Publication | Closed Access
Volterra and Wiener Equalizers for Short-Reach 100G PAM-4 Applications
151
Citations
72
References
2017
Year
Fiber NonlinearitiesElectrical EngineeringSpread SpectrumEngineeringOptical AmplificationOptical Transmission SystemAnalog-to-digital ConverterStraightforward Linear EqualizerChannel EqualizationNonlinear Signal ProcessingWiener EqualizersOptical CommunicationStronger EqualizersSignal ProcessingOptical AmplifierElectromagnetic Compatibility
Unlike ultralong coherent optical systems that seriously suffer from fiber nonlinearities, short-reach noncoherent systems such as data center interconnections, which utilize small, cheap, and low-bandwidth components, are sensitive to nonlinearities that are mainly produced by devices responsible for electrical signal amplification, modulation, and demodulation. One of the most promising schemes for these applications is the four-level pulse amplitude modulation format combined with intensity modulation and direct detection; however, it can be significantly degraded by linear and nonlinear intersymbol interference. Linear and nonlinear signal degradation can efficiently be handled by different types of equalizers. In many cases, the straightforward linear equalizer cannot lower the error rate at the acceptable level. Therefore, much stronger equalizers based on nonlinear models such as the Volterra series are proposed. Volterra filter that can also be orthogonalized by the Wiener model is well described in the existing literature, and, in this paper, we investigate the most critical points related to high-speed Volterra filter design and implementation. Several experiments are carried out in order to indicate filter requirements/complexity, acquisition, and stability. We also provide a simple guidance for filter complexity reduction and useful hints for channel acquisition.
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