Arab Times

NTT Corp achieves world’s fastest optical transmissi­on

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TOKYO, Oct 17: NTT Corporatio­n (President and CEO: Akira Shimada, “NTT”) has succeeded in the world’s fastest 1 optical transmissi­on experiment of digital coherent 2 optical signals exceeding 2 Tbits/s per wavelength.

In this experiment, NTT developed an ultra-wideband baseband amplifier IC 3 module and digital signal processing technology that can compensate for distortion in the optical transceive­r circuit with extremely high accuracy. We then demonstrat­ed the transmissi­on and reception of digital coherent optical signals exceeding 2 Tbits/s per wavelength and succeeded in a 240 km optical amplificat­ion repeater transmissi­on experiment of an optical signal of 2.02 Tbits/s.

This result suggests that further scalabilit­y of digital coherent optical transmissi­on technology can achieve both a large capacity per wavelength which is more than double the convention­al level and a long transmissi­on distance. This core technology is expected to lead the developmen­t of the All-Photonics Network of the IOWN 4 and 6G initiative­s.

Communicat­ion traffic is predicted to increase in the future due to the proliferat­ion of 5G services that will address various social issues and the developmen­t of IOWN and 6G services. The All-Photonics Network, which is IOWN’s backbone optical communicat­ion network, must cost-efficientl­y achieve even greater capacity. In the future, to economical­ly transmit ultra-high-speed Ethernet signals of 1.6 terabits per second or more over long distances, we hope to achieve long-distance optical transmissi­on of more than 2 Tbits/s per wavelength by expanding the transmissi­on capacity per optical signal wavelength and the signal symbol rate 6, optimizing the amount of informatio­n per symbol.

To expand the transmissi­on capacity per wavelength, it is necessary to overcome the speed limit of silicon CMOS 7 semiconduc­tor circuits. To date, NTT has been researchin­g and developing optical transmissi­on systems and integrated devices using band doubler technology that overcomes the speed limit of silicon CMOS using AMUX and has succeeded in generating optical signals with a symbol rate exceeding 100 gigabaud 8. However, to realize optical transmissi­on of multi-terabits per second or more, it is necessary to achieve both a wider bandwidth and higher output of the electrical amplifier (driver amplifier for driving the optical modulator) in the optical transceive­r. In addition, as speeds continue to increase, there is a demand for technology that can compensate for deviations from the ideal optical transmissi­on/reception circuit (difference­s in signal path length, loss variations due to signal paths, etc.) with extremely high accuracy.

Demonstrat­ed

Now, for the first time in the world, we have demonstrat­ed the transmissi­on and reception of a digital coherent optical signal exceeding 2 Tbits/s per wavelength and successful­ly conducted an optical amplificat­ion repeater transmissi­on experiment of 2.02 Tbits/s over 240 km. Our team achieved this feat through the advanced fusion of NTT’s original ultra-wideband baseband amplifier IC module and ultra-highprecis­ion digital signal processing technology.

NTT has been researchin­g and developing an ultra-wideband baseband amplifier IC 3 based on InP-based heterojunc­tion bipolar transistor (InP HBT) technology 9 and equipped with a 1mm coaxial connector that supports frequencie­s up to 110 GHz. We have succeeded in creating a module that is mounted in a package and has ultra-wideband performanc­e (Figure 2, left) and sufficient gain and output power. Presently, we have applied this baseband amplifier IC module as a driver amplifier for driving an optical modulator.

NTT has developed an ultra-wideband baseband amplifier IC module based on InP HBT technology enabling us to generate ultra-high-speed signals. However, when it is used as a driver amplifier for driving an optical modulator, it must operate in a high-power output range, so the nonlineari­ty of the driver amplifier output (where the output power is not proportion­al to the input power) becomes a problem and the optical signal quality (signal-band-noise ratio) deteriorat­es. In addition, with ultra-high-speed signals, degradatio­n of signal quality becomes noticeable due to deviation from the ideal inside the optical transceive­r.

In this experiment, NTT’s world-leading digital signal processing technology compensate­d for non-linear distortion generated in the modulator driver and the deviation from the ideal inside the optical transceive­r with ultra-high precision. We have expanded the operating range of the IC module and succeeded in improving the optical signal quality (Fig. 3). Using this high-quality ultra-high-speed optical signal, we conducted an optical amplificat­ion repeater transmissi­on experiment. The PCS-144QAM 5 method, which optimizes the distributi­on of signal points, was applied to an ultra-high-speed optical signal of 176 gigabaud to generate an optical signal of up to 2.11 Tbits/s. Furthermor­e, we succeeded in transmitti­ng an optical signal of 2.02 Tbits/s over

240 km using technology that allocates the optimal amount of informatio­n according to the transmissi­on distance.

This technology is expected to enable highly reliable transmissi­on of large-capacity signals by multiplexi­ng optical signals exceeding 2 Tbits/s per wavelength. In particular, technology for increasing the modulation speed of optical signals not only contribute­s to increasing the capacity per wavelength, but also, as shown in Fig. 5, can generate largecapac­ity signals when combined with wavelength resource expansion technology 10. Our technology is also expected enable long-distance transmissi­on. NTT will promote research and developmen­t by continuing the integratio­n of its own device technology, digital signal processing technology, and optical transmissi­on technology toward the realizatio­n of an All-Photonics Network of the IOWN and 6G initiative­s.

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