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Showing papers by "Er'el Granot published in 2021"


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the fundamental chromatic dispersion limit for an optical communication N-level pulse amplitude modulation (PAM-N) format without any dispersion compensating module is calculated.
Abstract: The fundamental chromatic dispersion limit for an optical communication N-level pulse amplitude modulation (PAM-N) format without any dispersion compensating module is calculated. The main result of this analysis shows that in a non-dispersion-compensated channel, the product β2B2L (where β2, L, and B are the dispersion coefficient, fiber length, and the Baud rate, respectively) is bounded by a number, which depends only on the number of levels N. In particular, β2B2L < 0.318, β2B2L < 0.212, and β2B2L < 0.14 for N values of 2, 4, and 8, respectively. Moreover, an analytical expression for a noisy channel’s power penalty was formulated. This analytic expression shows high agreement with numerical simulations. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first time that such a fundamental limit has been formulated for PAM-N systems.

2 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
Er'el Granot1
TL;DR: In this article, the effect of optical chromatic dispersion on ordinary double-sided modulation (DSM) quadrature amplitude modulation (QAM-M) protocol in RF-over-fiber (RFOF) channels was investigated.
Abstract: We investigate the effect of optical chromatic dispersion on ordinary double-sided modulation (DSM) quadrature amplitude modulation (QAM-M) protocol in RF-over-fiber (RFOF) channels. QAM-M protocol is common in RFOF communications channels. An analytical expression was derived for the channel’s response, the standard deviation of the QAM’s clusters, and for the estimations of the channel’s bit error rate (BER). The main findings are as follows: (A) unlike single-sided modulation (SSM) QAM or coherent QAM, ordinary DS QAM is governed by three length scales, and therefore it is much more susceptible to dispersion; (B) the QAM’s clusters cannot be bounded, even for weak dispersion, and therefore, zero-error detection is unattainable without dispersion compensation; and (C) a linear dispersion compensation filter was derived to mitigate the dispersion effects post-detection. These results suggest that it is not essential to operate the channel in a SSM QAM mode. A simpler and affordable option may be to operate the channel in an ordinary DSM QAM method and to apply a dispersion compensating filter in the electrical or even in the digital domain. This method is a low-cost solution to improve substantially the RFOF channels performances.

1 citations