938 Gb/s, 5-150 GHz Ultra-Wideband Transmission Over the Air Using Combined Electronic and Photonic-Assisted Signal Generation

The next-generation radio access network (RAN) requires high speed wireless transmission between base stations exceeding \geq 100 Gb/s to connect access points and hubs. This has motivated research exploring how to fully utilize wireless spectrum from sub-6 GHz to millimeter (mm) waveband (e.g. D-ba...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of lightwave technology 2024-10, Vol.42 (20), p.7247-7252
Hauptverfasser: Zhou, Zichuan, Kassem, Amany, Seddon, James, Sillekens, Eric, Darwazeh, Izzat, Bayvel, Polina, Liu, Zhixin
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The next-generation radio access network (RAN) requires high speed wireless transmission between base stations exceeding \geq 100 Gb/s to connect access points and hubs. This has motivated research exploring how to fully utilize wireless spectrum from sub-6 GHz to millimeter (mm) waveband (e.g. D-band up to 170 GHz) for data transmission, using either all-electronic or optoelectronic approaches. However, to date, all-electronic and optoelectronic methods have been used separately due to the challenge of generating broad-band signals with synchronized carrier frequencies. Here, we demonstrate an ultra-wide 145 GHz bandwidth wireless transmission of orthogonal frequency-division multiplexing (OFDM) signals over the air, covering 5-150 GHz frequency region. This is achieved by combining the merits of high-speed electronics and microwave photonics technologies. Specifically, the signals over 5-75 GHz are generated using high speed digital-to-analog converters. The high frequency mm-wave band signals, including W-band (75-110 GHz) and D-band (110-150 GHz) signals, are generated by mixing optically modulated signals with frequency-locked lasers on high-speed photodiodes. By frequency-locking two pairs of narrow linewidth lasers and referring to a common quartz oscillator, we generated W-band and D-band signals with stable carrier frequency and reduced phase noise compared to free-running lasers, maximizing the use of spectrum. By using OFDM format and bit loading, we achieve 938 Gb/s transmission data rate with less than 300 MHz gap between different RF and mm-wave bands.
ISSN:0733-8724
1558-2213
DOI:10.1109/JLT.2024.3446827