Mohab Nabil Mohamed Fathy, Hammad (2022) Characterisation of optimum devices and parameters for enhanced optical frequency comb generation. PhD thesis, Dublin City University.
Abstract
The Internet has become an irreplaceable aspect of our daily life. It is used every day by
billions of people around the world for various functions such as business, study, and
entertainment. Hence, an unabated rise in the demand for higher and faster data traffic has
been experienced through the last few decades. This demand for bandwidth is further fuelled
by the introduction of bandwidth intensive applications such as ultra-high-definition video
streaming, real time online gaming and cloud services making the realization of higher
capacity and performance optical networks a necessity.
Today’s telecommunication systems are static, with pre-provisioned links requiring an
expensive and time-consuming reconfiguration process. The state-of-the-art approach
(wavelength division multiplexing - WDM), entailing multiple lasers emitting differing
wavelengths (each modulated) multiplexed together (on a 50 GHz grid), cannot meet the
growing demands. Hence, future networks need to be flexible and programmable, allowing
for resources to be directed, where the demand exists, thus improving network efficiency. A
cost-effective solution is to utilise the legacy fibre infrastructure more efficiently by reducing
the size of the guard bands and allowing closer optical carrier spacing, thereby increasing the
overall spectral efficiency. However, such a scheme imposes a stringent transmitter
requirement in terms of wavelength stability, noise properties and cost-efficiency, which
would not be met with the incumbent laser-array based transmitters. An attractive
alternative would be to employ an optical frequency comb (OFC), which generates multiple
phase-correlated optical carriers with a precise frequency separation. The reconfigurability
of such a multi-carrier transmitter would enable tuning of channel spacing, number of
carriers and emission wavelengths, according to the dynamic network demands.
This thesis focusses on the externally injected gain-switched laser-based OFC (GSL-OFC)
technique. Advances to the state of the art are achieved via a detailed static and dynamic
characterisation of lasers, which is then used for enhancing the comb generation process.
Specifically, initial efforts are devoted to the use of different laser structures for OFC
generation. This aspect is then furthered by incorporating the concept of photonic
integration to reduce the cost, power consumption and footprint of the multi-carrier
transmitter. Self and externally seeded photonic integrated circuits are used to generate
combs that are then fully characterized to verify their employability in optical networks.
Metadata
Item Type: | Thesis (PhD) |
---|---|
Date of Award: | November 2022 |
Refereed: | No |
Supervisor(s): | Anandarajah, Prince and Landais, Pascal |
Subjects: | Engineering > Electronic engineering |
DCU Faculties and Centres: | DCU Faculties and Schools > Faculty of Engineering and Computing > School of Electronic Engineering |
Funders: | Science Foundation Ireland |
ID Code: | 27335 |
Deposited On: | 17 Nov 2022 13:26 by Prince Anandarajah . Last Modified 17 Nov 2022 13:26 |
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