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Non-Integer-Oversampling Digital Signal Processing for Coherent Passive Optical Networks

Information Theory 2023-06-21 v1 Signal Processing math.IT

Abstract

Beyond 100G passive optical networks (PONs) will be required to meet the ever-increasing traffic demand in the future. Coherent optical technologies are the competitive solutions for the future beyond 100G PON but also face challenges such as the high computational complexity of digital signal processing (DSP). A high oversampling rate in coherent optical technologies results in the high computational complexity of DSP. Therefore, DSP running in a non-integer-oversampling below 2 samples-per-symbol (sps) is preferred, which can not only reduce computational complexity but also obviously lower the requirement for the analog-to-digital converter. In this paper, we propose a non-integer-oversampling DSP for meeting the requirements of coherent PON. The proposed DSP working at 9/8-sps and 5/4-sps oversampling rates can be reduced by 44.04% and 40.78% computational complexity compared to that working at the 2-sps oversampling rate, respectively. Moreover, a 400-Gb/s-net-rate coherent PON based on digital subcarrier multiplexing was demonstrated to verify the feasibility of the non-integer-oversampling DSP. There is almost no penalty on the receiver sensitivity when the non-integer-oversampling DSP is adopted. In conclusion, the non-integer-oversampling DSP shows great potential in the future coherent PON.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2306.11325,
  title  = {Non-Integer-Oversampling Digital Signal Processing for Coherent Passive Optical Networks},
  author = {Haide Wang and Ji Zhou and Jinyang Yang and Jianrui Zeng and Weiping Liu and Changyuan Yu and Fan Li and Zhaohui Li},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2306.11325},
  year   = {2023}
}

Comments

This paper has been submitted to the Journal of Optical Communications and Networking

R2 v1 2026-06-28T11:09:20.504Z