Title: Polarisation Mode Dispersion in Highspeed Transmission Systems
1Polarisation Mode Dispersionin High-speed
Transmission Systems
2Presentation Overview
- Origins of PMD
- why PMD is a problem for high-speed systems
- descriptions of first order (PMD1) and higher
order (e.g. PMD2) - influence of environment of PMD evolution
- System degradation due to PMD
- analyse impact of PMD1 only, as well as all PMD
orders - PMD Compensation
- PMD1 compensation and its limitations
- techniques for high-order compensation
- experimental demonstrations of high-speed
transmission with compensation
3Pulse Dispersion in Optical Fibre
- Minimise all forms of pulse dispersion to
maximise rate of signal transmission through
fibre - History of dispersion minimisation in optical
fibre systems - modal dispersion è singlemode fibre
- chromatic dispersion è non-zero dispersion
shifted fibre and dispersion compensating fibre - polarisation mode dispersion (PMD) è ?
- PMD exhibits fundamental differences to other
system impairments (like chromatic dispersion,
Kerr effect) since it is stochastic by nature - varies with optical frequency and time
- difficult to minimise, since compensation
(probably) needs to be active
4Polarisation Mode Dispersion
- PMD originates from the inherent weak
birefringence in optical fibres(due to core
ellipticity, fibre stresses due to manufacturing
or layout) - Origins can be understood through analogy with
birefringent crystals 1,2 - consider a weakly birefringent telecom fibre as a
concatenation of many randomly orientated
birefringent waveplates - Distribution of optical energy from each axis of
one waveplate into some combination of the axes
of the next - mode coupling
5Polarisation Sensitivity ofLight Transmission
Through Fibre
- Light emerging from the fibre is the
superposition of pulses split between the fast
and slow axes of each of the waveplates, and its
temporal characteristics are highly
wavelength-dependent - However, there exist orthogonal input states of
polarisation (SOPs) for which the output states
are orthogonal and wavelength independent 2-
principle states of polarisation (PSPs) - Propagation delay difference, , between
light propagation along these PSPs - differential
group delay (DGD) - modelled as Maxwellian distr.
3 - Light injected into the fibre can then be
considered as a superposition of energy between
the two input PSPs - to 1st order, not true when there is
polarisation-dependent loss (PDL) 4
6Polarisation-induced Group Delay
- When pulsed light is launched in both PSPs, to
1st order, the output is a linear superposition
of 2 orthogonal pulses 2 - delay between pulses equal to the DGD
- power of each pulse dependent on the input
polarisation - average DGD over frequency range referred to as
1st order PMD (PMD1) - Impact on transmission performance
- maximum - equal distribution of energy in each
input PSP - minimum - input light aligned to one input PSP
Input PSPs
Output PSPs
7Other Polarisation Effects
- In reality, pulsed light comprises a range of
frequencies - DGD is frequency dependent
- PSPs are also frequency dependent
- both are stochastic by nature
- This frequency dependence is referred to as
higher order PMD 4,5 - increases with increasing PMD1
- 2nd order PMD (PMD2) is most important for
telecomms applications - All PMD orders change over time, which makes PMD
difficult to analyse and minimise - temperature, acoustic vibrations, splice movement
8Analytical Model for PMD, 1st Order PMD
- PMD can be completely described by the
polarisation dispersion vector (PDV), ,
defined as 4-6 - is the DGD at frequency
- is the fast-output PSP at the same
frequency - the magnitude of PDV is equal to the DGD, and
therefore also PMD1 4, i.e. - Note that at a given time and frequency, the DGD
can be more ore less than PMD1, since PMD1
represents the average delay between PSPs
92nd Order PMD (I)
- PMD2 represents the frequency-dependence of the
fibres polarisation dispersion, and is defined
as 4 - the subscript refers to the functions
derivative with respect to - the constant scales the sqrt so that PMD2
can be expressed in the same units as chromatic
dispersion (ps/nm) - The derivative of PDV is also a vector, but now
has 2 components 4,7
102nd Order PMD (II)
- Thankfully, the PDV derivative can be explained
intuitively - change in DGD with respect to frequency for that
specific PSP, commonly referred to as
polarisation-dependent chromatic dispersion (PCD)
5 - change in PSP with frequency, commonly referred
to as signal depolarisation - PMD2 is further enhanced by chromatic dispersion
- PMD2 is sometimes misrepresented as simply
related to the average derivative of DGD versus
wavelength, but this is only half true (PCD) - Depolarisation has been shown, both theoretically
and experimentally, to dominate over PCD, with a
ratio of 91 4,6
112nd Order PMD (III)
- Measured components of PMD2 across 40 nm around
1560 nm 6 - Orthogonal and parallel values for are
relative to , so PCD is the parallel comp.
(dots), whereas depolarisation is the orthogonal
comp. (thin line), and total PMD2 is solid line - Depolarisation dominates over PCD, as predicted
12Dependence of PMD on Fibre Length
- When the length of fibre is much greater than the
polarisation coupling length (i.e. the length of
each randomly-orientated waveplate) - PMD1 increases with the sqrt of the length
- since the arrangement of the waveplates axes is
random, the increase in the DGD will represent a
random walk 7 - PMD2 increases linearly with the fibre length
- the DGD slope increases with sqrt(L), more
frequencies appear as the length increases,
another sqrt (L), so PCD increases with L 4 - For long lengths of fibre (I.e. strong mode
coupling), there PMD1 and PMD2 are intrinsically
related
13Environmental Influences on PMD
- PMD is strongly affected by environmental
fluctuations, esp. temperature variations and
fibre vibrations - PMD sensitivity to temperature is related to the
fibres location, e.g. PMD for an aerial cable
8, right, and PMD vs wavelength for 6.5 km of
lab fibre 1, centre, and 50 km of installed
fibre (50 km) 1, left - Note - PMD fluctuations can occur in time
intervals down to msec 1,9
14System Degradation Due to PMD
- Many early evaluations of PMD-induced degradation
only considered PMD1, but for higher bit rate
systems, PMD2 is just as important - At lower speeds (e.g. 2.5 Gbps), PMD1 dominates,
resulting in eye closure and time drift 10 - eye closure results in a reduction in Q, and
hence a power penalty - time drift, if caused by changes in PMD due to
temperature fluctuations, can be accomodated by
the receiver clock recovery cct - At higher speeds, the average PMD penalty is
determined by PMD1, but PMD2 causes an additional
fluctuation of the penalty 11 - a good measure of the impact of PMD2 is
Pr(outage), where outage is defined as a time
interval where the BER is above a specified value
12
15Examples of Pulse Degradation due to PMD
- 40 Gbps transmission through 186 km of fully
compensated installed fibre 1,13 - PMD1 highlighted by pulse splitting and received
pulse shape depends heavily on input SOP
16PMD1 Compensation (I)
- A pulse under the influence of PMD1 exists fibre
in two orthogonal modes (according to the output
PSPs), differentially delayed by the fibres DGD - This can be completely compensated by using a
polarisation-based interferometer, where the
orthogonal pulses are delayed, with the pulse in
the fast PSP delayed by the DGD, then recombined
14,15 - i.e. functionally the same as many PMD1 emulators
- requires active feedback to delay mechanism
17PMD1 Compensation (II)
- PMD1 can be minimised by aligning the input light
to one PSP 1,13,15 using a polarisation
controller (PC) - this minimises polarisation-induced dispersion
only to 1st order - requires feedback path from receiver to
transmitter to track changes in PSP over time
(unrealistic) - E.g. 40 Gbps transmissionpreviously mentioned
1,13 - Residual penalty due tohigher-order PMD
- Performance heavilydependent on accuracyof
input SOP alignment
18Limitations to PMD1 Compensation
- As more PMD1 compensation is required in a link,
the more sensitive the system becomes to PMD2,
since PMD2 is proportional to PMD12 - Numerical calculations used to determine
Pr(outage), equal to Pr (BER) gt 10-12 in this
case, for a system with a 2 dB (PMD 0) margin
14 - Without compensation10 eye closure, mainly due
toPMD1, can be tolerated - With compensation40 PMD1 eye closure can
beremoved, but PMD2 causesBER fluctuation
19Higher-order Dispersion Compensation
- Requires concatenation of DGD fibre sections,
with polarisation transformers between each - degree of compensation depends on number of
sections - can be realised using a number of techniques
- polarisation controllers located along the
transmission fibre length 13 - polarisation controllers or waveplates 15-17,
or ferroelectric liquid crystals 15, located
between section(s) of polarisation maintaining
fibre (PMF) before the receiver - distributed equaliser using PMF-twist sections
15 before the receiver - PCs and waveplates may be too slow to compensate
for some PMD-induced signal fluctuations - liquid crystals require fibre coupling, and do
not have proven reliability
20Higher Order Compensation - PCs in Fibre Path
- Experimental set-up similar to the one discussed
on P17 1,13 - PCs located at fibre input, and mid-span of
fibre (corresponding to equal amounts of PMD1
before and after) - PC2 optimised, then PC1used to align input to
PSPof complete light path - Impact of PMD2 is reduced,but not eliminated
21Higher Order Compensation - PMF sectionswith PMD
monitors
- Experimental demonstrations of compensation at 40
Gbps using PMF sections and polarisation
transformers, coupled with novel polarisation
state monitors 15-17 - Detect electrical power of sub-harmonics
- power proportional to sin2(K.fSH.DGD)
- detect a number of sub-harmonics, fSH,for
unambiguous measure of DGD - choice of sub-harmonics depend onRZ or NRZ
waveform (different electrical spectral content) - example of 40 Gbps NRZ detection 16
22Higher Order Compensation - Distributed Equaliser
- Length of PMF fed through a cascade of fibre
twisters 25 - minimal insertion loss, since no fibre cuts
required - many degrees of freedom, limited only by number
of twisters - Promises best PMD compensation, may require
significant computation to avoid trapping in
local minima
23Conclusion
- PMD is a significant problem for long-distance
transmission systems operating at 10 Gbps and
higher - PMD1 can be minimised using relatively simple
delay line techniques - Compensation of higher-order PMD requires more
complex equalisation techniques - Monitoring of polarisation dependent dispersion
is required for all compensation schemes, due to
the time-varying nature of PMD - Initial experimental demonstrations of PMD
compensation act on a per-channel basis, due to
strong wavelength dependence of PMD
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