Paper
24 January 2011 Developing accurate simulations for high-speed fiber links
Steven Searcy, Andrew Stark, Yu-Ting Hsueh, Thomas Detwiler, Sorin Tibuleac, GK Chang, Stephen E. Ralph
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
Reliable simulations of high-speed fiber optic links are necessary to understand, design, and deploy fiber networks. Laboratory experiments cannot explore all possible component variations and fiber environments that are found in today's deployed systems. Simulations typically depict relative penalties compared to a reference link. However, absolute performance metrics are required to assess actual deployment configurations. Here we detail the efforts within the Georgia Tech 100G Consortium towards achieving high absolute accuracy between simulation and experimental performance with a goal of ±0.25 dB for back-to-back configuration, and ±0.5 dB for transmission over multiple spans with different dispersion maps. We measure all possible component parameters including fiber length, loss, and dispersion for use in simulation. We also validate experimental methods of performance evaluation including OSNR assessment and DSP-based demodulation. We investigate a wide range of parameters including modulator chirp, polarization state, polarization dependent loss, transmit spectrum, laser linewidth, and fiber nonlinearity. We evaluate 56 Gb/s (single-polarization) and 112 Gb/s (dual-polarization) DQPSK and coherent QPSK within a 50 GHz DWDM environment with 10 Gb/s OOK adjacent channels for worst-case XPM effects. We demonstrate good simulation accuracy within linear and some nonlinear regimes for a wide range of OSNR in both back-to-back configuration and up to eight spans, over a range of launch powers. This allows us to explore a wide range of environments not available in the lab, including different fiber types, ROADM passbands, and levels of crosstalk. Continued exploration is required to validate robustness over various demodulation algorithms.
© (2011) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Steven Searcy, Andrew Stark, Yu-Ting Hsueh, Thomas Detwiler, Sorin Tibuleac, GK Chang, and Stephen E. Ralph "Developing accurate simulations for high-speed fiber links", Proc. SPIE 7960, Coherent Optical Communication: Components, Subsystems, and Systems, 79600A (24 January 2011); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.875560
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CITATIONS
Cited by 2 scholarly publications.
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KEYWORDS
Polarization

Computer simulations

Demodulation

Optical simulations

Systems modeling

Device simulation

Modulators

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