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Low‐Latency WDM Intensity‐Modulation and Direct‐Detection Transmission Over >100 km Distances in a Hollow Core Fiber
Author(s) -
Hong Yang,
Bottrill Kyle R. H.,
Bradley Thomas D.,
Sakr Hesham,
Jasion Gregory T.,
Harrington Kerrianne,
Poletti Francesco,
Petropoulos Periklis,
Richardson David J.
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
laser and photonics reviews
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 3.778
H-Index - 116
eISSN - 1863-8899
pISSN - 1863-8880
DOI - 10.1002/lpor.202100102
Subject(s) - wavelength division multiplexing , latency (audio) , modulation (music) , computer science , transmission (telecommunications) , intensity modulation , optics , multiplexing , electronic engineering , materials science , telecommunications , wavelength , physics , phase modulation , engineering , phase noise , acoustics
The pervasive digital economy, fueled by developments in datacenter networking and cloud/edge computing, relies ever increasingly on the implementation of short‐ to metro‐range high‐capacity, low‐latency optical communication links. In this paper, it is demonstrated that the low spectrally flat chromatic dispersion and ultralow nonlinearity possible in hollow‐core fibers (HCFs) compared to conventional solid‐core fibers offer significant potential for the transmission of intensity‐modulation and direct‐detection (IM‐DD) signals over 100‐km‐scale distances. Specifically, the longest HCF‐only IM‐DD wavelength‐division multiplexed (WDM) C‐band transmission experiments (>100km) without chromatic dispersion compensation to date are reported, achieving reach improvements of approximately 5 times and 2 times compared to using standard single‐mode fiber and non‐zero dispersion‐shifted fiber, respectively, in the same experimental recirculating loop set‐up. For >100‐km transmission, a significant >150‐µs latency reduction can be obtained using HCF. These results, in combination with recent progress in loss reduction in HCFs, indicate that such fibers present a promising route to the realization of simple, cost‐effective, high‐capacity, ultra‐low‐latency IM‐DD WDM transmission links with the potential to revolutionize optical networks in the years to come.

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