BICM-compatible Rate Adaptive Geometric Constellation Shaping Using Optimized Many-to-one Labeling
In this paper, a rate adaptive geometric constellation shaping (GCS) scheme which is fully backward-compatible with existing state of the art bit-interleaved coded modulation (BICM) systems is proposed and experimentally demonstrated. The system relies on optimization of the positions of the quadrat...
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Zusammenfassung: | In this paper, a rate adaptive geometric constellation shaping (GCS) scheme
which is fully backward-compatible with existing state of the art
bit-interleaved coded modulation (BICM) systems is proposed and experimentally
demonstrated. The system relies on optimization of the positions of the
quadrature amplitude modulation (QAM) points on the I/Q plane for maximized
achievable information rate, while maintaining quantization and fiber nonlinear
noise robustness. Furthermore, `dummy' bits are multiplexed with coded bits
before mapping to symbols. Rate adaptivity is achieved by tuning the ratio of
coded and `dummy' bits, while maintaining a fixed forward error-correction
block and a fixed modulation format size. The points' positions and their
labeling are optimized using automatic differentiation. The proposed GCS scheme
is compared to a time-sharing hybrid (TH) QAM modulation and the now mainstream
probabilistic amplitude shaping (PAS) scheme. The TH without shaping is
outperformed for all studied data rates in a simulated linear channel by up to
0.7 dB. In a linear channel, PAS is shown to outperform the proposed GCS
scheme, while similar performances are reported for PAS and the proposed GCS in
a simulated nonlinear fiber channel. The GCS scheme is experimentally
demonstrated in a multi-span recirculating loop coherent optical fiber
transmission system with a total distance of up to 3000 km. Near-continuous
zero-error flexible throughput is reported as a function of the transmission
distance. Up to 1-2 spans of increased reach gains are achieved at the same net
data rate w.r.t. conventional QAM. At a given distance, up to 0.79 bits/2D
symbol of gain w.r.t. conventional QAM is achieved. In the experiment, similar
performance to PAS is demonstrated. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2312.09444 |