| United States Patent |
5,999,290
|
|
Li
|
December 7, 1999
|
Optical add/drop multiplexer having complementary stages
Abstract
An add/drop multiplexer (ADM) 100 includes an optical demultiplexer 200 and
an optical multiplexer 300 that are connected in series. The optical
multiplexer and the optical demultiplexer each include a number of
corresponding passbands, which means that the central wavelengths of the
multiplexer's passbands are approximately equal to the central wavelengths
of the demultiplexer's passbands. The performance of the ADM is improved
by making the edges of corresponding passbands complementary to each
other. In one illustrative design, the transmission of the demultiplexer
decreases at its passband edges as the wavelength moves away from its
central wavelength, whereas the transmission of the multiplexer increases
as the wavelength moves away from its central wavelength. The resultant
cascaded passband of the pair is wider than the passband of the
demultiplexer alone, thereby increasing the number of ADMs in a chain for
the same performance. Not surprisingly, the advantages of the present
invention are most evident in a wavelength-division-multiplexed system
having many geographically separated locations 71-74 interconnected by an
optical transmission path, and where selected channels of information need
to be inserted or removed from the optical transmission path.
| Inventors:
|
Li; Yuan P. (Duluth, GA)
|
| Assignee:
|
Lucent Technologies Inc. (Murray Hill, NJ)
|
| Appl. No.:
|
958496 |
| Filed:
|
October 27, 1997 |
| Current U.S. Class: |
398/83; 385/24 |
| Intern'l Class: |
H04J 014/02 |
| Field of Search: |
359/124,127-128,130
385/24
|
References Cited [Referenced By]
U.S. Patent Documents
| 4904042 | Feb., 1990 | Dragone | 350/96.
|
| 5002350 | Mar., 1991 | Dragone | 350/96.
|
| 5136671 | Aug., 1992 | Dragone | 385/46.
|
| 5412744 | May., 1995 | Dragone | 385/24.
|
| 5467418 | Nov., 1995 | Dragone | 385/37.
|
| 5488680 | Jan., 1996 | Dragone | 385/24.
|
| 5502781 | Mar., 1996 | Li et al. | 385/4.
|
| 5542010 | Jul., 1996 | Bernard et al. | 385/14.
|
| 5611016 | Mar., 1997 | Fangmann et al. | 385/100.
|
| 5612805 | Mar., 1997 | Fevrier et al. | 359/124.
|
| 5748350 | May., 1998 | Pan et al. | 359/127.
|
| Foreign Patent Documents |
| 0720408 | Jul., 1996 | EP.
| |
Other References
D. Trouchet, et al., "Passband Flattening of PHASAR WDM using Input And
Output Star Couplers Designed With Two Focal Points", Conference On
Optical Fiber.
Y. P. Li, et al., "Silica-based Optical Integrated Circuits", IEE
Proc.-Optoelectron, vol. 143, No. 5, Oct. 1996, pp. 263-280.
|
Primary Examiner: Negash; Kinfe-Michael
Attorney, Agent or Firm: Morra; Michael A.
Claims
I claim:
1. An optical device comprising an optical multiplexer and an optical
demultiplexer connected in series, the multiplexer comprising a plurality
of passbands that correspond to the passbands of the demultiplexer, each
passband having a central wavelength and a transmission gain that varies
according to wavelength and each passband having a bandwidth that is
measured between a pair of band-edge wavelengths where the transmission
gain is a fixed amount below the transmission gain at its central
wavelength, said corresponding passbands comprising one of the
demultiplexer passbands and one of the multiplexer passbands whose central
wavelengths are approximately equal to each other, one of said passbands
in each pair of corresponding passbands having a narrow bandwidth and the
other having a wide bandwidth, said wide passband having a transmission
characteristic that cooperates with the transmission characteristic of the
narrow passband to produce a composite passband whose bandwidth is greater
than the bandwidth of the narrow passband.
2. The optical device of claim 1, wherein the passbands associated with the
demultiplexer have the narrow bandwidths and the passbands associated with
the multiplexer have the wide bandwidths.
3. The optical device of claim 1, wherein the band-edges wavelengths of
each passband comprises the wavelengths where the transmission gain is 2
dB below the transmission gain at its central wavelength.
4. The optical device of claim 1, wherein the demultiplexer includes a
plurality of output ports and the multiplexer includes a plurality of
input ports, at least one of the output ports of the demultiplexer being
connected to an input port of the multiplexer through an optical switch.
5. The optical device of claim 1 wherein the optical demultiplexer or the
optical multiplexer comprises a dense wavelength-division multiplexer.
6. The optical device of claim 5 wherein the dense wavelength-division
multiplexer comprises:
first and second dielectric slabs, each have a pair of opposite sides;
a plurality of unequal-length waveguides interconnecting one side of the
first dielectric slab to one side of the second dielectric slab, each of
said unequal-length waveguides having a length that differs from its
nearest neighbors by a fixed amount;
a power splitter connected to the opposite side of the first dielectric
slab; and
a plurality of waveguides connected to the opposite side of the second
dielectric slab.
7. The optical device of claim 1, wherein the transmission characteristic
of the narrow-bandwidth passband is formed from the combination of two
Gaussian passbands having a normalized separation, S, which is less than
1.00.
8. The optical device of claim 1, wherein the transmission characteristic
of the wide-bandwidth passband is formed from the combination of two
Gaussian passbands having a normalized separation, S, which is greater
than 1.00.
9. An optical device comprising an optical multiplexer and an optical
demultiplexer connected in series, the multiplexer comprising a plurality
of passbands that correspond to the passbands of the demultiplexer, each
passband having a central wavelength and a transmission gain that varies
according to wavelength and each passband having a bandwidth that is
measured between a pair of band-edge wavelengths where the transmission
gain is a fixed amount below the transmission gain at its central
wavelength, said corresponding passbands comprising one of the
demultiplexer passbands and one of the multiplexer passbands whose central
wavelengths are approximately equal to each other, characterized in that
one of said passbands in each pair of corresponding passbands has a narrow
bandwidth and the other has a wide bandwidth;
wherein the transmission gain of the narrow passband decreases at a first
rate at its band-edge wavelengths; and
wherein the transmission gain of the corresponding wide passband increases
at a second rate, which is complementary to the first rate, at the
band-edge wavelengths of the narrow passband.
10. A wavelength-division-multiplexed system for transmitting a plurality
of communication channels over a transmission path, each channel occupying
a different band of wavelengths, the system including a plurality of
geographically separated locations that are interconnected by the
transmission path, each of said locations having an add/drop multiplexer
(ADM) for inserting and removing channels of optical signals from the
transmission path, each ADM comprising an optical multiplexer and an
optical demultiplexer connected in series, the multiplexer comprising a
plurality of passbands that correspond to the passbands of the
demultiplexer, each passband having a central wavelength and a
transmission gain that varies according to wavelength, and each passband
having a bandwidth that is measured between a pair of band-edge
wavelengths where the transmission gain is a fixed amount below the
transmission gain at its central wavelength, said corresponding passbands
comprising one of the demultiplexer passbands and one of the multiplexer
passbands whose central wavelengths are approximately equal to each other,
one of said passbands in each pair of corresponding passbands having a
narrow bandwidth and the other having a wide bandwidth, said wide passband
having a transmission characteristic that cooperates with the transmission
characteristic of the narrow passband to produce a composite passband
whose bandwidth is greater than the bandwidth of the narrow passband.
11. The wavelength-division-multiplexed system of claim 10 further
including a near-end location that connects to one of the geographically
separated locations via the transmission path, the source location
including;
a plurality of sources of optical signals, each of said sources generating
optical signals that reside in a passband having a different central
wavelength; and
a multiplexer for combining the plural sources of optical signals onto a
single waveguide for transmission over the transmission path.
12. The wavelength-division-multiplexed system of claim 11 further
including a far-end location that connects to another of the
geographically separated locations over the transmission path, the
terminus location including;
a demultiplexer, responsive to a multiplexed optical signal on a single
waveguide for separating same into a plurality of the plural sources of
optical signals onto a single waveguide for transmission over the
transmission path
a plurality of sources of optical signals, each of said sources receiving
optical signals that reside in a passband having a different central
wavelength.
13. The wavelength-division-multiplexed system of claim 10 wherein the
transmission path includes optical cables.
Description
TECHNICAL FIELD
This invention relates to optical devices that perform an add/drop
multiplexing function and, more particularly, to the transmission
characteristics of such devices.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
The information superhighway will primarily comprise optical fibers for the
foreseeable future because of the enormous bandwidth that each optical
fiber provides. For example, an optical fiber exhibits relatively low loss
over the wavelength region 820-1600 nanometers. This particular region
provides a bandwidth of about 180,000 GHz which means that a single
optical fiber can potentially carry 45 billion voice channels (4 kHz each)
or 30 million television channels (6 MHz each). And while these numbers
represent upper limits that are not practical to attain, they provide a
compelling reason for communication carriers to use optical transmission.
However, in order to fully utilize this information superhighway, there
needs to be convenient equipment for inserting and removing individual
optical channels, or groups of channels, at multiple intermediate
locations along an optical fiber path. Equipment that performs this
function is not surprisingly known as an optical add/drop multiplexer
(ADM), and it generally comprises a demultiplexer connected in series with
a multiplexer. Between the demultiplexer and the multiplexer, another
optical device is used to add and/or remove selected channels.
However, because the ADMs are cascaded in large optical networks, the
transmission characteristic of each channel that undergoes demultiplexing
and multiplexing is narrowed--a phenomenon that can be readily understood
by recognizing that cascading these passive devices is equivalent to
multiplying their individual transmission functions together. For example,
assuming that the transmission characteristic of one particular channel of
an ADM has a normalized magnitude of 1.0 at the center of its passband and
0.8 at its edges, then the transmission characteristic of that particular
channel through two ADMs is still 1.0 at the center, but is now
0.8.times.0.8=0.64 at the edges. The resulting passband thus has a more
pronounced central peak, which effectively reduces the usable bandwidth of
each passband. Accordingly, the number of ADMs that can be cascaded is
also reduced.
Optical multiplexing and demultiplexing is frequently accomplished via a
pair of star couplers that are interconnected by an optical grating (i.e.,
a number of parallel waveguides--each differing in length with respect to
its nearest neighbor by a predetermined fixed amount). Examples of such
interconnected star couplers, known as Dense Wave Division Multiplexers
(DWDMs), are shown in U.S. Pat. Nos. 5,002,350 and 5,136,671 and
5,412,744. In one direction of optical transmission, the DWDM can be used
as a multiplexer wherein a plurality of separate and distinct wavelengths
(.lambda..sub.1, .lambda..sub.2. . . .lambda..sub.n, ) are launched into
different input ports of one star coupler and emerge on a single output
port of the other star coupler. In the other direction of optical
transmission, the DWDM can be used as a demultiplexer wherein a plurality
of different wavelengths are launched into a single port of one star
coupler and emerge on multiple ports of the other star coupler according
to their particular wavelengths. An ADM can therefore be built using two
DWDMs connected back-to-back.
Techniques are known for making the passband of a DWDM relatively wide and
flat. For example, U.S. Pat. No. 5,412,744 achieves wide and flat
passbands by coupling adjacent waveguides at the input or at the output of
the DWDM. Further, application Ser. No. 08/682,453 was filed on Jul. 17,
1996 by the present inventor, and it achieves wide and flat passbands by
installing multiple power splitters in the same DWDM. Nevertheless, when
such DWDMs are cascaded in an ADM configuration, it is desirable to
further improve the transmission characteristics of the individual
passbands.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
A novel optical device consists of an optical multiplexer and an optical
demultiplexer that are connected in series. The optical multiplexer and
the optical demultiplexer each include a number of corresponding
passbands, which is to say that the central wavelengths of the
multiplexer's passbands are approximately equal to the central wavelengths
of the demultiplexer's passbands. The overall transmission characteristic
of the optical device is improved by making the edges of corresponding
passbands complementary to each other.
In an illustrative embodiment of the invention, the demultiplexer passbands
have narrower bandwidths than the corresponding multiplexer passbands.
Illustratively, transmission gain is measured between the edges of the
passband (e.g., those wavelengths where the gain is about 2 dB below the
gain at the central wavelength). At the edges of the demultiplexer
passbands, the transmission gain decreases as wavelengths move farther
away from the central wavelength; whereas the transmission gain of the
multiplexer increases in a complementary manner such that the passband of
the cascaded demultiplexer/multiplexer is flatter than either of the
individual passbands.
The advantages of the present invention are most evident in a
wavelength-division-multiplexed system that operates over an optical
transmission path that includes a number of geographically separated
locations where selected channels of information need to be added to, or
dropped from, the transmission path.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWING
The invention and its mode of operation will be more clearly understood
from the following detailed description when read with the appended
drawing in which:
FIG. 1 discloses an add/drop multiplexer (ADM) in accordance with the
present invention;
FIG. 2A discloses details of the optical demultiplexer used in the ADM of
FIG. 1;
FIG. 2B shows the transmission characteristic of one representative channel
of the optical demultiplexer of FIG. 2A;
FIG. 3A discloses details of the optical multiplexer used in the ADM of
FIG. 1;
FIG. 3B shows the transmission characteristic of one representative channel
of the optical multiplexer of FIG. 3A;
FIG. 4 is a magnified view of the input and output portions of the ADM
shown in FIG. 1;
FIG. 5 shows transmission characteristics associated with representative
passbands of optical multiplexers and demultiplexers;
FIG. 6 shows the composite transmission characteristics for the ADM of the
present invention, and for a combination of "maximally flat" passbands;
and
FIG. 7 discloses a wavelength-division-multiplexed system that includes a
number of cascaded ADMs in each direction of transmission.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
The present invention relates to planar waveguides whose construction is
generally understood and described in numerous articles and patents. The
most advanced and technically developed planar waveguides are doped-silica
waveguides fabricated with silicon optical bench (SiOB) technology. A
doped-silica waveguide is usually preferred because it has a number of
attractive properties including low cost, low insertion loss, low
birefringence, stability, and compatibility for coupling to fiber.
Further, the processing steps are compatible with those in silicon
integrated circuit (IC) technology, which are geared for mass production
and are readily known.
Generally, a doped-silica waveguide is formed by initially depositing a
base or lower cladding layer of low index silica on a silicon or silica
substrate. A layer of doped silica with a high refractive index, i.e., the
core layer, is then deposited on top of the lower cladding layer. The core
layer is subsequently patterned or sculpted into structures required by
the optical circuits using photo-lithographic techniques similar to those
used in integrated circuit fabrication. Lastly, a top cladding layer is
deposited to cover the patterned waveguide core. This technology is
generally described in an article entitled: Silica-based optical
integrated circuits by Y. P. Li and C. H. Henry at Vol. 143, No. 5, IEE
Proceedings on Optoelectronics, pages 263-280 (October 1996), which is
hereby incorporated by reference.
FIG. 1 shows an ADM 100 that services sixteen channels operating at
different nominal wavelengths (.lambda..sub.1, . . . , .lambda..sub.16).
These channels are immediately adjacent to each other with a spacing of,
for example, 0.8 nanometers (nm). These channels illustratively reside in
the 1550 nm range. Incoming channels on waveguide 101 are denoted by the
subscript "A," whereas channels that are added at this location are
denoted by the subscript "B." Demultiplexer (demux) 200 separates a
multiplexed optical signal that is present on waveguide 101 into its
component channels and makes them available on output leads 201-216;
whereas multiplexer (mux) 300 combines input channels, on leads 301-316,
into a composite output signal for transmission on waveguide 401.
A conventional 2.times.2 optical waveguide switch 11 is used, for example,
to extract channel .lambda..sub.1A and add channel .lambda..sub.1B.
Channels .lambda..sub.1A and .lambda..sub.1B operate at the same nominal
wavelength (i.e., .lambda..sub.1), but carry different information.
Similarly, optical waveguide switch 12 routes its input channels
.lambda..sub.15A and .lambda..sub.15B in two different directions to
provide add/drop functionality. It is understood that channels may be
dropped without necessarily adding others. In the present invention,
electromechanical switching is used to perform on/off switching. However,
other switching techniques are known, and are disclosed in U.S. Pat. No.
5,502,781.
Optical switch 11, for example, shows three paths (A, B, C) between its
input and output ports. Path A is enabled when an input optical signal,
.lambda..sub.1B, is to be added. Path B is enabled when input optical
signal, .lambda..sub.1A, is to continue through ADM 100 to a distant
location. Finally, path C is enabled when input optical signal,
.lambda..sub.1A, is to be dropped from ADM 100. It is noted that paths A
and B cannot both be enabled at the same time. It is also noted that
optical switches can be associated with each of the channels for maximum
flexibility, and cost, or only with selected channels.
Optical Demultiplexer
An optical demultiplexer operates much like a prism, which takes a beam of
white light at its input and separates its various colors at its output.
In optical demultiplexers, however, the input light beam comprises a
limited number of colors (.lambda..sub.1, .lambda..sub.2, . . . ,
.lambda..sub.n) at a single input waveguide, and each color is precisely
directed to a particular one of n output waveguides. Such a demultiplexer
is illustratively shown in FIG. 2A, but is more completely disclosed in
U.S. Pat. No. 5,136,671. Optical demultiplexer 200 comprises a pair of
star couplers 1, 2 that are interconnected by a diffraction grating 250,
which is made from a plurality of unequal-length optical waveguides. The
length of each waveguide in the grating 250 differs from the lengths of
all other waveguides in the grating by different amounts so that the same
optical signal is phase shifted by different amount when it reaches then
end of the grating.
A star coupler couples the lightwaves from any input to all of the outputs
without wavelength selectivity. It is widely used as a basic cross-connect
element in passive optical networks. Ideally, the optical power from any
input splits evenly into all the outputs without power loss, so that each
output receives an equal portion of the input power. Star coupler 1
includes a dielectric slab 120 which comprises a free-space region having
two curved, preferably circular, boundaries 1a and 1b. Power transfer in
star coupler 1 is accomplished through radiation in the dielectric slab
120 between its input and output waveguides. Note that a power splitter
102 is connected to input waveguide 101, and its purpose is to shape the
transmission characteristic of the individual passbands, one of which is
shown in FIG. 2B. It is noted that although power splitter 102 is a
conventional Y-branch splitter, the power splitting function can be
accomplished by other techniques to achieve the same desired result. For
example:
Power splitting can be accomplished by shaping the dielectric slab to have
two focal points. Such a device has been reported in the Technical Digest
of the 1997 Optical Fiber Conference at pages 302-303 by D. Trouchet et
al.
The waveguides of the diffraction grating 250 (see FIG. 2A) can be grouped
according to length (l.sub.i) into at least two groups to form a power
splitter. The first group has lengths that differ from each other by
multiples of a first predetermined length (.DELTA.l.sub.1); whereas the
second group of waveguides has lengths that differ from each other by
multiples of a second predetermined length (.DELTA.l.sub.2); where
.DELTA.l.sub.1 .noteq..DELTA.l.sub.2. Details regarding the construction
of such a power splitter is contained in application Ser. No. 08/841021
which was filed on Apr. 29, 1997 by the present inventor.
Star coupler 2 includes a dielectric slab 220 which comprises a free-space
region having two curved, preferably circular, boundaries 2a and 2b. Power
transfer in star coupler 2 is accomplished through radiation in the
dielectric slab 220 between its input and output waveguides. The
waveguides of grating 250 are uniformly distributed along boundary 2a of
star coupler 2, and are radially directed toward a focal point that
resides on boundary 2b. Like star coupler 1, star coupler 2 comprises a
slab of dielectric material 220 forming a free-space region having two
curved, preferably circular, boundaries 2a and 2b. Output waveguides
201-216 are also connected to the free-space region 220 in a substantially
uniform distribution along the boundary 2b.
Reference is now made to FIG. 2B, which visually illustrates the
combination of Gaussian passbands 20a and 20b to form an overall
demultiplexer passband 20. Gaussian passband 20a represents the
transmission characteristic associated with one of the output legs of
power splitter 102 in FIG. 2A, while Gaussian passband 20b represents the
transmission characteristic associated with the other output leg of power
splitter 102.
As background information it is noted that Gaussian passbands combine to
create a "maximally flat" shape when the wavelength separation between
adjacent passbands is equal to their bandwidth (measured between
wavelengths where the power is 3 dB below the power at the central
wavelength of the passband). In this situation, a normalized separation,
S, between the central wavelengths of adjacent passbands is defined to be
1.00. Surprisingly, it has been found that such "maximally flat" shapes do
not themselves combine to produce the widest overall passband shape for an
ADM. Indeed, it has been found that the multiplexer and demultiplexer
passbands should have complementary shapes (i.e., the transmission gain of
one passband decreases at a rate at its band-edge wavelengths, as the
wavelength moves away from the central wavelength, while the transmission
gain of the other passband increases at the same rate at these
wavelengths).
Referring again to FIG. 2B, the normalized separation, S.sub.d, between the
central wavelengths of Gaussian passbands 20a and 20b is designed to be
0.95 for demultiplexer 200. This produces a composite passband 20 for the
demultiplexer whose top is generally rounded and whose 2 dB bandwidth,
B.sub.d, is about 60 GHz (0.48 nm) between its band-edge wavelengths
.lambda..sub.d1 and .lambda..sub.d2. In the preferred embodiment of the
invention, passband 20 is the composite of two Gaussian passbands 20a and
20b. However, it is understood that other shapes are contemplated for
passband 20 such as, for example, one formed by three or more Gaussian
passbands. Note that the central wavelength of demultiplexer passband 20
is designated .lambda..sub.C. In the following discussion of optical
multiplexers, the same central wavelength, .lambda..sub.C, is used to
denote that corresponding passbands of the demultiplexer and multiplexer
have the same central wavelength.
Dense Wavelength-Division Multiplexer
The principle of the dense wavelength-division multiplexer (DWDM), can be
described as follows: the lightwave from an input waveguide couples into
the grated waveguides by the input star coupler. If there were no
differential phase shift in the grating region, the lightwave propagation
in the output star would appear as if it were the reciprocal propagation
in the input star. The input waveguide would thus be imaged at the
interface between the output slab and the output waveguides. The imaged
input waveguide would be butt-coupled to one of the output waveguides. The
linear length difference in the waveguide grating results in a
wavelength-dependent tilt of the wave front of the lightwave in the
grating waveguides, and thus shifts the input waveguide image to a
wavelength-dependent position. As the wavelength changes, the input
waveguide image sweeps across and couples light into different output
waveguides. For a more detailed discussion, reference is made to the
aforementioned article entitled: Silica-based optical integrated circuits
at pages 274-276.
In the illustrative embodiment of the invention, demultiplexer 200 is a
DWDM, which is suitable for performing the demultiplexing function in one
direction of transmission and the multiplexing function in the other.
Therefore, the following discussion of an optical multiplexer is
abbreviated because the component parts of the DWDM have already been
discussed.
Optical Multiplexer
FIG. 3A shows a DWDM which performs a multiplexing function in the
left-to-right direction of signal propagation. A plurality of optical
channels, whose central wavelengths (.lambda..sub.1, .lambda..sub.2, . . .
.lambda..sub.16), are individually present on the input waveguides 301-316
of star coupler 3, which is connected to star coupler 4 via a plurality of
unequal-length waveguides 350. These waveguides 350 form a diffraction
grating that cause the individual input channels to be focused on power
splitter 402, which combines them onto a single output waveguide 401. As
discussed above, each star coupler 3, 4 respectively comprises a
dielectric slab 320, 420 having input and output waveguides positioned
along its opposite sides 3a, 3b and 4a, 4b.
Reference is now made to FIG. 3B, which visually illustrates the
combination of Gaussian passbands 30a and 30b to form an overall
multiplexer passband 30. Gaussian passband 30a represents the transmission
characteristic associated with one of the output legs of power splitter
402 in FIG. 3A, while Gaussian passband 30b represents the transmission
characteristic associated with the other output leg of power splitter 402.
As discussed above, although power splitter 402 is shown as conventional
Y-branch splitter, the power splitting function can be accomplished by
other techniques to achieve the same desired result. And the desired
result is the particular shaping of the transmission characteristic of the
multiplexer passband.
The normalized separation, S.sub.m, between the central wavelengths of
Gaussian passbands 30a and 30b is designed to be 1.4 for demultiplexer
200. This produces a composite passband 30 for the multiplexer whose top
has a single ripple and whose 2 dB bandwidth, B.sub.m, is about 110 GHz
(1.06 nm) between its band-edge wavelengths .lambda..sub.d1 and
.lambda..sub.d2. In the preferred embodiment of the invention, passband 20
is the composite of two Gaussian passbands 20a and 20b. However, it is
understood, that other shapes are contemplated for passband 20 such as,
for example, one formed by three or more Gaussian passbands. Note that the
central wavelength of demultiplexer passband 20 is designated
.lambda..sub.C. In the following discussion of optical multiplexers, the
same central wavelength, .lambda..sub.C, is used to denote that
corresponding passbands of the demultiplexer and multiplexer have the same
central wavelength.
FIG. 4 provides a magnified view of certain portions of the ADM 100 shown
in FIG. 1. Particular attention is drawn to the different dimensions
associated with branch splitters 102 and 402. The transmission
characteristic of each channel through ADM 100 is related to the
mathematical convolution of the input and output waveguide mode fields. As
shown in FIG. 4, splitter 102 includes a pair of waveguides, of width
w.sub.1, that are separated by distance c.sub.1 where they impinge the
boundary 1a of star coupler 1; whereas splitter 402 includes a pair of
waveguides, of width w.sub.2, that are separated by distance c.sub.2 where
they impinge the boundary 4b of star coupler 4.
In a preferred embodiment of the invention, the following dimensions are
used: c.sub.1 =10 .mu.m and c.sub.2 =16 .mu.m; w.sub.1 =5.75 .mu.m and
w.sub.2 =8.25 .mu.m; and the period spacing is 26.4 .mu.m. Period spacing
means the center-to-center distance between waveguides 201-216 and
waveguides 301-316 (see FIGS. 2A, 3A). In this preferred embodiment, the
Y-branches associated with star coupler 1 are narrower than the Y-branches
associated with star coupler 4. However, because the composite
transmission characteristic of the series-connected demultiplexer and
multiplexer is the mathematical convolution of the waveguide geometries of
the Y-branch splitters 102, 402 where they interface dielectric slabs 120
and 420 respectively, and because convolution is commutative (i.e.,
.alpha.b=b.alpha.), it is not surprising that equivalent performance can
be achieved if the Y-branches associated with star coupler 1 are wider
than the Y-branches associated with star coupler 4; and, indeed, this is
the case. Accordingly, ADMs in accordance with the present invention can
also be constructed with the demultiplexer having wide passbands and the
multiplexer having narrow passbands. What is important is that the wide
passband have a transmission characteristic that cooperates with the
transmission characteristic of the narrow passband to produce a composite
passband whose bandwidth is greater than the bandwidth of the narrow
passband (i.e., a complementary shape in the band-edge region of the
narrow passband).
FIG. 5 shows the transmission characteristics associated with
representative passbands of optical multiplexers and demultiplexers. In
the preferred embodiment of the present invention, passband 20 is the
transmission characteristic associated with demultiplexer 200 and passband
30 is the transmission characteristic associated with multiplexer 300 (see
FIG. 1). Passband 21 is the so-called "maximally flat" transmission
characteristic which, as discussed above, is formed by combining a pair of
adjacent Gaussian passbands whose wavelength separation is equal to their
bandwidth (measured between wavelengths where the power is 3 dB below the
power at the central wavelength of the passband).
Looked at another way, all three passbands 20, 21 and 30 are the result of
combining two Gaussian curves, but with different normalized separations
(S). Curve 21 is the "maximally flat" curve that one achieves when S=1.
Curve 20 is slightly rounded in the central wavelength (.lambda..sub.C)
region, which is what occurs when S<1.00 (here, S=0.95). And curve 30 has
a slight depression in the central wavelength region, which is what occurs
when S>1.00 (here, S=1.40). In the present invention, multiplexer passband
30 has a complementary slope to that of demultiplexer passband 20 at the
band-edge wavelengths (.lambda..sub.d1, .lambda..sub.d2) of the
demultiplexer passband. The result of combining such passbands 20, 30
together is shown in FIG. 6 as composite passband 50. Surprisingly,
composite passband 50 has a greater bandwidth than composite passband 51,
which is formed by combining a pair of "maximally flat" passbands, each
having shape 21 as shown in FIG. 5.
Optical Wavelength-Division-Multiplex System
The advantages of the present invention are apparent in a
wavelength-division-multiplex (WDM) system such as shown in FIG. 7. This
particular WDM system comprises a near-end location 71, a plurality of
intermediate locations 72-73, and a far-end location 74 that are
interconnected by optical cables 710, 720, 730. Each optical cable
includes a number of optical fibers, and a suitable cable design is shown
in U.S. Pat. No. 5,611,016 to Fangmann et al. that issued on Mar. 11,
1997. Illustratively, one optical fiber is used for downstream
transmission (i.e., from location 71 toward location 74) and another
optical fiber is used for upstream transmission (i.e., from location 74
toward location 71). Each optical fiber carries a number of multiplexed
channels. Illustratively, sixteen channels are available in each direction
of transmission wherein each channel has a usable bandwidth of about 0.5
nm, and adjacent channels are separated by about 0.8 nm. These channels
illustratively operate in the 1550 nm wavelength range. Terminals 701, 702
transmit and receive lightwave signals at a transmission rate of about 2.5
Gb/s. In the downstream direction, multiplexer 300 includes a plurality of
input waveguides 301, 302 that receive lightwave signals from terminals
701, 702 and combines them for transmission over output waveguide 401.
Optical waveguide 401 is then connected to an optical fiber within cable
710, which carries the multiplexed signals to intermediate location 72.
This same cable 710 includes one or more optical fibers for carrying
optical signals in the opposite direction. Such signals are connected to
input waveguide 101 of demultiplexer 200, which separates the multiplexed
signals into individual channels that are available at its output
waveguides 201, 202. These output waveguides are connected to terminals
701, 702 respectively. Similar equipment is available at the far-end
location 74. For example, terminals 801, 802 may be identical to terminals
701, 701. However, the present invention allows more intermediate
locations 72, 73 to be chained than in the prior art WDM systems because
passband narrowing is less of a problem.
At each intermediate location 72, 73, one or more ADMs (100-1, 100-2,
100-3, 100-4) are used to add and/or drop individual channels, or groups
thereof For example, at locations 72, 73 terminals 721, 731 may be
identical to the above-described terminal 701. In this illustrative WDM
system, terminal 701 communicates with terminal 721. The downstream
channel that interconnects these two terminals is dropped at ADM 100-1,
whereas the upstream channel that interconnects these two terminals is
added at ADM 100-2. Accordingly, the band of wavelengths, which are used
for communication between terminals 701 and 721, is unused between
intermediate locations 72 and 73. However, terminal 731 (at location 73)
uses this band of wavelengths to communicate with terminal 801 at the
far-end location 74.
For the same passband narrowing, the present invention increases the number
of intermediate locations where channels can be added and/or dropped by
more than a factor of two.
Although various particular embodiments of the present invention have been
shown and described, modifications are possible within the spirit and
scope of the invention. These modifications include, but are not limited
to: the use of different power splitter designs in a DWDM to fabricate
complementary transmission characteristics; the use of multiplexer and
demultiplexer designs, other than DWDMs, to fabricate complementary
transmission characteristics; and the use of complementary transmission
characteristics in optical devices other than ADMs. And while an
illustrative embodiment of the present invention shows the demultiplexer
as having narrower passbands than the multiplexer, it is understood that
complementary transmission characteristics can also be achieved in
embodiments where the multiplexer has narrower passbands than the
demultiplexer.
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