Paper
15 December 2000 Electroabsorption transceiver (EAT): device concepts and system applications
Andreas Stoehr, Robert Heinzelmann, Toshiaki Kuri, Ken-ichi Kitayama, Dieter Jaeger
Author Affiliations +
Proceedings Volume 4087, Applications of Photonic Technology 4; (2000) https://doi.org/10.1117/12.406417
Event: 2000 International Conference on Application of Photonic Technology (ICAPT 2000), 2000, Quebec City, Canada
Abstract
Recently, lightwave systems have attracted great interest not only for digital optical communication but also for the distribution of microwave and mm-wave signals in wireless applications. Future wireless communication networks are expected to offer broadband multimedia services to a large number of subscribers. As a consequence, the radio frequency is expected to be within the mm-wave band where a sufficient bandwidth for the large number of broadband channels is available. Since the electrical transmission of the mm-wave radio signals over long distances is not feasible, fiber-wireless systems have attracted great interest. They are considered to form the backbone of future broadband mm-wave wireless communication systems. Obviously, the successful implementation of mm-wave wireless communication networks in mass-market applications strongly depends on the costs of the infrastructure. In that respect, specially the cost of each single base station (BS) is a very critical factor since future wireless networks are expected to support a large number of remote BSs. Consequently, it is of great interest to reduce the base station complexity and cost. In this paper, we present a novel photonic transceiver component and discuss its application in mm-wave fiber-wireless systems. In detail, an InP-based 1 .55im waveguide electroabsorption transceiver (EATs) is presented that serves as a modulator and a photodetector simultaneously. Besides the basic device concept and its properties, the employment of high-speed EAT in 60GHz millimeter-wave (mm-wave) fiber-wireless applications is experimentally demonstrated. For the first time, full-duplex broadband (155.52Mbit/s) fiber-optic transmission in the 60GHz band has been achieved in a point-to-point link. Furthermore, a point-to-multipoint fiber-ring network architecture employing EAT is presented and in a first experiment full-duplex point-to-multipoint operation in the 60GHz band is experimentally demonstrated.
© (2000) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Andreas Stoehr, Robert Heinzelmann, Toshiaki Kuri, Ken-ichi Kitayama, and Dieter Jaeger "Electroabsorption transceiver (EAT): device concepts and system applications", Proc. SPIE 4087, Applications of Photonic Technology 4, (15 December 2000); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.406417
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KEYWORDS
Transceivers

Modulation

Signal detection

L band

Telecommunications

Wireless communications

Modulators

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