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Cylindrical vector beam multiplexing for radio-over-fiber communication with dielectric metasurfaces
Author(s) -
Chaofeng Wang,
Bo Yang,
Menglong Cheng,
Sihang Cheng,
Junmin Liu,
Jiangnan Xiao,
Huapeng Ye,
Ying Li,
Dianyuan Fan,
Shuqing Chen
Publication year - 2020
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.406300
Subject(s) - multiplexing , optics , radio over fiber , free space optical communication , physics , optical communication , optical fiber , telecommunications , computer science
Radio-over-fiber (ROF) technology, loading microwave signal on light beams, has attracted considerable attention in wireless access network for its superiority in processing high-frequency microwave signals. Multiplexing for achieving high-capacity density, however, remains elusive in ROF communication because the optical microwave occupies large bandwidth. Here, we introduce a cylindrical vector beam (CVB) multiplexing for ROF communication with dielectric Pancharatnam-Berry phase-based metasurfaces (PBMs). CVBs, a structured light beam possessing spatially nonuniform polarization distribution and carrying vector mode, provide an additional multiplexing dimension for optical communication with the advantages of weak scintillation in free-space and low mode injure in few-mode-fiber. Exploiting the spin-orbit interaction of the PB phase, we construct PBMs to manipulate CVBs, which show broadband working wavelengths ranging from C- to L-band. After 3 m free-space propagation, two multiplexed CVBs carrying 100 GHz microwave are successfully demultiplexed, and the 100 GHz ROF communication with 12 Gbit/s QPSK-OFDM signals is realized. The crosstalk of the multiplexed CVBs is less than -15.13 dB, and the bit-error-rates (BERs) are below 3.26 × 10 -5 . With 5 km few-mode-fiber transmission, the CVBs are also demultiplexed with the BERs of 6.51 × 10 -5 . These results indicate that CVB is not only capable of free-space transmission but also available for few-mode-fiber transmission, which might pave new avenues for the multiplexing of ROF communications.

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