
Joint blind equalization of CD and RSOP using a time-frequency domain Kalman filter structure in Stokes vector direct detection system
Author(s) -
Nan Cui,
Zibo Zheng,
Xiaoguang Zhang,
Yi Wei,
Ruipu Guo,
Wenbo Zhang,
Xianfeng Tang,
Hengying Xu,
Lixia Xi
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
optics express
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.394
H-Index - 271
ISSN - 1094-4087
DOI - 10.1364/oe.27.011557
Subject(s) - kalman filter , frequency domain , time domain , computer science , stokes parameters , control theory (sociology) , optics , physics , artificial intelligence , computer vision , control (management) , scattering
We propose a joint blind equalization method for chromatic dispersion (CD) and ultra-fast rotation of state-of-polarization (RSOP) in a Stokes vector direct detection (SV-DD) system based on a new time-frequency domain Kalman filter structure. In an SV-DD system, the impairments induced by CD and RSOP possess a nonlinear form. Therefore, CD and RSOP cannot be treated sequentially, which causes difficulty in jointly equalizing these two impairments using an ordinary algorithm. The Kalman filter was proven to be effective in equalizing polarization effects in a coherent receiver. However, this approach has inherent limitations given that the Kalman filter was originally presented as a method implemented in the time domain whereas CD is eventually induced in the frequency domain. In this report, the proposed time-frequency domain Kalman filter can facilitate CD compensation in the frequency domain and RSOP equalization in the time domain by exploiting a sliding window structure. Both the CD compensation and the RSOP equalization are conducted in Stokes space when the proposed method is utilized, which is specially designed for an SV-DD system. The presented approach was checked using a 28 Gbaud 16-QAM SV-DD system simulation platform. The simulation results confirm that the method is very effective and has strong tolerance to CD (more than 2550 ps/nm, equivalent to a 150 km G. 652 fiber) combined with ultra-fast RSOP (up to 2 Mrad/s) for application in extreme polarization environments, like the transient lightning in a rainy day.