 301409/2017-0 and 402923/2016-2).

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Publication Dates

  • Publication in this collection
    16 Sept 2020
  • Date of issue
    Jul-Sep 2020

History

  • Received
    11 Feb 2020
  • Reviewed
    13 Feb 2020
  • Accepted
    17 June 2020
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