All-optical regenerators can be used to suppress amplified spontaneous emission(ASE) noise introduced by cascaded erbium doped fiber amplifiers(EDFAs) in optical fiber communication systems and lead to the improvement...All-optical regenerators can be used to suppress amplified spontaneous emission(ASE) noise introduced by cascaded erbium doped fiber amplifiers(EDFAs) in optical fiber communication systems and lead to the improvement of optical receiver sensitivity. By introducing the Q-factor transfer function(QTF), we evaluate the Q-factor performance of degenerate four-wave mixing(DFWM) regenerators with clock pump and reveal the differences between the optimal input powers determined from the static and dynamic power tranfer function(PTF) and the QTF curves. Our simulation shows that the clock-pump regnerator is capable of improving the Q-facor and receiver sensitivity for 40 Gbit/s ASE-degraded return-to-zero on-off keying(RZ-OOK) signal by 2.58 dB and 4.2 d B, respectively.展开更多
基金supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China(No.61671108)the Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities(No.ZYGX2014J005)the Program for Changjiang Scholars and Innovative Research Team in University
文摘All-optical regenerators can be used to suppress amplified spontaneous emission(ASE) noise introduced by cascaded erbium doped fiber amplifiers(EDFAs) in optical fiber communication systems and lead to the improvement of optical receiver sensitivity. By introducing the Q-factor transfer function(QTF), we evaluate the Q-factor performance of degenerate four-wave mixing(DFWM) regenerators with clock pump and reveal the differences between the optimal input powers determined from the static and dynamic power tranfer function(PTF) and the QTF curves. Our simulation shows that the clock-pump regnerator is capable of improving the Q-facor and receiver sensitivity for 40 Gbit/s ASE-degraded return-to-zero on-off keying(RZ-OOK) signal by 2.58 dB and 4.2 d B, respectively.