US20050025410A1 - Dispersion-compensated optical wavelength router and cascaded architectures - Google Patents
Dispersion-compensated optical wavelength router and cascaded architectures Download PDFInfo
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- US20050025410A1 US20050025410A1 US10/170,245 US17024502A US2005025410A1 US 20050025410 A1 US20050025410 A1 US 20050025410A1 US 17024502 A US17024502 A US 17024502A US 2005025410 A1 US2005025410 A1 US 2005025410A1
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- H04J14/02—Wavelength-division multiplex systems
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- G02B6/00—Light guides; Structural details of arrangements comprising light guides and other optical elements, e.g. couplings
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- G02B6/27—Optical coupling means with polarisation selective and adjusting means
- G02B6/2706—Optical coupling means with polarisation selective and adjusting means as bulk elements, i.e. free space arrangements external to a light guide, e.g. polarising beam splitters
- G02B6/2713—Optical coupling means with polarisation selective and adjusting means as bulk elements, i.e. free space arrangements external to a light guide, e.g. polarising beam splitters cascade of polarisation selective or adjusting operations
- G02B6/272—Optical coupling means with polarisation selective and adjusting means as bulk elements, i.e. free space arrangements external to a light guide, e.g. polarising beam splitters cascade of polarisation selective or adjusting operations comprising polarisation means for beam splitting and combining
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- G02B6/27—Optical coupling means with polarisation selective and adjusting means
- G02B6/2746—Optical coupling means with polarisation selective and adjusting means comprising non-reciprocal devices, e.g. isolators, FRM, circulators, quasi-isolators
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- G02B6/28—Optical coupling means having data bus means, i.e. plural waveguides interconnected and providing an inherently bidirectional system by mixing and splitting signals
- G02B6/293—Optical coupling means having data bus means, i.e. plural waveguides interconnected and providing an inherently bidirectional system by mixing and splitting signals with wavelength selective means
- G02B6/29302—Optical coupling means having data bus means, i.e. plural waveguides interconnected and providing an inherently bidirectional system by mixing and splitting signals with wavelength selective means based on birefringence or polarisation, e.g. wavelength dependent birefringence, polarisation interferometers
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- G02B6/293—Optical coupling means having data bus means, i.e. plural waveguides interconnected and providing an inherently bidirectional system by mixing and splitting signals with wavelength selective means
- G02B6/29346—Optical coupling means having data bus means, i.e. plural waveguides interconnected and providing an inherently bidirectional system by mixing and splitting signals with wavelength selective means operating by wave or beam interference
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- G02B6/29379—Optical coupling means having data bus means, i.e. plural waveguides interconnected and providing an inherently bidirectional system by mixing and splitting signals with wavelength selective means characterised by the function or use of the complete device
- G02B6/2938—Optical coupling means having data bus means, i.e. plural waveguides interconnected and providing an inherently bidirectional system by mixing and splitting signals with wavelength selective means characterised by the function or use of the complete device for multiplexing or demultiplexing, i.e. combining or separating wavelengths, e.g. 1xN, NxM
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Definitions
- the present invention relates generally to the field of optical communications systems. More specifically, the present invention relates to a dispersion compensated optical wavelength router and cascaded architectures.
- Wavelength division multiplexing is a commonly used technique that allows the transport of multiple optical signals, each at a slightly different wavelength, over an optical fiber.
- the ability to carry multiple signals on a single fiber allows that fiber to carry a tremendous amount of traffic, including data, voice, and digital video signals.
- ITU International Telecommunications Union
- G.mcs proposes a frequency grid which specifies various channel spacings including 100 GHz and 200 GHz. It would be advantageous to obtain smaller channel spacings. As transmission systems evolve to longer distances, smaller channel spacings, and higher bit rates, however, the phenomenon of dispersion becomes a limiting factor.
- One embodiment of the present invention is an optical wavelength router that includes a beamsplitter, a first resonator, and a second resonator.
- the beamsplitter separates an input signal into a first beam and a second beam.
- the first resonator reflects the first beam and has a partially reflective front surface and a highly reflective back surface spaced a first optical thickness from the front surface.
- the second resonator reflects the second beam and has a partially reflective front surface and a highly reflective back surface spaced a second optical thickness from the front surface.
- the difference between the first optical thickness and the second optical thickness is approximately equal to one-eighth wavelength.
- an optical device comprises a first stage optical wavelength router and a second stage optical wavelength router.
- the first stage optical wavelength router receives an input wavelength division multiplexed signal and generates a first output signal comprising a first subset of wavelength channels from the input signal and a second output signal comprising a second subset of wavelength channels from the input signal.
- the first stage optical wavelength router is characterized by a chromatic dispersion profile having a first frequency offset.
- the second stage optical wavelength router receives the first output signal and generates a third output signal and a fourth output signal.
- the second stage optical wavelength router is characterized by the chromatic dispersion profile having a second frequency offset such that the difference between the first frequency offset and the second frequency offset comprises one-half of the period of the chromatic dispersion profile.
- the optical wavelength router performs a multiplexing and/or a demultiplexing function to generate output waveforms that have a flat-top passband, good isolation, and very low chromatic dispersion.
- FIGS. 1A and 1B illustrate one embodiment of an optical wavelength router according to the present invention
- FIG. 2 illustrates the optical wavelength router arranged in a tilted configuration
- FIG. 3 illustrates an example of the spectral response of the optical wavelength router
- FIG. 4A illustrates one embodiment of a resonator that may be used in the optical wavelength router
- FIG. 4B illustrates another embodiment of a resonator using an air-gap structure
- FIG. 5 illustrates the phase functions for the two arms of the optical wavelength router
- FIG. 6 illustrates the waveform, group delay, and dispersion of the optical wavelength router
- FIG. 7 illustrates a conceptual diagram of an interferometer
- FIG. 8 illustrates a block diagram of a Michelson interferometer with a resonator
- FIG. 9 illustrates the phase functions for the two arms of the interferometer illustrated in FIG. 8 ;
- FIG. 10 illustrates the waveform, group delay, and dispersion of the interferometer illustrated in FIG. 8 ;
- FIG. 11 illustrates another embodiment of the optical wavelength router according to the present invention.
- FIGS. 12A and 12B illustrate one embodiment of a Faraday rotator
- FIG. 13 illustrates yet another embodiment of the optical wavelength router according to the present invention.
- FIG. 14 illustrates a cascaded architecture of optical wavelength routers
- FIG. 15 illustrates an optical networking architecture using the optical wavelength routers
- FIGS. 16A and 16B illustrate dispersion profiles for alternative embodiments of an optical wavelength router according to the present invention
- FIG. 17 illustrates a dispersion profile for various stages of one embodiment of a cascaded architecture
- FIG. 18 illustrates a dispersion profile for various stages of another embodiment of a cascaded architecture
- FIG. 19 illustrates a dispersion profile for various stages of a further embodiment of a cascaded architecture.
- FIG. 1A illustrates one embodiment of an optical wavelength router 10 that includes a beamsplitter 20 and resonators 30 a and 30 b .
- Resonators 30 a and 30 b are collectively referred to as resonators 30 .
- router 10 performs a multiplexing function and/or a demultiplexing function and reduces the dispersion generally associated with performing these functions.
- router 10 When performing the multiplexing function, router 10 combines two streams of optical signals into a single, more densely spaced signal stream.
- the multiplexing function of router 10 is described in greater detail below.
- router 10 separates a dense signal stream into two, wider spaced streams.
- beamsplitter 20 of router 10 receives an input signal 12 at an input port and splits signal 12 into a first beam 14 propagating along a first optical path and a second beam 16 propagating along a second optical path.
- the beams 14 and 16 propagating along each path are reflected back by the appropriate resonators 30 a and 30 b .
- the two reflected beams combine and interfere at the beamsplitter 20 to form a first output signal 22 and a second output signal 24 .
- Output signal 22 back-propagates toward the input and exits at an output port A.
- Output signal 24 emerges from an output port B.
- Input signal 12 comprises a WDM signal containing multiple optical channels to define an input spectral band.
- the outputs signals 22 and 24 emerging at output ports A and B contain two complementary subsets of the input spectral band such that, for example, output signal 22 comprises a WDM signal containing the even channels of the input spectral band and output signal 24 comprises a WDM signal containing the odd channels of the input spectral band. Therefore, alternating optical channels in the input spectral band are routed to each output port (e.g., even channels are routed to output port A, and odd channels are routed to output port B), as shown in the graph provided in FIG. 3 .
- Router 10 therefore performs a demultiplexing function. If desired, this router 10 can be extended in a cascaded architecture with multiple stages of optical routers 10 to progressively separate individual channels or groups of channels. A description of a cascaded architecture is detailed with respect to FIG. 14 .
- beamsplitter 20 is illustrated in FIG. 1A as a non-polarizing beamsplitter cube.
- the beam splitting takes place at a surface 40 , and the four outer surfaces of the beamsplitter 20 are coated with anti-reflection film.
- the beamsplitter 20 shown in FIG. 1A can either be polarization-based or non-polarizing.
- the beamsplitter 20 can be a non-polarizing or polarizing thin film beamsplitter, a birefringent beam displacer, a diffractive optical element, or an optical coupler.
- Resonator 30 comprises a cavity with a partially reflective front surface and a totally reflective back surface, such as, for example, an etalon.
- FIGS. 4A and 4B illustrate examples of resonators 30 that may be used in router 10 . It should be understood, however, that other types of resonators 30 may be used to achieve the unique features and functions of the present invention.
- FIG. 4A illustrates one embodiment of a single cavity Gires-Tournois resonator having two mirror surfaces 34 and 35 separated by intermediate material 32 .
- the surfaces 34 and 35 are parallel to each other.
- the front mirror 34 is partially reflective, while the back mirror 35 is highly reflective.
- the optical thickness, d, of a resonator 30 is defined as the physical thickness of the gap 32 multiplied by the refractive index of the intermediate material 32 .
- FIG. 4B illustrates another embodiment of a single cavity Gires-Tournois resonator having two mirror surfaces 34 and 35 parallel to each other and separated by an air gap 32 .
- the layers 31 and 33 are transparent.
- the front surface 36 of the first layer 31 can be coated with anti-reflection film.
- the surface 36 also has a wedge angle relative to the mirror surfaces 34 and 35 to further reduce the effect of residual reflections from the surface 36 .
- the optical thickness of the resonator here is the physical thickness of gap 32 multiplied by the refractive index of air. In general, the optical thickness of an object is equal to its physical thickness multiplied by the refractive index of the material forming the distance.
- the optical thicknesses of the resonators 30 a and 30 b are referred to as d1 and d2, respectively.
- the amplitude reflectivities of the front mirrors of the resonators 30 a and 30 b are referred to as r 1 and r 2 , respectively.
- the wavelength router 10 illustrated in FIG. 1A has two arms. The first arm traces the beam 14 propagation path toward resonator 30 a and the second arm traces the beam 16 propagation path toward resonator 30 b . For example, the first arm starts at the point of interception between the input beam 12 and surface 40 of beamsplitter 20 .
- the optical path length of the first arm is referred to as L 1 , and it is defined as the summation of the optical thicknesses of all the parts in this arm including the first resonator 30 a .
- the optical path length of the second arm, L 2 is defined similarly.
- the interferometer path length difference ⁇ L is defined as (L 2 ⁇ L 1 ).
- beamsplitter 20 splits input signal 12 into beams 14 and 16 . If the beamsplitter 20 is a polarization beamsplitter, beams 14 and 16 will have orthogonal polarizations. Beams 14 and 16 are directed onto resonators 30 a and 30 b , respectively. Each beam 14 and 16 striking the partially-reflective layer 34 of a resonator 30 is partially transmitted through the partially-reflective layer 34 into the resonator cavity 32 , and is then reflected by the reflective layer 35 through the partially-reflective layer 34 toward the beamsplitter 20 .
- each beam 14 and 16 is also reflected back by the partially-reflective layer 34 along its optical path toward the beamsplitter 20 without propagating through a resonator 30 .
- Each resonator 30 reflects substantially all of the incident optical power back regardless of wavelength, but the group delay of the reflected beams is strongly dependent on wavelength.
- output signal 22 comprises a first subset of the input spectral band, such as the even channels of input signal 12 .
- output signal 24 comprises a second subset of the input spectral band complementary to the first subset, such as the odd channels of input signal 12 .
- Output signal 22 emerges from router 10 at output port A while output signal 24 emerges from router 10 at output port B. Therefore, when performing the demultiplexing function, router 10 separates a dense signal 12 into two, wider spaced signals 22 and 24 . Router 10 achieves low dispersion in this endeavor using resonators 30 a and 30 b.
- FIG. 1B illustrates the operation of router 10 performing a multiplexing function.
- Input signals 50 and 52 contain complementary subsets of an output spectral band.
- Beamsplitter 20 splits each input signal 50 and 52 into beams 54 and 56 which are directed onto resonators 30 a and 30 b , respectively.
- Beam 54 contains components of both signal 50 and signal 52 .
- beam 56 contains components of both signal 50 and signal 52 .
- Each beam 54 and 56 striking the partially-reflective layer 34 of a resonator 30 is partially transmitted through the partially-reflective layer 34 into the resonator cavity 32 , and is then reflected by the reflective layer 35 through the partially-reflective layer 34 toward the beamsplitter 20 .
- each beam 54 and 56 is also reflected back by the partially-reflective layer 34 along its optical path toward the beamsplitter 20 without propagating through a resonator 30 .
- Each resonator 30 reflects substantially all of the incident optical power back regardless of wavelength, but the group delay of the reflected beams is strongly dependent on wavelength.
- Both of the reflected beams 54 and 56 from the resonators 30 a and 30 b back-propagate along their respective optical paths toward the beamsplitter 20 , where they are combined and interfere to produce output signal 58 .
- Output signal 58 generally defines an output spectral band comprising each of the complementary subsets of channels in input signals 50 and 52 . Therefore, when performing the multiplexing function, router 10 combines two streams of optical signals 50 and 52 into a single, more densely spaced signal stream 58 . Router 10 achieves low dispersion in this endeavor using resonators 30 a and 30 b.
- FIG. 2 illustrates the optical wavelength router 10 of FIG. 1A in a tilted configuration.
- resonator 30 a is arranged at a bias angle ⁇ a with respect to the normal of the optical path of beam 14 .
- Resonator 30 b is arranged at a bias angle ⁇ b with respect to the normal of the optical path of beam 16 .
- ⁇ a and ⁇ b are each set at an angle from 0.5 to 10 degrees to achieve an appropriate tilt configuration of resonators 30 .
- ⁇ a and ⁇ b are each set at approximately the same angle.
- each of beams 14 and 16 reflected by resonators 30 a and 30 b propagates toward beamsplitter 20 along an optical path that is offset from its original optical path toward resonators 30 a and 30 b .
- optical signals 22 and 24 emitted by router 10 are isolated from input signal 12 .
- the tilt configuration of resonators 30 a and 30 b is not limited to that illustrated in FIG. 2 . Rather, any tilt configuration of resonators 30 a and 30 b suitable to isolate output signals 22 and 24 from input signal 12 is contemplated.
- router 10 illustrated in FIG. 2 may also be operated in a multiplexing function, as described above with regard to FIG. 1B , while still achieving isolation of input and output signals and low dispersion.
- FIGS. 5 and 6 illustrate the performance characteristics of wavelength router 10 .
- This example demonstrates the construction of a low-dispersion, 50 GHz optical demultiplexer (i.e., the input channels are spaced 50 GHz apart, and the output channels are 100 GHz apart).
- the optical thickness d2 of resonator 30 b is selected so that resonator 30 b has a free spectral range (FSR) of approximately 50 GHz and the resonance frequencies are at f c +/ ⁇ 25 GHz.
- FSR free spectral range
- f c denotes the center frequencies of the WDM channels of input signal 12 that are spaced, for example, 50 GHz apart.
- the FSR of resonator 30 b here is defined as the period of the resonator's complex reflectivity.
- ⁇ .c is the center wavelength of any one of the input channels within the FSR of the particular resonator 30 ; and c is the speed of light in a vacuum.
- ⁇ .c is the center wavelength of the center input channels within the FSR of the particular resonator 30 .
- ⁇ .c 1545.32 nm
- c 2.99792458*10 8 M/sec
- d2 2.998307 mm
- d1 d2 ⁇ (1 ⁇ 4) .
- the center wavelength of the resonator 30 a is offset relative to the center wavelength of the resonator 30 b by approximately one half of the free spectral range of both the resonators. For example, if the free spectral range of both resonators is approximately 50 GHz, then the center wavelength of resonator 30 a is offset by approximately 25 GHz relative to the center wavelength of resonator 30 b . This causes the resonance frequencies of the resonator 30 a to match that of the anti-resonance frequencies of the resonator 30 b . As will be elaborated further below, this arrangement of the resonators' center wavelengths can significantly reduce chromatic dispersion in the device, while keeping a flat-top passband and good isolation.
- the back mirror reflectivities of the two resonators 30 are both set to be 100%.
- the front mirror reflectivities of the resonators 30 can be varied to adjust the passband, isolation, and dispersion of the interleaver waveform.
- the interferometer path length difference, ⁇ L is set to be approximately (1 ⁇ 2)*d2, which comes out to ⁇ L ⁇ 1.499 mm.
- wavelength router 10 is its low dispersion. This can be most readily understood by comparison to a conventional Michelson interferometer in which an incoming optical beam is split 50/50 between two optical paths (e.g., by a beamsplitter), as shown in FIG. 7 .
- the beam propagating along the first path experiences a phase shift, ⁇ 1(f).
- the second beam experiences a phase shift, ⁇ 2(f).
- f denotes the optical frequency, and that both the phase shift functions are frequency (or wavelength) dependent.
- Ea 2 cos [ ⁇ ( ⁇ 1 ⁇ 2)/2] exp [ ⁇ i ( ⁇ 1+ ⁇ 2)/2]
- Eb ⁇ 2 sin [ ⁇ ( ⁇ 1 ⁇ 2)/2] exp [ ⁇ i ( ⁇ 1+ ⁇ 2)/2]
- FIG. 8 shows an interferometer 100 in which an input signal 102 is split into two beams by a beamsplitter 110 .
- One beam propagates toward a mirror 120 and is reflected back by this mirror 120 toward the beamsplitter 110 .
- the other beam propagates toward a resonator 130 and is also reflected back toward the beamsplitter 110 .
- the resonator 130 is a cavity with a partially-reflective front mirror and a totally-reflective back mirror, as shown for example in FIGS. 3 and 4 .
- the resonator 130 reflects back substantially all of the incident optical power regardless of wavelength, but the group delay of the reflected light is strongly dependent on wavelength.
- the two reflected beams from the mirror 120 and from the resonator 130 interfere at the beamsplitter 110 and the resulting output is split into two output signals, one at output Ea, and the other in a different direction at output Eb.
- the two output signals contain complementary subsets of the input spectral band.
- the two output ports Ea and Eb divide the spectral space evenly with alternating optical channels being directed to each output port (i.e., odd optical channels 1, 3, 5, 7, etc. are directed to output port Ea, while even channels 2, 4, 6, etc. are directed to output port Eb).
- Such a device concept has been proposed by B. B. Dingle and M.
- FIG. 9 shows the corresponding phase functions of the two arms of the interferometer 100 .
- ⁇ 1 is the phase function of the resonator arm and ⁇ 2 is the phase function (i.e., a straight line) of the mirror arm.
- the phase difference shows a step-like behavior with a distance of ⁇ between successive flat regions. This explains why the waveform is the flat-topped shape shown in FIG. 10 .
- the sum of the phase functions has significant curvature and therefore the dispersion is high, as illustrated in FIG. 10 .
- FIG. 5 shows the two phase functions ⁇ 1 and ⁇ 2 of the two arms in wavelength router 10 .
- the “bending”, or nonlinear behavior, of the two phase functions are caused by the resonators 30 a and 30 b respectively. It can be seen that the bending direction of both the phase functions reverse themselves every 25 GHz. Since the resonators 30 a and 30 b have a center frequency difference of 25 GHz, the two phase functions ⁇ 1 and ⁇ 2 have opposite bending directions at any given frequency. The summation of the two phase functions cancel each other's non-linearity, therefore ( ⁇ 1+ ⁇ 2) has nearly linear characteristics as shown in FIG. 5 .
- router 10 that performs dispersion-compensation. This is done to give a quantitative example of router 10 .
- Other channel spacings e.g., ranging from 12.5 GHz to 100 GHz
- d1, d2, and ⁇ L can be implemented by changing d1, d2, and ⁇ L in the spirit described above.
- router 10 By varying the resonator reflectivities r 1 and r 2 , devices with a passband shape and dispersion different from those of FIG. 6 can also be obtained.
- a technical advantage of router 10 is that no matter what reflectivities r 1 and r 2 are chosen for resonators 30 a and 30 b , the waveform is approximately symmetric. This means that the waveform of one output signal has about the same shape as that of the other output signal. The two output waveforms are shifted from each other in wavelength, since they are complimentary to each other in wavelength space.
- wavelength router 10 performs a multiplexing and/or demultiplexing function with very low chromatic dispersion by employing a structure in which the phase difference function remains step-like, but the phase summation function becomes approximately linear with frequency. As a result, the waveform has a flat-top passband, good isolation, and dispersion is small.
- phase functions ⁇ 1 and ⁇ 2 have opposite bending characteristics, so their difference forms a step-like curve which gives rise to a flat-top waveform.
- the sum of the two functions approximates a straight line and thereby results in low dispersion.
- FIG. 11 illustrates another embodiment of an optical wavelength router 1100 .
- the input signal 12 initially passes through a beam displacer 1101 which comprises, for example, a birefringent element made from a material such as calcite, rutile, lithium niobate, YVO 4 -based crystals, and the like.
- Beam displacer 1101 splits the input signal 12 into two beams having orthogonal polarizations (e.g., along the X and Y directions, respectively).
- a polarization rotator 1102 e.g., a half-wave plate
- the beam pair then passes through a polarized beamsplitter (PBS) 1103 .
- PBS polarized beamsplitter
- the Faraday rotator 1105 may be a magneto-optic element such as a doped garnet crystal 1201 (e.g., YIG) bonded to a half-wave plate 1202 .
- the crystal 1201 rotates the input polarization by 45 degrees and the half-wave plate 1202 has its optical axis at 22.5 degrees.
- the Faraday rotator 1105 transmits light in the forward direction without changing its polarization, as shown in FIG.
- the Faraday rotator 1105 transmits the polarized input beam pair in the forward direction without changing their polarization, but rotates the polarization of the reflected beam pair from the opposite direction by 90 degrees.
- a zero-order beam displacer 1115 splits the beams into two pair of orthogonally-polarized beams.
- Various embodiments of a zero-order beam displacer 1115 are described in U.S. patent application Ser. No. 09/547,812, which is incorporated herein by reference.
- a first pair of beams having a common polarization passes through a delay element 1120 , such as a block of glass having a predetermined thickness, and is then reflected back by a resonator 1130 a .
- a second pair of beams having a polarization orthogonal to that of the first pair of beams is reflected back by a resonator 1130 b .
- Resonators 1130 a and 1130 b may comprise the same type of resonators as resonators 30 a and 30 b described above.
- the resonators 1130 a and 1130 b reflect back substantially all of the incident optical power regardless of wavelength, but the group delay of the reflected light is strongly dependent on wavelength.
- the two pairs of reflected beams from the resonators 1130 a - b are recombined by back-propagation through the beam displacer 1115 and interfere to produce one beam pair again. Due to the birefringence of the beam displacer 1115 , a difference in the optical path lengths between the two beam pairs is generated. As a result, the polarization state of the back-propagating beam pair exiting the beam displacer 1115 is a function of optical wavelength. In other words, this back-propagating beam pair has mixed polarization as a function of the optical wavelengths carried by the beams.
- the second PBS 1107 splits this beam pair into two orthogonal polarizations.
- One polarization component of each beam is reflected by the second PBS 1107 and is directed toward output port A.
- one of the beams reflected by the second PBS 1107 passes through a polarization rotator 1108 (e.g., a half-wave plate), which rotates the beam polarization by 90 degrees so that the beam pair entering the birefringent element 1109 are orthogonally polarized.
- the birefringent element 1109 associated with output port A combines these orthogonally-polarized beams to produce an output signal 22 containing a predetermined subset of the input spectral band.
- the other polarization component of each beam is transmitted through the second PBS 1107 toward the Faraday rotator 1105 along the same optical paths as the polarized input beams, but in the opposite direction.
- the polarization of the beam pair from the second PBS 1107 is rotated by 90 degrees by the Faraday rotator 1105 , as previously discussed, so that they will be separated from the polarized input beams and reflected by the first PBS 1103 toward output port B.
- One of the beams reflected by the first PBS 1103 passes through a polarization rotator 1118 (e.g., a half-wave plate), which rotates the beam polarization by 90 degrees so that the beam pair entering the birefringent element 1119 are orthogonally polarized.
- the birefringent element 1119 associated with output port B combines these orthogonally-polarized beams to produce an output signal 24 containing a complementary subset of the input spectral beam.
- FIG. 13 illustrates yet another embodiment of an optical wavelength router 1300 according to the present invention.
- a portion of router 1300 is similar to that of router 1100 . Those elements of router 1300 that differ from those of router 1100 will be described in further detail.
- the beam pair is horizontally polarized along the X axis.
- a half-wave plate 1301 with its optical axis at 22.5 degrees from the X axis rotates the polarization of the beam pair by 45 degrees.
- a third PBS 1305 splits both beams into two different paths. The horizontally polarized components of the beam pair are transmitted through the third PBS 1305 and are reflected by the resonator 1130 b , as previously described.
- the vertically polarized components of the beam pair are reflected by the third PBS 1305 . They pass through the delay element 1120 and are reflected back by resonator 1130 a .
- the remainder of this embodiment operates in a manner similar to the embodiment shown in FIG. 11 .
- one or more waveplates 1303 with optical axes at 45 degrees to the X axis can be inserted between the second PBS 1107 and the third PBS 1305 to allow fine tuning (e.g., by angle) of the interferometer's path length.
- each of birefringent elements 1109 and 1119 receives an input signal and splits each respective input signal into beam pairs having orthogonal polarizations.
- Polarization rotator 1108 rotates one of the beam polarizations of a first beam pair so that both components of the first beam pair have the same polarization.
- Polarization rotator 1118 rotates one of the beam polarizations of a second beam pair so that both components of the second beam pair have the same polarization.
- the polarization of the second beam pair may or may not be the same as that of the first beam pair.
- PBS 1103 directs the second beam pair toward Faraday rotator 1105 .
- routers 1100 and 1300 When routers 1100 and 1300 perform a multiplexing function, the position of rotator 1105 is reversed to the position of rotator 1105 when routers 1100 and 1300 are performing the demultiplexing function described above with regard to FIGS. 11-13 .
- the first beam pair and the second beam pair interfere and combine at PBS 1107 to produce one beam pair.
- zero-order beam displacer 1115 of wavelength router 1100 splits the beams into two pair of orthogonally-polarized beams.
- One pair of orthogonally-polarized beams passes through delay element 1120 and is then reflected back by a resonator 1130 a .
- the other beam pair is reflected back by a resonator 1130 b .
- the resonators 1130 a and 1130 b reflect substantially all of the incident optical power back regardless of wavelength, but the group delay of the reflected light is strongly dependent on wavelength.
- the two pairs of reflected beams from the resonators 1130 a - b are recombined by back-propagation through the beam displacer 1115 and interfere to produce one beam pair again. Due to the birefringence of the beam displacer 1115 , a difference in the optical path lengths between the two beam pairs is generated. As a result, the polarization state of the back-propagating beam pair exiting the beam displacer 1115 is a function of optical wavelength. In other words, this back-propagating beam pair has mixed polarization as a function of the optical wavelengths carried by the beams.
- the beam pair after passing through PBS 1107 , the beam pair is horizontally polarized along the X axis.
- Half-wave plate 1303 with its optical axis at 22.5 degrees from the X axis rotates the polarization of the beam pair by 45 degrees.
- PBS 1305 splits both beams into two different paths.
- the horizontally polarized components of the beam pair are transmitted through PBS 1305 and are reflected by the resonator 1130 b , as previously described.
- the vertically polarized components of the beam pair are reflected by PBS 1305 and pass through the delay element 1120 after which they are reflected back by resonator 1130 a .
- the two pairs of reflected beams from the resonators 1130 a - b are recombined by back-propagation through the PBS 1305 and interfere to produce one beam pair again.
- one or more waveplates 1301 with optical axes at 45 degrees to the X axis can be inserted between the second PBS 1107 and the third PBS 1305 to allow fine tuning (e.g., by angle) of the interferometer's path length.
- PBS 1107 , rotator 1105 and PBS 1103 direct the back-propagating beam pair to birefringent element 1101 .
- the polarization of one component of the beam pair is rotated by ninety degrees by polarization rotator 1102 so that the beam pair entering the birefringent element 1101 is orthogonally polarized.
- Birefringent element 1101 combines these orthogonally polarized beams to produce a multiplexed output signal.
- routers 1100 and 1300 comprise alternative embodiments of router 10 , but each of routers 10 , 1100 , and 1300 performs demultiplexing and/or multiplexing functions while achieving low chromatic dispersion.
- FIG. 14 illustrates a cascaded architecture 1400 of optical filters.
- a first stage of architecture 1400 may include an optical filter 1402 .
- a second stage of architecture 1400 may include optical filters 1410 a and 1410 b , which are collectively referred to as optical filters 1410 .
- Third stage of architecture 1400 may include optical filters 1420 a , 1420 b , 1420 c , and 1420 d , which are collectively referred to as optical filters 1420 .
- Optical filters 1402 , 1410 , and 1420 may comprise any combination and arrangement of optical filters that employ any suitable conventional optical filtering technology (e.g., fiber bragg gratings, thin film filters, arrayed waveguide grating, etc.) and optical wavelength routers 10 , 1100 , and 1300 described above.
- suitable conventional optical filtering technology e.g., fiber bragg gratings, thin film filters, arrayed waveguide grating, etc.
- optical wavelength routers 10 , 1100 , and 1300 described above.
- filter 1402 comprises a 50 GHz optical router 10 that receives a 50 GHz spaced dense wavelength division multiplexed (DWDM) signal 1405 and generates an odd-channel 100 GHz spacing DWDM signal 1415 and an even channel 100 GHz spacing signal 1417 .
- Two 100 GHz filters 1410 a and 1410 b are used to produce a 200 GHz spaced signal 1431 carrying wavelengths ⁇ 1 and ⁇ 5 , a signal 1429 carrying wavelengths ⁇ 3 and ⁇ 7 , a signal 1427 carrying wavelengths ⁇ 2 and ⁇ 6 , and a signal 1425 carrying wavelengths ⁇ 4 and ⁇ 8 .
- DWDM dense wavelength division multiplexed
- a third stage of filters 1420 a - d are used to produce the individual channels ⁇ 1 through ⁇ 8 on outputs 1441 , 1449 , 1445 , 1453 , 1443 , 1451 , 1447 , and 1455 respectively.
- Signals 1415 , 1417 , 1425 , 1427 , 1429 , and 1431 may be referred to as intermediate input signals and/or intermediate output signals with respect to a particular filter 1402 , 1410 , or 1420 .
- the device significantly reduces chromatic dispersion while keeping a flat-top passband for each channel and good isolation among channels.
- FIG. 14 illustrates architecture 1400 having three stages of filters to demultiplex a DWDM signal 1405 having eight wavelength channels, it is contemplated that architecture 1400 may have any suitable number of stages to demultiplex a DWDM signal 1405 having any suitable number of wavelength channels. Moreover, FIG. 14 is detailed with respect to demultiplexing a 50 GHz spaced DWDM signal 1405 for illustrative purposes only. It is contemplated that a DWDM signal 1405 having any suitable channel spacing (12.5 GHz, 50 GHz, 100 GHz, 200 GHz, etc.) may be processed by the architecture 1400 of filters. Additionally, although the description of architecture 1400 is detailed with respect to a demultiplexing function, it should be understood that it can also perform a multiplexing function upon individual wavelength channels to produce one or more DWDM signals while achieving low chromatic dispersion.
- FIG. 15 illustrates one embodiment of an optical networking architecture 1500 that includes an optical network 1505 coupled to a demultiplexer network 1510 , filters 1550 , switch fabrics 1560 , regulators 1570 , filters 1580 , and a multiplexer network 1530 .
- optical wavelength routers 10 , 1100 , and/or 1300 may be incorporated into architecture 1500 , such as in demultiplexer network 1510 and/or multiplexer network 1530 , to compensate for chromatic dispersion.
- architecture 1500 may be configured differently and/or may include additional or fewer components without departing from the scope of the present invention.
- Optical network 1505 comprises any combination and arrangement of routers, bridges, hubs, gateways, switches, multiplexers, demultiplexers, transmitters, amplifiers, receivers, couplers, isolators, circulators, filters, detectors, wavelength converters, add/drop devices, or any other appropriate optical networking components.
- Optical network 1505 may include portions of a long-haul network, a metropolitan network, and/or a local/access network.
- Demultiplexer network 1510 and multiplexer network 1530 each comprise an appropriate arrangement of filters.
- demultiplexer network 1510 comprises filters 1512 , 1514 , 1516 , 1518 , and 1520 .
- filters 1512 - 1520 may comprise a wavelength router 10 , 1100 , and/or 1300 to perform a demultiplexing function while compensating for chromatic dispersion.
- multiplexer network 1530 may comprise filters 1532 , 1534 , 1536 , 1538 , and 1540 .
- filters 1532 - 1540 may comprise a wavelength router 10 , 1100 , and/or 1300 to perform a multiplexing function while compensating for chromatic dispersion.
- Filters 1550 and 1580 comprise gratings, Bragg gratings, Fiber gratings, Fiber Bragg gratings, Fabry-Perot filters, Thin-Film filters, interferometers, arrayed waveguide gratings, tunable filters, or any other optical device that process and differentiate among optical signals based upon wavelength.
- Switch fabrics 1560 comprise switches and/or routers.
- switch fabrics 1560 comprise add/drop switch arrays.
- Various embodiments of an add/drop switch array are disclosed in U.S. patent application Ser. No. 09/273,920, which is incorporated herein by reference.
- Regulators 1570 comprise any suitable device that adjustably regulate the optical power level of an optical channel.
- demultiplexer network 1510 receives input signal 12 from network 1505 .
- Demultiplexer network 1510 and filters 1550 separate input signal 12 into an array of spatially separated wavelength channels. This is generally done by progressively demultiplexing input signal 12 into intermediate signals, such as, for example, intermediate signals 1522 a - b , 1524 a - b , 1526 , 1528 a - b , and 1529 a - b which may be referred to as intermediate input signals and/or intermediate output signals with respect to a particular filter 1512 , 1514 , 1516 , 1518 , and 1520 .
- each spatially separated wavelength channel generally has a flat-top passband, good isolation from other channels, and low chromatic dispersion.
- Switch fabrics 1560 process the spatially separated channels to perform a switching and/or routing function.
- a switch fabric 1560 may comprise an add/drop switch array that selectively routes channels from the input ports to its drop ports; substitutes channels from the add ports in place of the dropped channels; and routes the remaining input channels and the added channels to the output ports of the add/drop switch array.
- the array of output channels from the switch fabrics 1550 pass through regulators 1570 which adjustably regulate the optical power level of each channel.
- a selected subset of the channels associated with input signal 12 pass directly from demultiplexer network 1510 to multiplexer network 1530 in “express lanes.”
- a second array of filters 1580 and a multiplexing network 1530 combine the output channels so that they can be transmitted as a DWDM output signal 1590 .
- output signal 1590 This is generally done by progressively multiplexing into output signal 1590 intermediate signals, such as, for example, intermediate signals 1542 a - b , 1544 a - b , 1546 a - b , 1548 , and 1549 a - b which may be referred to as intermediate input signals and/or intermediate output signals with respect to a particular filter 1532 , 1534 , 1536 , 1538 , and 1540 .
- the wavelength channels comprising output signal 1590 generally have low chromatic dispersion.
- FIGS. 16A and 16B illustrate the dispersion profiles of modified embodiments of wavelength router 10 .
- the optical thickness d2 of resonator 30 b is selected so that resonator 30 b has a free spectral range (FSR) of approximately 50 GHz and the resonance frequencies are at f c ⁇ 6.25 GHz.
- FSR free spectral range
- f c denotes the center frequencies of the WDM channels of input signal 12 that are spaced, for example, 50 GHz apart.
- the FSR of resonator 30 b here is defined as the period of the resonator's complex reflectivity.
- ⁇ c is the center wavelength of any one of the input channels within the FSR of the particular resonator 30 ; and c is the speed of light in a vacuum.
- ⁇ .c is the center wavelength of the center input channel within the FSR of the particular resonator 30 .
- ⁇ .c 1545.32 nm
- c 2.99792458*10 8 m/sec
- d2 2.998017 mm
- each period of the chromatic dispersion profile has a positive slope for a first range of frequencies and a negative slope for a second range of frequencies.
- the second modified embodiment of the router 10 can be constructed by exchanging the optical thicknesses of resonators 30 a and 30 b .
- each period of the chromatic dispersion profile has a negative slope for a first range of frequencies and a positive slope for a second range of frequencies. Therefore, by exchanging the optical thicknesses of resonators 30 a and 30 b from router 1600 to router 1610 , the chromatic dispersion profile is inverted about the center frequency along the x-axis and inverted about the zero dispersion measurement about the y-axis.
- the center wavelength of the resonator 30 a is offset relative to the center wavelength of the resonator 30 b by approximately one-quarter of the free spectral range of both the resonators. For example, if the free spectral range of both resonators is approximately 50 GHz, then the center wavelength of resonator 30 a is offset by approximately 12.5 GHz relative to the center wavelength of resonator 30 b . As will be elaborated further below, this arrangement of the resonators' center wavelengths reduce chromatic dispersion in a multi-stage optical wavelength router configuration, while keeping a flat-top passband and good isolation.
- the back mirror reflectivities of the two resonators 30 are both set to be 100%.
- the front mirror reflectivities of the resonators 30 can be varied to adjust the passband, isolation, and dispersion of the interleaver waveform.
- the interferometer path length difference, ⁇ L is set to be approximately (1 ⁇ 2)*d2, which comes out to ⁇ L ⁇ 1.499 mm. Note that the exact ⁇ L values for routers 1600 and 1610 can differ by a small amount that is a fraction of a wavelength.
- the cascaded architecture 1400 of optical filters may further include an arrangement of routers 10 , 100 , 1100 , 1300 , 1600 , and 1610 to yield a reduction in chromatic dispersion for the individual wavelength channels, ⁇ 1 through ⁇ 8 .
- cascaded architecture 1400 is described with reference to a two-stage configuration operating as a demultiplexer, it should be understood that the arrangement of routers 10 , 100 , 1100 , 1300 , 1600 , and 1610 in cascaded architecture 1400 can yield a reduction in chromatic dispersion for individual wavelength channels ⁇ 1 through ⁇ 8 for a configuration having any number of stages greater than one when operating as a demultiplexer or a multiplexer.
- a first stage of architecture 1400 includes a router 10 characterized by a chromatic dispersion profile having a first frequency offset and a second stage of architecture 1400 includes at least one router 10 characterized by a chromatic dispersion profile having a second frequency offset.
- the chromatic dispersion profile of each of the first stage, second stage, and combined stages is illustrated in greater detail with reference to FIG. 17 .
- spectral curve 1710 corresponds to the chromatic dispersion profile of the first stage router 10 with a first frequency offset
- spectral curve 1712 corresponds to the chromatic dispersion profile of the second stage router 10 with a second frequency offset
- spectral curve 1714 corresponds to the chromatic dispersion profile of the combined first and second stage routers 10 .
- spectral curves 1710 and 1712 each approach a sinusoidal curve as the reflectivities r 1 and r 2 of resonators 30 a and 30 b , respectively, become substantially the same.
- the relative center frequency shift between the two stages is approximately one-half of the period of the chromatic dispersion profile.
- the first and second frequency offsets may be achieved by a number of different techniques, such as, for example, (1) by changing the temperature in the cavity of any given resonator 30 to offset the center frequency of that resonator 30 by a predetermined amount; (2) by inserting and adjusting the angle of a transparent plate along the optical path within the cavity of any given resonator 30 to offset the center frequency of that resonator 30 by a predetermined amount; and (3) by changing the air pressure in the cavity of any given resonator 30 to offset the center frequency of that resonator 30 by a predetermined amount.
- a first stage of architecture 1400 includes a router 100 characterized by a chromatic dispersion profile having a first slope at the center frequency of any particular wavelength channel
- a second stage of architecture 1400 includes at least one router 10 characterized by a chromatic dispersion profile having a second slope at the center frequency of the particular wavelength channel that is substantially opposite to the first slope.
- the chromatic dispersion profile of each of the first stage, second stage, and combined stages is illustrated in greater detail with reference to FIG. 18 .
- the slope of the chromatic dispersion profile of the second stage optical wavelength router 10 is substantially opposite to the slope of the chromatic dispersion profile of the first stage optical wavelength router 10 over a range of frequencies surrounding the center frequency of any particular wavelength channel.
- the chromatic dispersion profile of the second stage router 100 substantially compensates the chromatic dispersion profile of the first stage router 10 over a range of frequencies surrounding the center frequency of any particular wavelength channel.
- this embodiment of architecture 1400 is described with reference to the first stage router 100 and the second stage router 10 , it should be understood that architecture 1400 may also be arranged having a first stage router 10 and a second stage router 100 to accomplish chromatic dispersion reduction.
- a first stage of architecture 1400 includes a router 1600 and the second stage includes at least one router 1610 .
- the chromatic dispersion profile of each of the first stage, second stage, and combined stages is illustrated in greater detail with reference to FIG. 19 .
- spectral curve 1910 corresponds to the chromatic dispersion profile of the first stage router 1600 having a first slope over a first range of frequencies of a particular wavelength channel and a second slope over a second range of frequencies of the particular wavelength channel. The second slope is substantially opposite to the first slope.
- Spectral curve 1912 corresponds to the chromatic dispersion profile of the second stage router 1610 having the second slope over the first range of frequencies of the particular wavelength channel and the first slope over the second range of frequencies of the particular wavelength channel.
- Spectral curve 1914 corresponds to the chromatic dispersion profile of the combined first and second stage routers 1600 and 1610 .
- the chromatic dispersion profile associated with the second stage router 1610 substantially compensates the chromatic dispersion profile associated with the first stage router 1600 over the first and second range of frequencies of the particular wavelength channel, yielding the chromatic dispersion profile illustrated by spectral curve 1914 .
- architecture 1400 may also be arranged having a first stage router 1610 and a second stage router 1600 to accomplish chromatic dispersion reduction.
Abstract
Description
- This application is a continuation-in-part of U.S. application Ser. No. 09/798,659, filed Mar. 1, 2001, by Gan Zhou and Kuang-Yi Wu.
- The present invention relates generally to the field of optical communications systems. More specifically, the present invention relates to a dispersion compensated optical wavelength router and cascaded architectures.
- Wavelength division multiplexing is a commonly used technique that allows the transport of multiple optical signals, each at a slightly different wavelength, over an optical fiber. The ability to carry multiple signals on a single fiber allows that fiber to carry a tremendous amount of traffic, including data, voice, and digital video signals. For example, the International Telecommunications Union (ITU) Draft Recommendation G.mcs proposes a frequency grid which specifies various channel spacings including 100 GHz and 200 GHz. It would be advantageous to obtain smaller channel spacings. As transmission systems evolve to longer distances, smaller channel spacings, and higher bit rates, however, the phenomenon of dispersion becomes a limiting factor.
- One embodiment of the present invention is an optical wavelength router that includes a beamsplitter, a first resonator, and a second resonator. The beamsplitter separates an input signal into a first beam and a second beam. The first resonator reflects the first beam and has a partially reflective front surface and a highly reflective back surface spaced a first optical thickness from the front surface. The second resonator reflects the second beam and has a partially reflective front surface and a highly reflective back surface spaced a second optical thickness from the front surface. The difference between the first optical thickness and the second optical thickness is approximately equal to one-eighth wavelength.
- In another embodiment of the present invention, an optical device comprises a first stage optical wavelength router and a second stage optical wavelength router. The first stage optical wavelength router receives an input wavelength division multiplexed signal and generates a first output signal comprising a first subset of wavelength channels from the input signal and a second output signal comprising a second subset of wavelength channels from the input signal. The first stage optical wavelength router is characterized by a chromatic dispersion profile having a first frequency offset. The second stage optical wavelength router receives the first output signal and generates a third output signal and a fourth output signal. The second stage optical wavelength router is characterized by the chromatic dispersion profile having a second frequency offset such that the difference between the first frequency offset and the second frequency offset comprises one-half of the period of the chromatic dispersion profile.
- The following technical advantages may be achieved by some, none, or all of the embodiments of the present invention. The optical wavelength router performs a multiplexing and/or a demultiplexing function to generate output waveforms that have a flat-top passband, good isolation, and very low chromatic dispersion. These and other advantages, features, and objects of the present invention will be more readily understood in view of the following detailed description and the drawings.
- The present invention can be more readily understood in conjunction with the accompanying drawings, in which:
-
FIGS. 1A and 1B illustrate one embodiment of an optical wavelength router according to the present invention; -
FIG. 2 illustrates the optical wavelength router arranged in a tilted configuration; -
FIG. 3 illustrates an example of the spectral response of the optical wavelength router; -
FIG. 4A illustrates one embodiment of a resonator that may be used in the optical wavelength router; -
FIG. 4B illustrates another embodiment of a resonator using an air-gap structure; -
FIG. 5 illustrates the phase functions for the two arms of the optical wavelength router; -
FIG. 6 illustrates the waveform, group delay, and dispersion of the optical wavelength router; -
FIG. 7 illustrates a conceptual diagram of an interferometer; -
FIG. 8 illustrates a block diagram of a Michelson interferometer with a resonator; -
FIG. 9 illustrates the phase functions for the two arms of the interferometer illustrated inFIG. 8 ; -
FIG. 10 illustrates the waveform, group delay, and dispersion of the interferometer illustrated inFIG. 8 ; -
FIG. 11 illustrates another embodiment of the optical wavelength router according to the present invention; -
FIGS. 12A and 12B illustrate one embodiment of a Faraday rotator; -
FIG. 13 illustrates yet another embodiment of the optical wavelength router according to the present invention; -
FIG. 14 illustrates a cascaded architecture of optical wavelength routers; -
FIG. 15 illustrates an optical networking architecture using the optical wavelength routers; -
FIGS. 16A and 16B illustrate dispersion profiles for alternative embodiments of an optical wavelength router according to the present invention; -
FIG. 17 illustrates a dispersion profile for various stages of one embodiment of a cascaded architecture; -
FIG. 18 illustrates a dispersion profile for various stages of another embodiment of a cascaded architecture; and -
FIG. 19 illustrates a dispersion profile for various stages of a further embodiment of a cascaded architecture. -
FIG. 1A illustrates one embodiment of anoptical wavelength router 10 that includes abeamsplitter 20 andresonators Resonators resonators 30. In general,router 10 performs a multiplexing function and/or a demultiplexing function and reduces the dispersion generally associated with performing these functions. When performing the multiplexing function,router 10 combines two streams of optical signals into a single, more densely spaced signal stream. The multiplexing function ofrouter 10 is described in greater detail below. When performing the demultiplexing function,router 10 separates a dense signal stream into two, wider spaced streams. For example,beamsplitter 20 ofrouter 10 receives aninput signal 12 at an input port and splitssignal 12 into afirst beam 14 propagating along a first optical path and asecond beam 16 propagating along a second optical path. Thebeams appropriate resonators beamsplitter 20 to form afirst output signal 22 and asecond output signal 24.Output signal 22 back-propagates toward the input and exits at an output portA. Output signal 24 emerges from an output port B. -
Input signal 12 comprises a WDM signal containing multiple optical channels to define an input spectral band. The outputs signals 22 and 24 emerging at output ports A and B contain two complementary subsets of the input spectral band such that, for example,output signal 22 comprises a WDM signal containing the even channels of the input spectral band andoutput signal 24 comprises a WDM signal containing the odd channels of the input spectral band. Therefore, alternating optical channels in the input spectral band are routed to each output port (e.g., even channels are routed to output port A, and odd channels are routed to output port B), as shown in the graph provided inFIG. 3 .Router 10 therefore performs a demultiplexing function. If desired, thisrouter 10 can be extended in a cascaded architecture with multiple stages ofoptical routers 10 to progressively separate individual channels or groups of channels. A description of a cascaded architecture is detailed with respect toFIG. 14 . - For simplicity of discussion,
beamsplitter 20 is illustrated inFIG. 1A as a non-polarizing beamsplitter cube. The beam splitting takes place at asurface 40, and the four outer surfaces of thebeamsplitter 20 are coated with anti-reflection film. It should be noted that generally thebeamsplitter 20 shown inFIG. 1A can either be polarization-based or non-polarizing. For example, thebeamsplitter 20 can be a non-polarizing or polarizing thin film beamsplitter, a birefringent beam displacer, a diffractive optical element, or an optical coupler. -
Resonator 30 comprises a cavity with a partially reflective front surface and a totally reflective back surface, such as, for example, an etalon.FIGS. 4A and 4B illustrate examples ofresonators 30 that may be used inrouter 10. It should be understood, however, that other types ofresonators 30 may be used to achieve the unique features and functions of the present invention. -
FIG. 4A illustrates one embodiment of a single cavity Gires-Tournois resonator having twomirror surfaces intermediate material 32. Thesurfaces front mirror 34 is partially reflective, while theback mirror 35 is highly reflective. Consistent with standard terminology in the art, the optical thickness, d, of aresonator 30 is defined as the physical thickness of thegap 32 multiplied by the refractive index of theintermediate material 32. -
FIG. 4B illustrates another embodiment of a single cavity Gires-Tournois resonator having twomirror surfaces air gap 32. Thelayers front surface 36 of thefirst layer 31 can be coated with anti-reflection film. Typically, thesurface 36 also has a wedge angle relative to the mirror surfaces 34 and 35 to further reduce the effect of residual reflections from thesurface 36. The optical thickness of the resonator here is the physical thickness ofgap 32 multiplied by the refractive index of air. In general, the optical thickness of an object is equal to its physical thickness multiplied by the refractive index of the material forming the distance. - Returning to
FIG. 1A , the optical thicknesses of theresonators resonators wavelength router 10 illustrated inFIG. 1A has two arms. The first arm traces thebeam 14 propagation path towardresonator 30 a and the second arm traces thebeam 16 propagation path towardresonator 30 b. For example, the first arm starts at the point of interception between theinput beam 12 andsurface 40 ofbeamsplitter 20. It includes the upper-left half of thebeamsplitter 20, followed by the gap between thebeamsplitter 20 andfirst resonator 30 a, then theresonator 30 a. The optical path length of the first arm is referred to as L1, and it is defined as the summation of the optical thicknesses of all the parts in this arm including thefirst resonator 30 a. The optical path length of the second arm, L2, is defined similarly. The interferometer path length difference ΔL is defined as (L2−L1). - In operation of
router 10 performing a demultiplexing function,beamsplitter 20 splitsinput signal 12 intobeams beamsplitter 20 is a polarization beamsplitter, beams 14 and 16 will have orthogonal polarizations.Beams resonators beam reflective layer 34 of aresonator 30 is partially transmitted through the partially-reflective layer 34 into theresonator cavity 32, and is then reflected by thereflective layer 35 through the partially-reflective layer 34 toward thebeamsplitter 20. A portion of the eachbeam reflective layer 34 along its optical path toward thebeamsplitter 20 without propagating through aresonator 30. Eachresonator 30 reflects substantially all of the incident optical power back regardless of wavelength, but the group delay of the reflected beams is strongly dependent on wavelength. - Both of the reflected beams from the
resonators beamsplitter 20, where they are combined and interfere to produceoutput signals output signal 22 comprises a first subset of the input spectral band, such as the even channels ofinput signal 12. In this example,output signal 24 comprises a second subset of the input spectral band complementary to the first subset, such as the odd channels ofinput signal 12.Output signal 22 emerges fromrouter 10 at output port A whileoutput signal 24 emerges fromrouter 10 at output port B. Therefore, when performing the demultiplexing function,router 10 separates adense signal 12 into two, wider spacedsignals Router 10 achieves low dispersion in thisendeavor using resonators -
FIG. 1B illustrates the operation ofrouter 10 performing a multiplexing function. Input signals 50 and 52 contain complementary subsets of an output spectral band.Beamsplitter 20 splits eachinput signal beams resonators Beam 54 contains components of bothsignal 50 andsignal 52. Similarly,beam 56 contains components of bothsignal 50 andsignal 52. Eachbeam reflective layer 34 of aresonator 30 is partially transmitted through the partially-reflective layer 34 into theresonator cavity 32, and is then reflected by thereflective layer 35 through the partially-reflective layer 34 toward thebeamsplitter 20. A portion of eachbeam reflective layer 34 along its optical path toward thebeamsplitter 20 without propagating through aresonator 30. Eachresonator 30 reflects substantially all of the incident optical power back regardless of wavelength, but the group delay of the reflected beams is strongly dependent on wavelength. - Both of the reflected beams 54 and 56 from the
resonators beamsplitter 20, where they are combined and interfere to produceoutput signal 58.Output signal 58 generally defines an output spectral band comprising each of the complementary subsets of channels in input signals 50 and 52. Therefore, when performing the multiplexing function,router 10 combines two streams ofoptical signals signal stream 58.Router 10 achieves low dispersion in thisendeavor using resonators -
FIG. 2 illustrates theoptical wavelength router 10 ofFIG. 1A in a tilted configuration. In particular,resonator 30 a is arranged at a bias angle Θa with respect to the normal of the optical path ofbeam 14.Resonator 30 b is arranged at a bias angle Θb with respect to the normal of the optical path ofbeam 16. In general, Θa and Θb are each set at an angle from 0.5 to 10 degrees to achieve an appropriate tilt configuration ofresonators 30. In a particular embodiment, Θa and Θb are each set at approximately the same angle. In operation, each ofbeams resonators beamsplitter 20 along an optical path that is offset from its original optical path towardresonators optical signals router 10 are isolated frominput signal 12. It should be understood that the tilt configuration ofresonators FIG. 2 . Rather, any tilt configuration ofresonators output signals input signal 12 is contemplated. Moreover,router 10 illustrated inFIG. 2 may also be operated in a multiplexing function, as described above with regard toFIG. 1B , while still achieving isolation of input and output signals and low dispersion. -
FIGS. 5 and 6 illustrate the performance characteristics ofwavelength router 10. This example demonstrates the construction of a low-dispersion, 50 GHz optical demultiplexer (i.e., the input channels are spaced 50 GHz apart, and the output channels are 100 GHz apart). First, the optical thickness d2 ofresonator 30 b is selected so thatresonator 30 b has a free spectral range (FSR) of approximately 50 GHz and the resonance frequencies are at fc+/−25 GHz. Here fc denotes the center frequencies of the WDM channels ofinput signal 12 that are spaced, for example, 50 GHz apart. The FSR ofresonator 30 b here is defined as the period of the resonator's complex reflectivity. - The above conditions are achieved by following the equation:
d2=(m/2)*λc+(¼).*λc
and picking the integer m such that the equation:
d2=c/(2*FSR)
is satisfied to best approximation. Here λ.c is the center wavelength of any one of the input channels within the FSR of theparticular resonator 30; and c is the speed of light in a vacuum. In a particular embodiment, λ.c is the center wavelength of the center input channels within the FSR of theparticular resonator 30. In an example for a c-band 50GHz router 10, we can use λ.c=1545.32 nm, c=2.99792458*108 M/sec, and therefore d2=2.998307 mm. The optical thickness d1 ofresonator 30 a is set such that d1=d2+/−(¼).*λc. In the example where d1=d2−(¼).*λc, d1=2.997921 mm. - By following the procedure above, the center wavelength of the
resonator 30 a is offset relative to the center wavelength of theresonator 30 b by approximately one half of the free spectral range of both the resonators. For example, if the free spectral range of both resonators is approximately 50 GHz, then the center wavelength ofresonator 30 a is offset by approximately 25 GHz relative to the center wavelength ofresonator 30 b. This causes the resonance frequencies of theresonator 30 a to match that of the anti-resonance frequencies of theresonator 30 b. As will be elaborated further below, this arrangement of the resonators' center wavelengths can significantly reduce chromatic dispersion in the device, while keeping a flat-top passband and good isolation. - The back mirror reflectivities of the two
resonators 30 are both set to be 100%. The front mirror reflectivities of theresonators 30 can be varied to adjust the passband, isolation, and dispersion of the interleaver waveform. In the example ofFIG. 5 andFIG. 6 the front mirror reflectivities are set at r2=0.2 (i.e., 4% reflectivity) and r1=0.12 (i.e., 1.44% reflectivity). Finally, the interferometer path length difference, ΔL, is set to be approximately (½)*d2, which comes out to ΔL≈1.499 mm. - A technical advantage of
wavelength router 10 is its low dispersion. This can be most readily understood by comparison to a conventional Michelson interferometer in which an incoming optical beam is split 50/50 between two optical paths (e.g., by a beamsplitter), as shown inFIG. 7 . The beam propagating along the first path experiences a phase shift, Φ1(f). Similarly, the second beam experiences a phase shift, Φ2(f). Note that f denotes the optical frequency, and that both the phase shift functions are frequency (or wavelength) dependent. The two output optical fields of the interferometer can be written as:
Ea=exp(−iΦ1)+exp(−iΦ2)
and
Eb=exp(−iΦ1)−exp(−iΦ2)
After some algebra, the two fields can be rewritten as:
Ea=2 cos [−(Φ1−Φ2)/2] exp [−i(Φ1+Φ2)/2]
Eb=−2 sin [−(Φ1−Φ2)/2] exp [−i(Φ1+Φ2)/2]
The key result from the above analysis is that the output waveform from the interferometer depends on the phase difference between the two arms. In contrast, the overall phase shift, and therefore the dispersion property, depends on the sum of the two phase functions. In mathematical terms:
Waveform ∝ cos [−(Φ1−Φ2)/2]2 or sin [−(Φ1−Φ2)/2]2
Group Delay ∝d(Φ1+Φ2)/df
Dispersion ∝d 2(Φ1+Φ2)/df 2 -
FIG. 8 shows aninterferometer 100 in which aninput signal 102 is split into two beams by abeamsplitter 110. One beam propagates toward amirror 120 and is reflected back by thismirror 120 toward thebeamsplitter 110. The other beam propagates toward aresonator 130 and is also reflected back toward thebeamsplitter 110. Theresonator 130 is a cavity with a partially-reflective front mirror and a totally-reflective back mirror, as shown for example inFIGS. 3 and 4 . Theresonator 130 reflects back substantially all of the incident optical power regardless of wavelength, but the group delay of the reflected light is strongly dependent on wavelength. The two reflected beams from themirror 120 and from theresonator 130 interfere at thebeamsplitter 110 and the resulting output is split into two output signals, one at output Ea, and the other in a different direction at output Eb. The two output signals contain complementary subsets of the input spectral band. The two output ports Ea and Eb divide the spectral space evenly with alternating optical channels being directed to each output port (i.e., oddoptical channels channels -
FIG. 9 shows the corresponding phase functions of the two arms of theinterferometer 100. Φ1 is the phase function of the resonator arm and Φ2 is the phase function (i.e., a straight line) of the mirror arm. The phase difference shows a step-like behavior with a distance of π between successive flat regions. This explains why the waveform is the flat-topped shape shown inFIG. 10 . However, the sum of the phase functions has significant curvature and therefore the dispersion is high, as illustrated inFIG. 10 . - In contrast to
FIG. 9 ,FIG. 5 shows the two phase functions Φ1 and Φ2 of the two arms inwavelength router 10. The “bending”, or nonlinear behavior, of the two phase functions are caused by theresonators resonators FIG. 5 . - From the previously stated properties of the
interferometer 100, an almost linear (Φ1+Φ2) function gives low chromatic dispersion. It is equally important to note that the difference of Φ1 and Φ2 remains a step-like function as shown inFIG. 5 . As a result, the output waveform has flat passband and good isolation. The corresponding waveform, group delay, and dispersion of one of the two output ports are illustrated inFIG. 6 . Note that the group delay and dispersion values inFIG. 6 are much smaller compared to the values shown inFIG. 10 . - The previous discussion shows a step-by-step construction of a
wavelength router 10 that performs dispersion-compensation. This is done to give a quantitative example ofrouter 10. Other channel spacings (e.g., ranging from 12.5 GHz to 100 GHz) can be implemented by changing d1, d2, and ΔL in the spirit described above. By varying the resonator reflectivities r1 and r2, devices with a passband shape and dispersion different from those ofFIG. 6 can also be obtained. A technical advantage ofrouter 10 is that no matter what reflectivities r1 and r2 are chosen forresonators - In contrast to
interferometer 100 illustrated inFIG. 8 ,wavelength router 10 performs a multiplexing and/or demultiplexing function with very low chromatic dispersion by employing a structure in which the phase difference function remains step-like, but the phase summation function becomes approximately linear with frequency. As a result, the waveform has a flat-top passband, good isolation, and dispersion is small. - As is evident in
FIG. 5 , the phase functions Φ1 and Φ2 have opposite bending characteristics, so their difference forms a step-like curve which gives rise to a flat-top waveform. However, because of the opposite bending characteristics of these phase functions, the sum of the two functions approximates a straight line and thereby results in low dispersion. -
FIG. 11 illustrates another embodiment of anoptical wavelength router 1100. Theinput signal 12 initially passes through abeam displacer 1101 which comprises, for example, a birefringent element made from a material such as calcite, rutile, lithium niobate, YVO4-based crystals, and the like. Beam displacer 1101 splits theinput signal 12 into two beams having orthogonal polarizations (e.g., along the X and Y directions, respectively). A polarization rotator 1102 (e.g., a half-wave plate) rotates the polarization of one of the beams by 90 degrees, so that both beams have substantially the same polarization. The beam pair then passes through a polarized beamsplitter (PBS) 1103. - The beams are then incident onto a non-reciprocal element, such as a
Faraday rotator 1105, which is used to separate the back-propagating beams from the polarized input beams propagating in the forward direction. Referring toFIGS. 12A and 12B , theFaraday rotator 1105 may be a magneto-optic element such as a doped garnet crystal 1201 (e.g., YIG) bonded to a half-wave plate 1202. Thecrystal 1201 rotates the input polarization by 45 degrees and the half-wave plate 1202 has its optical axis at 22.5 degrees. Thus, theFaraday rotator 1105 transmits light in the forward direction without changing its polarization, as shown inFIG. 12A , but rotates the polarization of any light from the opposite direction by a predetermined degree (e.g., 90 degrees), as shown inFIG. 12B . Referring back toFIG. 11 , theFaraday rotator 1105 transmits the polarized input beam pair in the forward direction without changing their polarization, but rotates the polarization of the reflected beam pair from the opposite direction by 90 degrees. - The input beam pair exiting the
Faraday rotator 1105 in the forward direction then passes through asecond PBS 1107. A zero-order beam displacer 1115 splits the beams into two pair of orthogonally-polarized beams. Various embodiments of a zero-order beam displacer 1115 are described in U.S. patent application Ser. No. 09/547,812, which is incorporated herein by reference. A first pair of beams having a common polarization passes through adelay element 1120, such as a block of glass having a predetermined thickness, and is then reflected back by aresonator 1130 a. A second pair of beams having a polarization orthogonal to that of the first pair of beams is reflected back by aresonator 1130 b.Resonators resonators resonators - The two pairs of reflected beams from the resonators 1130 a-b are recombined by back-propagation through the
beam displacer 1115 and interfere to produce one beam pair again. Due to the birefringence of thebeam displacer 1115, a difference in the optical path lengths between the two beam pairs is generated. As a result, the polarization state of the back-propagating beam pair exiting thebeam displacer 1115 is a function of optical wavelength. In other words, this back-propagating beam pair has mixed polarization as a function of the optical wavelengths carried by the beams. - The
second PBS 1107 splits this beam pair into two orthogonal polarizations. One polarization component of each beam is reflected by thesecond PBS 1107 and is directed toward output port A. In particular, one of the beams reflected by thesecond PBS 1107 passes through a polarization rotator 1108 (e.g., a half-wave plate), which rotates the beam polarization by 90 degrees so that the beam pair entering thebirefringent element 1109 are orthogonally polarized. Thebirefringent element 1109 associated with output port A combines these orthogonally-polarized beams to produce anoutput signal 22 containing a predetermined subset of the input spectral band. - The other polarization component of each beam is transmitted through the
second PBS 1107 toward theFaraday rotator 1105 along the same optical paths as the polarized input beams, but in the opposite direction. The polarization of the beam pair from thesecond PBS 1107 is rotated by 90 degrees by theFaraday rotator 1105, as previously discussed, so that they will be separated from the polarized input beams and reflected by thefirst PBS 1103 toward output port B. One of the beams reflected by thefirst PBS 1103 passes through a polarization rotator 1118 (e.g., a half-wave plate), which rotates the beam polarization by 90 degrees so that the beam pair entering thebirefringent element 1119 are orthogonally polarized. Thebirefringent element 1119 associated with output port B combines these orthogonally-polarized beams to produce anoutput signal 24 containing a complementary subset of the input spectral beam. -
FIG. 13 illustrates yet another embodiment of anoptical wavelength router 1300 according to the present invention. A portion ofrouter 1300 is similar to that ofrouter 1100. Those elements ofrouter 1300 that differ from those ofrouter 1100 will be described in further detail. After thesecond PBS 1107, the beam pair is horizontally polarized along the X axis. A half-wave plate 1301 with its optical axis at 22.5 degrees from the X axis rotates the polarization of the beam pair by 45 degrees. Athird PBS 1305 splits both beams into two different paths. The horizontally polarized components of the beam pair are transmitted through thethird PBS 1305 and are reflected by theresonator 1130 b, as previously described. The vertically polarized components of the beam pair are reflected by thethird PBS 1305. They pass through thedelay element 1120 and are reflected back byresonator 1130 a. The remainder of this embodiment operates in a manner similar to the embodiment shown inFIG. 11 . If desired, one or more waveplates 1303 with optical axes at 45 degrees to the X axis can be inserted between thesecond PBS 1107 and thethird PBS 1305 to allow fine tuning (e.g., by angle) of the interferometer's path length. - In operation of
wavelength routers birefringent elements Polarization rotator 1108 rotates one of the beam polarizations of a first beam pair so that both components of the first beam pair have the same polarization.Polarization rotator 1118 rotates one of the beam polarizations of a second beam pair so that both components of the second beam pair have the same polarization. The polarization of the second beam pair may or may not be the same as that of the first beam pair.PBS 1103 directs the second beam pair towardFaraday rotator 1105. Whenrouters rotator 1105 is reversed to the position ofrotator 1105 whenrouters FIGS. 11-13 . The first beam pair and the second beam pair interfere and combine atPBS 1107 to produce one beam pair. - Referring to
FIG. 11 , zero-order beam displacer 1115 ofwavelength router 1100 splits the beams into two pair of orthogonally-polarized beams. One pair of orthogonally-polarized beams passes throughdelay element 1120 and is then reflected back by aresonator 1130 a. The other beam pair is reflected back by aresonator 1130 b. Theresonators - The two pairs of reflected beams from the resonators 1130 a-b are recombined by back-propagation through the
beam displacer 1115 and interfere to produce one beam pair again. Due to the birefringence of thebeam displacer 1115, a difference in the optical path lengths between the two beam pairs is generated. As a result, the polarization state of the back-propagating beam pair exiting thebeam displacer 1115 is a function of optical wavelength. In other words, this back-propagating beam pair has mixed polarization as a function of the optical wavelengths carried by the beams. - Referring to
FIG. 13 , after passing throughPBS 1107, the beam pair is horizontally polarized along the X axis. Half-wave plate 1303 with its optical axis at 22.5 degrees from the X axis rotates the polarization of the beam pair by 45 degrees. -
PBS 1305 splits both beams into two different paths. The horizontally polarized components of the beam pair are transmitted throughPBS 1305 and are reflected by theresonator 1130 b, as previously described. The vertically polarized components of the beam pair are reflected byPBS 1305 and pass through thedelay element 1120 after which they are reflected back byresonator 1130 a. The two pairs of reflected beams from the resonators 1130 a-b are recombined by back-propagation through thePBS 1305 and interfere to produce one beam pair again. If desired, one or more waveplates 1301 with optical axes at 45 degrees to the X axis can be inserted between thesecond PBS 1107 and thethird PBS 1305 to allow fine tuning (e.g., by angle) of the interferometer's path length. - In both
wavelength router PBS 1107,rotator 1105 andPBS 1103 direct the back-propagating beam pair tobirefringent element 1101. The polarization of one component of the beam pair is rotated by ninety degrees bypolarization rotator 1102 so that the beam pair entering thebirefringent element 1101 is orthogonally polarized.Birefringent element 1101 combines these orthogonally polarized beams to produce a multiplexed output signal. - It should be understood that the use of
resonators wavelength routers wavelength router 10. Therefore, the performance characteristics illustrated inFIGS. 5 and 6 with regard towavelength router 10 generally apply towavelength routers routers router 10, but each ofrouters -
FIG. 14 illustrates a cascadedarchitecture 1400 of optical filters. For example, a first stage ofarchitecture 1400 may include anoptical filter 1402. A second stage ofarchitecture 1400 may includeoptical filters architecture 1400 may includeoptical filters Optical filters 1402, 1410, and 1420 may comprise any combination and arrangement of optical filters that employ any suitable conventional optical filtering technology (e.g., fiber bragg gratings, thin film filters, arrayed waveguide grating, etc.) andoptical wavelength routers - In the particular embodiment illustrated in
FIG. 14 ,filter 1402 comprises a 50 GHzoptical router 10 that receives a 50 GHz spaced dense wavelength division multiplexed (DWDM)signal 1405 and generates an odd-channel 100 GHzspacing DWDM signal 1415 and aneven channel 100GHz spacing signal 1417. Two 100GHz filters signal 1431 carrying wavelengths λ1 and λ5, asignal 1429 carrying wavelengths λ3 and λ7, asignal 1427 carrying wavelengths λ2 and λ6, and asignal 1425 carrying wavelengths λ4 and λ8. A third stage of filters 1420 a-d are used to produce the individual channels λ1 through λ8 onoutputs Signals particular filter 1402, 1410, or 1420. By using one or moreoptical wavelength routers architecture 1400, the device significantly reduces chromatic dispersion while keeping a flat-top passband for each channel and good isolation among channels. - Although
FIG. 14 illustratesarchitecture 1400 having three stages of filters to demultiplex aDWDM signal 1405 having eight wavelength channels, it is contemplated thatarchitecture 1400 may have any suitable number of stages to demultiplex aDWDM signal 1405 having any suitable number of wavelength channels. Moreover,FIG. 14 is detailed with respect to demultiplexing a 50 GHz spacedDWDM signal 1405 for illustrative purposes only. It is contemplated that aDWDM signal 1405 having any suitable channel spacing (12.5 GHz, 50 GHz, 100 GHz, 200 GHz, etc.) may be processed by thearchitecture 1400 of filters. Additionally, although the description ofarchitecture 1400 is detailed with respect to a demultiplexing function, it should be understood that it can also perform a multiplexing function upon individual wavelength channels to produce one or more DWDM signals while achieving low chromatic dispersion. -
FIG. 15 illustrates one embodiment of anoptical networking architecture 1500 that includes anoptical network 1505 coupled to ademultiplexer network 1510,filters 1550,switch fabrics 1560,regulators 1570,filters 1580, and a multiplexer network 1530. In general,optical wavelength routers architecture 1500, such as indemultiplexer network 1510 and/or multiplexer network 1530, to compensate for chromatic dispersion. It should be understood thatarchitecture 1500 may be configured differently and/or may include additional or fewer components without departing from the scope of the present invention. -
Optical network 1505 comprises any combination and arrangement of routers, bridges, hubs, gateways, switches, multiplexers, demultiplexers, transmitters, amplifiers, receivers, couplers, isolators, circulators, filters, detectors, wavelength converters, add/drop devices, or any other appropriate optical networking components.Optical network 1505 may include portions of a long-haul network, a metropolitan network, and/or a local/access network. -
Demultiplexer network 1510 and multiplexer network 1530 each comprise an appropriate arrangement of filters. For example,demultiplexer network 1510 comprisesfilters wavelength router filters wavelength router -
Filters -
Switch fabrics 1560 comprise switches and/or routers. In oneembodiment switch fabrics 1560 comprise add/drop switch arrays. Various embodiments of an add/drop switch array are disclosed in U.S. patent application Ser. No. 09/273,920, which is incorporated herein by reference.Regulators 1570 comprise any suitable device that adjustably regulate the optical power level of an optical channel. - In operation,
demultiplexer network 1510 receivesinput signal 12 fromnetwork 1505.Demultiplexer network 1510 andfilters 1550separate input signal 12 into an array of spatially separated wavelength channels. This is generally done by progressively demultiplexinginput signal 12 into intermediate signals, such as, for example, intermediate signals 1522 a-b, 1524 a-b, 1526, 1528 a-b, and 1529 a-b which may be referred to as intermediate input signals and/or intermediate output signals with respect to aparticular filter optical routers demultiplexer network 1510, each spatially separated wavelength channel generally has a flat-top passband, good isolation from other channels, and low chromatic dispersion.Switch fabrics 1560 process the spatially separated channels to perform a switching and/or routing function. In a particular embodiment, aswitch fabric 1560 may comprise an add/drop switch array that selectively routes channels from the input ports to its drop ports; substitutes channels from the add ports in place of the dropped channels; and routes the remaining input channels and the added channels to the output ports of the add/drop switch array. This combination ofdemultiplexer network 1510,filters 1550 and add/drop switch arrays 1560 allows any combination of input channels to be replaced with any combination of add channels. - In one embodiment, the array of output channels from the
switch fabrics 1550 pass throughregulators 1570 which adjustably regulate the optical power level of each channel. In a particular embodiment, a selected subset of the channels associated withinput signal 12 pass directly fromdemultiplexer network 1510 to multiplexer network 1530 in “express lanes.” A second array offilters 1580 and a multiplexing network 1530 combine the output channels so that they can be transmitted as a DWDM output signal 1590. This is generally done by progressively multiplexing into output signal 1590 intermediate signals, such as, for example, intermediate signals 1542 a-b, 1544 a-b, 1546 a-b, 1548, and 1549 a-b which may be referred to as intermediate input signals and/or intermediate output signals with respect to aparticular filter optical routers -
FIGS. 16A and 16B illustrate the dispersion profiles of modified embodiments ofwavelength router 10. In a first modified embodiment ofrouter 10, referred to hereinafter as router 1600, the optical thickness d2 ofresonator 30 b is selected so thatresonator 30 b has a free spectral range (FSR) of approximately 50 GHz and the resonance frequencies are at fc−6.25 GHz. Here fc denotes the center frequencies of the WDM channels ofinput signal 12 that are spaced, for example, 50 GHz apart. The FSR ofresonator 30 b here is defined as the period of the resonator's complex reflectivity. - The above conditions are achieved by following the equation:
d2=(m/2)*λc+({fraction (1/16)}).*λc
and picking the integer m such that the equation:
d2=c/(2*FSR)
is satisfied to best approximation. Here, λc is the center wavelength of any one of the input channels within the FSR of theparticular resonator 30; and c is the speed of light in a vacuum. In a particular embodiment, λ.c is the center wavelength of the center input channel within the FSR of theparticular resonator 30. In an example for a c-band 50GHz router 10, we can use λ.c=1545.32 nm, c=2.99792458*108 m/sec, and therefore d2=2.998017 mm. The optical thickness d1 ofresonator 30 a is set such that d1=d2−(⅛).*λc. In the example here, d1=2.997824 mm. - The dispersion profile of router 1600 is illustrated in
FIG. 16A . Note that each period of the chromatic dispersion profile has a positive slope for a first range of frequencies and a negative slope for a second range of frequencies. - The second modified embodiment of the
router 10, referred to hereinafter as router 1610, can be constructed by exchanging the optical thicknesses ofresonators FIG. 16A can haveresonator 30 a with optical thickness, d1=2.997824, andresonator 30 b with optical thickness, d2=2.998017, as determined above. Router 1610 yielding the dispersion profile illustrated inFIG. 16B can haveresonator 30 a with optical thickness, d1=2.998017, andresonator 30 b with optical thickness, d2=2.997824. Note that each period of the chromatic dispersion profile has a negative slope for a first range of frequencies and a positive slope for a second range of frequencies. Therefore, by exchanging the optical thicknesses ofresonators - By following the procedure above, the center wavelength of the
resonator 30 a is offset relative to the center wavelength of theresonator 30 b by approximately one-quarter of the free spectral range of both the resonators. For example, if the free spectral range of both resonators is approximately 50 GHz, then the center wavelength ofresonator 30 a is offset by approximately 12.5 GHz relative to the center wavelength ofresonator 30 b. As will be elaborated further below, this arrangement of the resonators' center wavelengths reduce chromatic dispersion in a multi-stage optical wavelength router configuration, while keeping a flat-top passband and good isolation. - The back mirror reflectivities of the two
resonators 30 are both set to be 100%. The front mirror reflectivities of theresonators 30 can be varied to adjust the passband, isolation, and dispersion of the interleaver waveform. In the example ofFIGS. 16A and 16B , the front mirror reflectivities are set at r2=0.2 (i.e., 4% reflectivity) and r1=0.2. Finally, the interferometer path length difference, ΔL, is set to be approximately (½)*d2, which comes out to ΔL≈1.499 mm. Note that the exact ΔL values for routers 1600 and 1610 can differ by a small amount that is a fraction of a wavelength. - Referring back to
FIG. 14 , the cascadedarchitecture 1400 of optical filters may further include an arrangement ofrouters architecture 1400 is described with reference to a two-stage configuration operating as a demultiplexer, it should be understood that the arrangement ofrouters architecture 1400 can yield a reduction in chromatic dispersion for individual wavelength channels λ1 through λ8 for a configuration having any number of stages greater than one when operating as a demultiplexer or a multiplexer. - In one embodiment of
architecture 1400, a first stage ofarchitecture 1400 includes arouter 10 characterized by a chromatic dispersion profile having a first frequency offset and a second stage ofarchitecture 1400 includes at least onerouter 10 characterized by a chromatic dispersion profile having a second frequency offset. The chromatic dispersion profile of each of the first stage, second stage, and combined stages is illustrated in greater detail with reference toFIG. 17 . In particular,spectral curve 1710 corresponds to the chromatic dispersion profile of thefirst stage router 10 with a first frequency offset;spectral curve 1712 corresponds to the chromatic dispersion profile of thesecond stage router 10 with a second frequency offset; andspectral curve 1714 corresponds to the chromatic dispersion profile of the combined first andsecond stage routers 10. Note thatspectral curves resonators - With reference to a 50
GHz router 10, for example, the first frequency offset may be such that for each individual wavelength channel the Δfc=+6.25 GHz, and the second frequency offset may be such that for each individual wavelength channel, the Δfc=−6.25 GHz. In another example, the first frequency offset may be such that for each individual wavelength channel the Δfc=−6.25 GHz, and the second frequency offset may be such that for each individual wavelength channel the Δfc=+6.25 GHz. - In yet another example, the first frequency offset may be such that for each individual wavelength channel the Δfc=0 GHz, and the second frequency offset may be such that for each individual wavelength channel the Δfc=+/−12.50 GHz. In still another example, the first frequency offset may be such that for each individual wavelength channel the Δfc=+/−12.5 GHz, and the second frequency offset may be such that for each individual wavelength channel the Δfc=0 GHz. In this regard, the relative center frequency shift between the two stages is approximately one-half of the period of the chromatic dispersion profile. As a result, the chromatic dispersion profile of the first stage is almost opposite to that of the second stage at all frequencies, which allows them to cancel each other when the first and second stages are cascaded. The first and second frequency offsets may be achieved by a number of different techniques, such as, for example, (1) by changing the temperature in the cavity of any given
resonator 30 to offset the center frequency of thatresonator 30 by a predetermined amount; (2) by inserting and adjusting the angle of a transparent plate along the optical path within the cavity of any givenresonator 30 to offset the center frequency of thatresonator 30 by a predetermined amount; and (3) by changing the air pressure in the cavity of any givenresonator 30 to offset the center frequency of thatresonator 30 by a predetermined amount. - In another embodiment of
architecture 1400, a first stage ofarchitecture 1400 includes arouter 100 characterized by a chromatic dispersion profile having a first slope at the center frequency of any particular wavelength channel, and a second stage ofarchitecture 1400 includes at least onerouter 10 characterized by a chromatic dispersion profile having a second slope at the center frequency of the particular wavelength channel that is substantially opposite to the first slope. The chromatic dispersion profile of each of the first stage, second stage, and combined stages is illustrated in greater detail with reference toFIG. 18 . In particular,spectral curve 1810 corresponds to the chromatic dispersion profile of thefirst stage router 100;spectral curve 1812 corresponds to the chromatic dispersion profile of thesecond stage router 10; andspectral curve 1814 corresponds to the chromatic dispersion profile of the combined first andsecond stage routers optical wavelength router 10 is substantially opposite to the slope of the chromatic dispersion profile of the first stageoptical wavelength router 10 over a range of frequencies surrounding the center frequency of any particular wavelength channel. As a result, when the first and second stages are cascaded, the chromatic dispersion profile of thesecond stage router 100 substantially compensates the chromatic dispersion profile of thefirst stage router 10 over a range of frequencies surrounding the center frequency of any particular wavelength channel. Although this embodiment ofarchitecture 1400 is described with reference to thefirst stage router 100 and thesecond stage router 10, it should be understood thatarchitecture 1400 may also be arranged having afirst stage router 10 and asecond stage router 100 to accomplish chromatic dispersion reduction. - In another embodiment of
architecture 1400, a first stage ofarchitecture 1400 includes a router 1600 and the second stage includes at least one router 1610. The chromatic dispersion profile of each of the first stage, second stage, and combined stages is illustrated in greater detail with reference toFIG. 19 . In particular,spectral curve 1910 corresponds to the chromatic dispersion profile of the first stage router 1600 having a first slope over a first range of frequencies of a particular wavelength channel and a second slope over a second range of frequencies of the particular wavelength channel. The second slope is substantially opposite to the first slope.Spectral curve 1912 corresponds to the chromatic dispersion profile of the second stage router 1610 having the second slope over the first range of frequencies of the particular wavelength channel and the first slope over the second range of frequencies of the particular wavelength channel.Spectral curve 1914 corresponds to the chromatic dispersion profile of the combined first and second stage routers 1600 and 1610. In this regard, when the first and second stages are cascaded, the chromatic dispersion profile associated with the second stage router 1610 substantially compensates the chromatic dispersion profile associated with the first stage router 1600 over the first and second range of frequencies of the particular wavelength channel, yielding the chromatic dispersion profile illustrated byspectral curve 1914. Although this embodiment ofarchitecture 1400 is described with reference to the first stage router 1600 and the second stage router 1610, it should be understood thatarchitecture 1400 may also be arranged having a first stage router 1610 and a second stage router 1600 to accomplish chromatic dispersion reduction. - The above disclosure sets forth a number of embodiments of the present invention. Other arrangements or embodiments, not precisely set forth, could be practiced under the teachings of the present invention and as set forth in the following claims.
Claims (35)
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US10/170,245 US20050025410A1 (en) | 2001-03-01 | 2002-06-11 | Dispersion-compensated optical wavelength router and cascaded architectures |
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US09/798,659 US6690846B2 (en) | 2001-03-01 | 2001-03-01 | Dispersion-compensated optical wavelength router |
US10/170,245 US20050025410A1 (en) | 2001-03-01 | 2002-06-11 | Dispersion-compensated optical wavelength router and cascaded architectures |
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US09/798,659 Continuation-In-Part US6690846B2 (en) | 2001-03-01 | 2001-03-01 | Dispersion-compensated optical wavelength router |
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US20050025410A1 true US20050025410A1 (en) | 2005-02-03 |
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US09/798,659 Expired - Fee Related US6690846B2 (en) | 2001-03-01 | 2001-03-01 | Dispersion-compensated optical wavelength router |
US10/170,245 Abandoned US20050025410A1 (en) | 2001-03-01 | 2002-06-11 | Dispersion-compensated optical wavelength router and cascaded architectures |
US10/739,495 Expired - Fee Related US6810171B2 (en) | 2001-03-01 | 2003-12-18 | Dispersion-compensated optical wavelength router |
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US10/739,495 Expired - Fee Related US6810171B2 (en) | 2001-03-01 | 2003-12-18 | Dispersion-compensated optical wavelength router |
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Also Published As
Publication number | Publication date |
---|---|
US20020122614A1 (en) | 2002-09-05 |
US6690846B2 (en) | 2004-02-10 |
WO2002071118A1 (en) | 2002-09-12 |
US6810171B2 (en) | 2004-10-26 |
US20040141685A1 (en) | 2004-07-22 |
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