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Learn the power, risetime, and cost budget steps for designing optical fiber communication systems using Lecture 17 - System Considerations material. Understand bandwidth, noise, penalties, and attenuation in fiber.
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EE 230: Optical Fiber Communication Lecture 17 System Considerations From the movie Warriors of the Net
Bitrate Distance Graph for various point to point link technologies
System Design • Determine wavelength, link distance, and bit-error rate • Work out power budget • Work out risetime budget • Work out cost budget
Power Budget Steps • Start with BER and bit rate, determine B based on coding method • B = 1/2RC gives the maximum load resistance R based on B and C • Based on R and M, determine detector sensitivity (NEP), multiply by B1/2 • Add system margin, typically 6 dB, to determine necessary power at receiver
Power budget steps, continued • Add power penalties, if necessary, for extinction ratio, intensity noise (includes S/N degradation by amplifiers), timing jitter • Add loss of fiber based on link distance • Include loss contributions from connections and splices • End up with required power of transmitter, or maximum length of fiber for a given transmitter power
Power budget example Imagine we want to set up a link operating at 1550 nm with a bit rate of 1 Gb/s using the RZ format and a BER of 10-9. We want to use a PIN photodiode, which at this wavelength should be InGaAs. The R0 for the diode is 0.9 A/W.
Bandwidth required for bit rate • For NRZ format, B=0.5 times bit rate • For RZ format, B=bit rate For this example, the bandwidth B is equal to the bit rate, 109 /s.
Bandwidth limit C=2 pF for this photodiode. B = 1/2RC, so the load resistance R must be (2BC)-1 = 79.6
Noise Equivalent Power (NEP) Signal power where S/N=1 Units are W/Hz1/2 In this case, M=1 and the dark current = 4 nA. The factor outside the radical is 1/R0. We can thus determine the NEP, which is 5.1x10-7 W, which equals -33.0 dBm.
Q Factor and BER For our BER of 10-9, Q=6 and S/N=12
Extinction ratio penalty Extinction ratio rex=P0/P1 If our extinction ratio is 0.1, the penalty is 0.87 dB.
Intensity noise penalty rI=inverse of SNR of transmitted light Since our S/N is 12, rI=0.83, which leads to a power penalty of 1.25 dB
Timing jitter penalty Parameter B=fraction of bit period over which apparent clock time varies If our jitter represents 10% of the bit period, the power penalty is 0.34 dB
Fiber attenuation If the attenuation in the fiber is 0.2 dB/km and the link is 80 km long, the total loss in the fiber will be 16.0 dB
Example results • Minimum power required for receiver: -33.0 dBm • Safety margin: 6.0 dB • Extinction ratio power penalty: 0.87 dB • S/N power penalty: 1.25 dB • Timing jitter power penalty: 0.34 dB • Fiber loss over 80 km: 16.0 dB • Total= minimum transmitter power= -8.54 dBm=0.14 mW=140 W
Further steps Alternatively, previous data could be used with a fixed transmitter power to determine maximum length of a fiber link If power budget does not add up, one can • replace PIN photodiode with APD • add an EDFA to the link
Rise time budget components • bit rate and coding format determine upper limit of rise time • rise time of transmitter (from manufacturer; laser faster than LED) • pulse spread due to dispersion • rise time of receiver (from manufacturer; PIN faster than APD) Rise time components are combined by taking the square root of sums of squares
Upper limit for rise time • For NRZ format, Tr=0.70/B • For RZ format, Tr=0.35/B In this case, choose RZ format. Tr must thus be less than or equal to 0.35/109 = 350 ps
Group Velocity Dispersion-based rise time Calculate from laser optical bandwidth if known, or from modulation rate: In this case, D=17 ps/nm-km, L=80 km, and =0.016 nm, so tf=21.8 ps.
Modal dispersion rise time For multimode fiber, time spread due to modal dispersion is based on core index and fiber length L. For step-index fiber: For graded-index fiber:
Total rise time For this example, tMD=0, tTR=100 ps, tRC=0.5 ns, and tGVD= 21.8 ps as before. tr is therefore 510 ps, and the rise time budget does not meet the limit. • Can use NRZ format • Use faster detector or transmitter • Use graded-index fiber for less dispersion
Computer Based Link Simulation • Computer Simulation is often used to model opticla links to account for the complex interaction between components and nonlinear effects • Commercial simulation tools are now available such as: • Linksim from RSoft • and the tools from VPI Systems Fiber-Optic Communication Systems-G. Agrawal