Abstract: We demonstrate a 40 Gb/s self-synchronizing, all-optical packet
clock recovery circuit designed for efficient packet-mode traffic. The circuit
locks instantaneously and enables sub-nanosecond packet spacing due to the
low clock persistence time. A low-Q Fabry-Perot filter is used as a passive
resonator tuned to the line-rate that generates a retimed clock-resembling
signal. As a reshaping element, an optical power-limiting gate is
incorporated to perform bitwise pulse equalization. Using two preamble
bits, the clock is captured instantly and persists for the duration of the data
packet increased by 16 bits. The performance of the circuit suggests its
suitability for future all-optical packet-switched networks with reduced
transmission overhead and fine network granularity.
Abstract: We demonstrate instantaneous 40 Gb/s clock extraction from 1 ns long data packets
separated by 750 ps. The circuit comprises a Fabry-Perot filter and an all-optical power limiting
gate and requires very short inter-packet guardbands.
Abstract: We present a novel all-optical half-adder using only two semiconductor interferometric gates. The first gate
simu/taneous/y peiforms logical AND/OR Boolean operatrbns and the second outputs SUM and CARRY bits of 10
GMs pseudorandom data patterns.
Abstract: This paper reviews the work performed under the
European ESPRIT project DO_ALL (Digital OpticAL Logic
modules) spanning from advanced devices (semiconductor optical
amplifiers) to all-optical modules (laser sources and gates) and
from optical signal processing subsystems (packet clock recovery,
optical write/store memory, and linear feedback shift register) to
their integration in the application level for the demonstration of
nontrivial logic functionality (all-optical bit-error-rate tester and
a 2 2 exchange–bypass switch). The successful accomplishment
of the project¢s goals has opened the road for the implementation
of more complex ultra-high-speed all-optical signal processing
circuits that are key elements for the realization of all-optical
packet switching networks.
Abstract: We demonstrate an all-optical clock and data recovery
circuit for short asynchronous data packets at 10-Gb/s line
rate. The technique employs a Fabry–P{\'e}rot filter and an ultrafast
nonlinear interferometer (UNI) to generate the local packet
clock, followed by a second UNI gate to act as decision element,
performing a logical AND operation between the extracted clocks
and the incoming data packets. The circuit can handle short
packets arriving at time intervals as short as 1.5 ns and arbitrary
phase alignment.
Abstract: All-opticalgate control signal generation is demonstrated
from flag pulses, using a Fabry–P{\'e}rot filter followed by
a semiconductor optical amplifier. Ten control pulses are generated
from a single flag pulse having less than 0.45-dB amplitude
modulation. By doubling or tripling the number of flag pulses, the
number of control pulses increases approximately by a factor of
two or three. The circuit can control the switching state of all-optical
switches, on a packet-by-packet basis, and can be used for
nontrivial network functionalities such us self-routing.
Abstract: In this paper we discussed different switch architectures. We focus mainly on optical buffering. We investigate an all-optical buffer architecture comprising of cascaded stages of quantum-dot semiconductor optical amplifier- based tunable wavelength converters, at 160 Gb/s. We also propose the optical buffer with multi-wavelength converters based on quantum-dot semiconductor optical amplifiers. We present multistage switching fabrics with optical buffers, where optical buffers are based on fibre delay lines and are located in the first stage. Finally, we describe a photonic asynchronous packet switch and show that the employment of a few optical buffer stages to complement the electronic ones significantly improves the switch performance. We also propose two asynchronous optical packet switching node architectures, where an efficient contention resolution is based on controllable optical buffers and tunable wavelength converters TWCs.