In this paper, a novel optical vector analyzer (OVA) is proposed and experimentally demonstrated by us based on coherent optical frequency modulated continuous-wave (FMCW) interferometry. The optical vector analysis of optical devices under test (ODUTs) maintains high accuracy despite strong sweep nonlinearity with our method. Basically, due to the linear frequency sweep of optical FMCW, the beat photocurrent consisting of a baseband frequency (BF) signal and an intermediate frequency (IF) signal is generated. Usually we extract the IF signal by filtering and then Hilbert transform to get the frequency response. However, when the sweep nonlinearity is strong, the spectral overlap will occur, and simple filtering will cause severe distortion. We innovatively introduced a common mode branch whose signal is the same as the BF signal in the beat photocurrent. Due to the introduction of the common mode signal, the non-aliased IF signal can be extracted without filtering, which solves the measurement distortion caused by spectrum aliasing and filtering. What’s more, an optical tunable bandpass filter (OTBPF) is added to the correction path to locate the optical frequency for the first time. The phase-shift-fiber grating (PS-FBG) in 1550nm band is measured, and the effectiveness of this method is verified. We eliminate the distortion brought about by the spectral aliasing and filtering with the introduction of the common mode signal path and the measurement accuracy is greatly improved. Frequency response resolution accuracy of this method reaches 33MHz which is mainly limited by the presentation difference.
A frequency-shifted dual-carrier method is proposed for microwave characterization of Mach-Zehnder modulators based on low frequency detection. The proposed method utilizes the heterodyne products between the beats of two modulated sidebands, and achieves calibration-free microwave measurement of Mach-Zehnder modulators with the help of electrical spectrum analysis. Our method features low-frequency detection with only one microwave source and avoids the responsivity correction introduced by the photodetector. In the experiment, the frequency response of a Mach-Zehnder electro-optic intensity modulator is measured by using the proposed method, where the measurement results fit in with those obtained by using the conventional optical spectrum analysis method.
A novel laser phase noise measurement method based on self-homodyne structure with a Faraday rotating mirror (FRM) and an optical coherent receiver is proposed and experimentally demonstrated. The proposed method is simple in structure and easy to operate. Compared with the ordinary phase noise measurement system of self-homodyne optical coherent receiver, the length of the required delay fiber is halved and the polarization of the optical signal is more stable. Experimental results show that the proposed method can accurately characterize the phase noise and the linewidth of the laser under test, which are consistent with those obtained by the conventional self-homodyne method.
A broadband photonic time-stretch analog-to-digital converter (PTS-ADC) based on complementary parallel singlesideband (SSB) modulation architecture is proposed and experimentally demonstrated by using a dissipative soliton-based passively mode-locked fiber laser (MLL). The experiment results indicate that the proposed scheme can increase the effective input analog bandwidth and remove the pulse-envelope-induced distortion. The signal-to-noise ratio of the photonic time stretch system can be guaranteed by using the dissipative soliton-based MLL. Therefore, a broadband PTSADC with input frequency of 2GHz to 25 GHz is constructed and an ENOB of beyond 3 bits is achieved.
An approach to characterizing the intrinsic phase response of an optical filter free of additional phase shift from the pigtail or the free space is proposed and experimentally demonstrated. The kernel of this approach is based on the fact that the intrinsic phase response of an optical filter with a minimum phase response has a unique relationship with its magnitude response. Thus, the intrinsic phase response can be obtained through the measurement of the magnitude response only. Most importantly, this method avoids the influence of the fiber pigtail or the free space on the phase response measurement, which cannot be easily calibrated in the traditional single-sideband modulation-based optical vector analyzer. A phase retrieval algorithm based on fast Fourier transform is presented, which can be used to accurately retrieve the intrinsic phase response of an optical filter with either a symmetric magnitude response or an asymmetric one. In the experiment, the intrinsic phase response of an active stimulated-Brillouin-scattering-based optical filter with an asymmetric magnitude response and a phase-shift fiber Bragg grating with pigtails is successfully retrieved from the measured magnitude response using the proposed method.
Access to the requested content is limited to institutions that have purchased or subscribe to SPIE eBooks.
You are receiving this notice because your organization may not have SPIE eBooks access.*
*Shibboleth/Open Athens users─please
sign in
to access your institution's subscriptions.
To obtain this item, you may purchase the complete book in print or electronic format on
SPIE.org.
INSTITUTIONAL Select your institution to access the SPIE Digital Library.
PERSONAL Sign in with your SPIE account to access your personal subscriptions or to use specific features such as save to my library, sign up for alerts, save searches, etc.