| United States Patent |
5,912,749
|
|
Harstead
,   et al.
|
June 15, 1999
|
Call admission control in cellular networks
Abstract
A unique time slot is assigned to each of a plurality of wavelengths
emitted by a single, centralized wavelength division multiplexed optical
source to provide a "bit interleaved" WDM signal. In accordance with an
illustrative embodiment of the present invention, the thus-developed
bit-interleaved WDM signal is replicated in cascaded stages of
amplification and power splitting before data is encoded for respective
frequency dependent receivers as, for example, a plurality of passive
optical networks. Because the output of the optical source need not be
encoded with data for the respective receivers until after many stages of
splitting and amplification, a small number of time division multiplexing
(TDM) modulators synchronized to the source may be used to deliver data to
potentially tens of thousands of subscribers.
| Inventors:
|
Harstead; Edward Eric (New York, NY);
Knox; Wayne Harvey (Rumson, NJ);
Nuss; Martin C. (Fair Haven, NJ);
Stark; Jason Blain (Holmdel, NJ)
|
| Assignee:
|
Lucent Technologies Inc. (Murray Hill, NJ)
|
| Appl. No.:
|
798895 |
| Filed:
|
February 11, 1997 |
| Current U.S. Class: |
398/75; 398/1; 398/49; 398/71; 398/90 |
| Intern'l Class: |
H04J 014/02; H04J 014/08 |
| Field of Search: |
359/123,120,178,125,140,132,133
|
References Cited [Referenced By]
U.S. Patent Documents
| 5337175 | Aug., 1994 | Ohnsorge et al. | 359/125.
|
| 5438444 | Aug., 1995 | Tayonaka et al. | 359/123.
|
| 5559624 | Sep., 1996 | Darcie et al. | 359/125.
|
| 5631758 | May., 1997 | Knox et al. | 359/127.
|
| 5793507 | Aug., 1998 | Giles et al. | 359/125.
|
Primary Examiner: Pascal; Leslie
Attorney, Agent or Firm: Gurey; Stephen M.
Parent Case Text
REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS
The present invention is related to U.S. patent application Ser. No.
08/548,537 filed on Oct. 26, 1995, now U.S. Pat. No. 5,631,758, issued May
20, 1997, entitled Chirped-Pulse Multiple Wavelength Telecommunications
System; to U.S. patent application Ser. No. 08/706,029 filed on Aug. 30,
1996, entitled Optical Communication System Employing Spectrally Sliced
Optical Source; and to U.S. patent application Ser. No. 08/656,023 filed
on May 31, 1996, now U.S. Pat. No. 5,793,507 issued Aug. 11, 1998,
entitled Discretely Chirped Multiple Wavelength Optical Source For Use In
A Passive Optical Network Telecommunications System.
Claims
What is claimed is:
1. An optical source distribution network, comprising:
an optical transmitter including
a multifrequency optical source for supplying an optical signal having a
plurality of wavelength division multiplexed (WDM) channels, substantially
all light supplied over a given time interval being within a single
wavelength channel;
a power splitter having an input port, for receiving the optical signal
from said multifrequency source, and a plurality of output ports, and
a plurality of data encoding modulators, each said data encoding modulator
being coupled to one of said output ports and being operable to
sequentially modulate at least some of the wavelength channels present on
an output signal received from said power splitter; and
a plurality of frequency dependent receivers, each said frequency dependent
receiver being operable to receive and wavelength demultiplex a modulated
optical signal received from one of said data encoding modulators over an
optical medium.
2. The optical source distribution network according to claim 1, further
including at least one optical amplifier coupled to a port of said power
splitter.
3. The optical source distribution network according to claim 1, wherein
said at least one optical amplifier is coupled to an input port of said
power splitter.
4. The optical source distribution network according to claim 1, wherein
said at least one optical amplifier is an erbium doped fiber amplifier.
5. The optical source distribution network according to claim 1, wherein
said multifrequency source includes an array of substantially single
frequency lasers, each emitting light constituting a respective wavelength
channel and being operable to supply a pulse occupying a fraction of time
such that only a single WDM laser in the array emits over a given time
interval.
6. The optical source distribution network according to claim 1, wherein at
least one of said frequency dependent receivers is a passive optical
network including a wavelength router and a plurality of optical network
units, each optical network unit receiving from said router a
corresponding wavelength demultiplexed signal.
7. The optical source distribution network according to claim 1,
wherein said power splitter is a first power splitter, said optical source
distribution network further including a second power splitter having an
input port coupled to an output port of said first power splitter and a
plurality of output ports, and
wherein at least one of said data encoding modulators is coupled to an
output port of said second power splitter.
8. The optical source distribution network according to claim 7, further
including at least one optical amplifier coupled to a port of one of said
power splitters.
9. The optical source distribution network according to claim 7, further
including at least one optical amplifier optically interconnecting ports
of said first and second power splitters.
10. An optical transmitter for use in an optical source distribution
network comprising:
a multifrequency optical source for supplying an optical signal having a
plurality of wavelength division multiplexed (WDM) channels, substantially
all light supplied over a given interval being within a single WDM
channel;
a power splitter having an input port, for receiving the optical signal
from said multifrequency source, and a plurality of output ports; and
a plurality of data encoding modulators, each said data encoding modulator
being coupled to one of said output ports and being operable to
sequentially modulate at least some of the WDM channels present on an
output signal received from said power splitter.
11. The optical transmitter according to claim 10, wherein said
multifrequency source includes an array of substantially single frequency
lasers, each emitting light constituting a respective wavelength channel
and being operable to supply a pulse occupying a fraction of time such
that only a single WDM laser in the array emits over a given time
interval.
12. The optical transmitter according to claim 10, further including at
least one optical amplifier coupled to a port of said power splitter.
13. The optical transmitter according to claim 12, wherein said at least
one optical amplifier is coupled to an input port of said power splitter.
14. The optical transmitter according to claim 10, wherein said power
splitter is a first power splitter, said optical transmitter further
including a second power splitter having an input port coupled to an
output port of said first power splitter and a plurality of output ports.
15. The optical transmitter according to claim 14, wherein at least one of
said data encoding modulators is coupled to an output port of said second
power splitter.
16. A method of operating an optical multiple wavelength communication
system comprising the steps of:
receiving, at a power splitter having an input port, an optical signal
having a plurality of wavelength division multiplexed (WDM) channels,
substantially all light received over a given interval being of a single
WDM channel;
sequentially modulating at least some of the WDM channels present on an
output signal received from said power splitter with a first modulator;
sequentially modulating at least some of the WDM channels present on an
output signal received from said power splitter with a second modulator;
and
launching the modulated WDM channels into an optical medium.
17. The method of claim 16, further including a step of receiving and
wavelength demultiplexing respective modulated optical signals received
from said data encoding modulators over the optical medium.
Description
FIELD OF THE INVENTION
The present invention relates generally to optical communication systems
and, more particularly, to optical fiber communication systems in which
multiple information channels are carried on a single mode optical fiber.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
A passive optical network typically consists of a transmitter, feeder
fiber, a remote branching device, and an optical network unit (ONU) for
each subscriber or group of subscribers. In a conventional TDM power
splitting passive optical network, the transmitter emits an aggregated
signal on a single wavelength, while the branching device splits the
aggregated signal into a plurality of identical signals, each such signal
being distributed to a corresponding ONU configured to receive at the
aggregate bit-rate.
In a wavelength division multiplexed (WDM) passive optical network, each
transmitted wavelength carries data for a single ONU and is modulated at
the baseband bit rate. The branching device, which may comprise, for
example, a wavelength grating router, establishes a virtual point-to-point
link between the transmitter and the ONU. A multifrequency optical source
such as a multifrequency laser or a WDM laser array is customarily used to
generate the comb of wavelengths required for the WDM network.
Since data for each wavelength channel is encoded directly at the
multifrequency optical source, for example, by turning on and off
individual elements of a multifrequency laser array, one WDM
multifrequency laser is required for each N subscribers or optical network
units, where N is the number of wavelengths emitted by the laser. Due to
the high cost of multifrequency optical sources, WDM for fiber
distribution networks as they have heretofore been envisioned is not
deemed cost-competitive with conventional power splitting passive optical
networks or even simple point-to-point schemes (one fiber per customer).
Accordingly, there is a continuing need for an efficient and
cost-effective WDM system that is capable of transmitting a large number
of spectral channels.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
The aforementioned deficiencies are addressed, and an advance is made in
the art by an optical communications network architecture in which optical
power splitting techniques and, optionally, optical amplifiers such as
erbium doped fiber amplifiers (EDFAs), for example, are deployed in a
cascaded distribution fabric that permits a single multiple frequency
optical source to serve as the primary optical source for a substantially
higher number of frequency dependent receivers, such as passive optical
networks including one or more optical network units, than has heretofore
been possible.
A unique time slot is assigned to each of a plurality of wavelengths
emitted by a single, centralized wavelength division multiplexed (WDM)
optical source to provide a "bit interleaved" WDM signal. In accordance
with the present invention, the thus-developed bit-interleaved WDM signal
is replicated in cascaded stages of amplification and power splitting
before data is encoded for respective frequency dependent receivers as,
for example, a plurality of WDM passive optical networks. Because the
output of the optical source need not be encoded with data for the
respective receivers until after many stages of splitting and
amplification, a small number of time multiplexing (TDM) modulators
synchronized to the source may be used to deliver data to potentially tens
of thousands of subscribers.
The various features of the present invention will become apparent from the
following detailed description considered in conjunction with the
accompanying drawings. It is to be understood, however, that the drawings
are designed solely for purposes of illustration and not as a definition
of the limits of the invention, for which reference should be made to the
appended claims.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
A more complete understanding of the invention may be obtained by reading
the following description of specific illustrative embodiments of the
invention in conjunction with the appended drawings in which:
FIG. 1 is a schematic diagram of a cascaded multiple wavelength optical
communications system utilizing a single multiple wavelength optical
source to serve a number of passive optical networks in accordance with an
illustrative embodiment of the present invention;
FIG. 2 is a schematic diagram of an investigative cascaded multiple
wavelength optical communication system constructed in accordance with the
present invention and used to evaluate the performance of a cascading
distribution fabric, the bit interleaved multiple frequency optical source
thereof being configured as a fiber-chirped, femtosecond-laser;
FIG. 3A is a graphical representation depicting the transmission spectra of
data transmitted on a single wavelength channel launched into a
distribution fiber after being encoded with a pseudo-random bit (PSBR)
sequence with the single stage cascading distribution fabric being omitted
from the investigative system of FIG. 2, the upper and lower traces
respectively corresponding to the spectra observed at the input of the
distribution fiber and at a single port of a demultiplexing waveguide
grating router;
FIG. 3B is a graphical representation depicting the transmission spectra of
data transmitted on a single wavelength channel launched into a
distribution fiber after being encoded with a pseudo-random bit (PSBR)
sequence with the single stage cascading distribution fabric incorporated
as shown into the investigative system of FIG. 2, the upper and lower
traces respectively corresponding to the spectra observed at the input of
the distribution fiber and at a single port of a demultiplexing waveguide
grating router;
FIG. 4 graphically compares the bit error rate vs. received power observed
in the PSBR encoded wavelength channel when the cascading distribution
fabric was omitted from and included in, respectively, the investigative
system of FIG. 2;
FIG. 5A is a graphical representation depicting the transmission spectra of
data transmitted on fifteen wavelength channels launched into a
distribution fiber after being encoded with a pseudo-random bit (PSBR)
sequence by a single modulator, with the single stage cascading
distribution fabric being omitted from the investigative system of FIG. 2
and the upper and lower traces respectively corresponding to the spectra
observed at the input of the distribution fiber and at a single output
port of a demultiplexing waveguide grating router;
FIG. 5B is a graphical representation depicting the transmission spectra of
data transmitted on fifteen wavelength channels launched into a
distribution fiber after being encoded with a pseudo-random bit (PSBR)
sequence by a single modulator, with the single stage cascading
distribution fabric incorporated as shown into the investigative system of
FIG. 2 and the upper and lower traces respectively corresponding to the
spectra observed at the input of the distribution fiber and at a single
port of a demultiplexing waveguide grating router; and
FIG. 6 is a graphical representation comparing the bit error rate vs.
received power observed in one of fifteen PSBR encoded wavelength channels
when the cascading distribution fabric was omitted from and included in
the investigative system of FIG. 2.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
With initial reference to FIG. 1, there is shown an optical communications
system 10 constructed in accordance with an illustrative embodiment of the
present invention. By way of illustrative example, optical communications
system 10 may be implemented in a local access communication network
designed to serve many thousands of subscribers. In any event, as seen in
FIG. 1, it will be seen that communications system 10 includes a
transmitter 12 comprising a bit-interleaved multifrequency light source 14
for sequentially emitting N wavelength channels, a cascaded distribution
fabric 16, a plurality of data-encoding modulators M.sub.1 -M.sub.n, and a
plurality of frequency dependent receivers R.sub.1 -R.sub.n.
Illustratively, some or all of the frequency dependent receivers may be
configured as passive optical networks (PONs) consisting of, as shown in
FIG. 1, a WDM splitter 22 having multiple output ports each for supplying
a respectively discrete wavelength (or a narrow wavelength band or channel
centered around that wavelength) to an associated optical network unit 24.
Alternate PON configurations are, of course, possible. For example, in
lieu of a wavelength selective router, a simple power splitter (not
shown)--having its output ports optically coupled to respective frequency
selective filters (not shown)--may be used to distribute the discrete
wavelengths to the appropriate optical network units.
As will soon become apparent, a principal advantage of the present
invention resides in the ease to which communication system 10 can be
scaled to accommodate the addition of many more subscribers, as needed,
merely by introducing one or more additional power splitting and
amplification stages, and a number of modulators, corresponding to the
number of WDM passive optical networks to be introduced, to distribution
fabric 14. Essentially, for k stages of 1:M power-splitters, and N
wavelength channels, the number of subscribers served is M.sup.k .times.N.
In accordance with the present invention, optical source 12 is configured
as a bit-interleaved multifrequency source, in which there is only a
single wavelength or wavelength channel centered around that wavelength,
present at any given time. One optical source which is suitable for the
purposes of the present invention is disclosed in U.S. patent application
Ser. No. 08/548,537 by Knox et al., now U.S. Pat. No. 5,631,758, issued
May 20, 1997, entitled CHIRPED PULSE MULTIPLE WAVELENGTH COMMUNICATIONS
SYSTEM and assigned to the assignee herein, Lucent Technologies Inc.,
which application is expressly incorporated herein by reference.
Knox et al. disclose a technique in which the output of a broadband
short-pulse source is stretched to a large fraction of the time between
pulses by linear dispersion in a fiber. The dispersion imposes a linear
frequency chirp onto the stretched pulses, so that each WDM channel
occupies a different time slot. A femtosecond laser was employed by Knox
et al. as the broadband short-pulse source. For example, a
transform-limited Gaussian laser pulse of duration t has a time bandwidth
product (.DELTA.v)(t)=0.44, so that a 70 fs laser pulse has an optical
bandwidth (FWHM)(.DELTA.v) of 6.4 THz, enough for 32 WDM channels spaced
at 200 GHz. For the purposes of the present invention, however, any
multifrequency optical source that can supply an optical signal having a
plurality of wavelength division multiplexed (WDM) channels in which
substantially all light supplied over a given time interval is within a
single WDM channel, may be used.
Illustratively, in lieu of a femtosecond laser, a short pulse ASE source
may be employed. By way of further example, a gain switched diode
laser--amplified and spectrally broadened by self-phase modulation in a
fiber--may be used. See "Electro-Optic Testing of Ultrafast Electronic and
Optoelectronic Devices" by T. Nagatsuma, Technical Digest, p. 46, Optical
Society of America, Washington, 1995. Yet another multifrequency optical
source which may be utilized to implement the present invention is
disclosed in U.S. patent application Ser. No. 08/656,023 by Giles et al.,
now U.S. Pat. No. 5,793,507, issued Aug. 11, 1998, entitled DISCRETELY
CHIRPED MULTIPLE WAVELENGTH OPTICAL SOURCE FOR USE IN A PASSIVE OPTICAL
NETWORK TELECOMMUNICATIONS SYSTEM. In the latter application, there is
proposed a discretely chirped WDM source that, illustratively, comprises a
WDM laser array in which successive wavelength channels are pulsed on and
off serially, thus generating a step-function approximation to a
continuously chirped WDM source.
Yet another example of a suitable multifrequency bit-interleaving optical
source is disclosed in U.S. patent application Ser. No. 08/706,029, by U.
Koren et al, entitled "Optical Communication System Employing Spectrally
Sliced Optical Source". Essentially, Koren et al. propose an arrangement
in which the output of a broad spectrum optical source such as a light
emitting diode is supplied to a wavelength splitter having at least one
input port and a plurality of output ports each corresponding to an
individual wavelength channel. Each of the output ports have optically
coupled thereto a respective length of optical fiber that is configured to
provide a different time delay for each wavelength channel, thereby
ensuring that each individual wavelength occupies a discrete time slot.
In view of the preceding discussion, it should be readily appreciated by
those skilled in the art that although reference may be made hereafter to
a femtosecond laser-chirped pulse multiple frequency source, as for
example, in the discussion of the investigative apparatus depicted in FIG.
2, such reference is by way of illustration only and it is contemplated by
the inventors herein that any bit interleaved, multiple frequency optical
sources such as, for example, those enumerated above, may be employed. In
any event, and with continued reference to FIG. 1, it will be seen that
light emitted by source 12 propagates through cascaded distribution fabric
16. In the illustrative embodiment depicted in FIG. 1, only two stages of
distribution fabric 16 are shown for clarity of illustration. Each stage
comprises a 1:M power splitter 26, 28 and, where appropriate to maintain
the requisite power level, a pre-amplifier 30, 32. The light passes
through distribution fabric 16 and, thereafter, through a modulator as
modulator M.sub.1, where a TDM signal encodes data onto each WDM channel
sequentially.
The fully-encoded WDM signal is then transmitted to a frequency dependent
receiver as R.sub.1, a passive optical network in the illustrative
embodiment depicted in FIG. 1, for distribution to subscribers in their
homes. For a power splitter with 32 output ports, a total of 32,768 PONs
can be serviced using three cascaded stages of splitting, and a single WDM
light source. For a PON having 16 WDM channels, this system serves 524,288
subscribers with a single source. In general, for k cascaded stages having
M-fold split, and N WDM channels, a single light source serves N.M.sup.k
subscribers. The light source is shared by all subscribers, while the
costs of the modulator and final cascade stage are shared by each PON.
An investigative system employing a linearly chirped femtosecond laser 40
as the bit-interleaved multifrequency source is shown in FIG. 2 and was
constructed in order to evaluate the performance of a cascading
distribution fabric according to the present invention. The distribution
fabric 42 consists of a single power splitting stage employing an optical
amplifier 44 and a power splitter 46 having an input port and a plurality
of output ports. Before preamplification, the laser spectrum has a 3 dB
bandwidth in excess of 70 nm and is centered about 1550 nm, a typical
communications wavelength.
The system was configured such that data for each separate channel may be
multiplexed into the buffer of a pattern generator (not shown), and
delivered in Non-Return-to-Zero (NRZ) format to a modulator 48. Each of
the fifteen individual channels is programmable with a pseudo-random
bitstream (PRBS), with variable offset. Additionally, each channel can be
blanked, so that no data is transmitted on that channel. The performance
of the system, in the absence of crosstalk, is first measured by
transmitting a 2.sup.15 PRBS on a single channel. In the first
measurement, a PRBS was transmitted on channel 8, at 1563.7 nm, while the
remaining 15 channels were blanked. The transmission spectra, FIGS. 3A and
3B, show the light transmitted into the distribution fiber 50 (upper
trace) and that received after port 8 (lower trace) of WDM router 52. The
peaking of the output spectrum results from nonuniform gain in the
preamplifier and distribution amplifier. This can be eliminated by using
gain-flattened amplifiers, and by active equalization of the spectrum
using the data modulator.
The BER vs. received power, FIG. 4, shows that the received power level for
a bit error rate of 10.sup.-9 is -50.3 dBm without the distribution
fabric, and -50.3 dBm with the distribution fabric. No significant power
penalty is incurred by the introduction of the distribution stage.
Transmission measurements made using channel 1, at the edge of the output
spectrum show an overall power penalty of 1 dB, due to the peaking of the
output spectrum, but no significant ASE penalty.
With reference now to FIGS. 5A, 5B, and 6, the results of a second
measurement, by which the effects of crosstalk may be evaluated, will now
be discussed. For this measurement, a PRBS was transmitted on each of the
fifteen wavelength channels, with the measurements again being taken at
port 8 of the router. Each PRBS was offset by 736 bits, relative to the
previous channel. The BER measurements, FIG. 6, indicates a sensitivity of
-50.1 dBm and -50.3 dBm, without and with distribution stage,
respectively. Comparing FIGS. 5A and 5B, the peaked spectrum of the
distribution stage suppresses the crosstalk levels away from channel 8,
resulting in a crosstalk penalty of -0.2 dB. Measurements of transmission
on channel 1 again show a 1 dB penalty due to spectral peaking in the
distribution stage. Again, it should be emphasized that the penalties
associated with nonuniform gain in the amplifier stage can be eliminated
by using gain-flattened amplifiers, only leaving an insignificant power
penalty due to ASE, as discussed below.
Cascaded distribution in accordance with the present invention cannot be
continued indefinitely. Each power splitter in the distribution fabric
divides the input power among its individual output ports, and is preceded
by a compensating amplifier, contributing noise to the transmission in the
form of amplified spontaneous emission (ASE). The ASE power after a
cascade of N stages is given by
##EQU1##
where m is the number of polarization modes, h Planck's constant, v the
light frequency, .DELTA.v the optical filter frequency bandwidth, G.sub.k
the gain of stage k, L.sub.k the loss in stage k, and n.sub.k.sup.sp the
spontaneous emission factor of the amplifier in stage k. For N identical
unity-gain stages the ASE power is P.sub.ASE =N mhv .DELTA.v n.sub.sp,
amounting to 64 nW (-42 dBm) per stage in a 1 nm optical bandwidth, with
m=2 and n.sub.sp =2. The power penalty associated with cascaded
distribution is
##EQU2##
when the receiver thermal noise power dominates optical shot noise. For a
transmitted signal level of 100 .mu.W (-10 dBm), and a three-stage cascade
of 1:32 splitters, one half million subscribers can be served using a
single source, with a power penalty of only 0.008 dB.
Although modifications and changes may be suggested by those skilled in the
art, it is the intention of the inventors to embody within the patent
warranted hereon all changes and modifications as reasonably and properly
come within the scope of their contribution to the art.
* * * * *