calit2

Electrical Engineers at UCSD Demonstrate Revolutionary Photonic Technology

Team Achieves World Record for Wavelength Translation

San Diego, CA, March 28, 2006 -- Until now much of the investment on equipment to generate, transport and detect signals traveling through optical fiber has revolved around 1.55 micron (infrared) as the standard wavelength for telecommunications. Yet many critical new applications rely on other wavelengths (colors) for optical transmission that hitherto could not be generated, carried or received by today's standard equipment. Now, researchers at the University of California, San Diego (UCSD) have demonstrated a way to build on the dominant infrastructure rather than replace it-by "translating" optical signals between the current infrared standard and a wide range of other bands of light.

Stojan Radic
UCSD electrical and computer engineering
professor Stojan Radic in the new
Calit2 Photonics Laboratory 

At the Optical Fiber Conference (OFC) in Anaheim earlier this month, the team from UCSD's Jacobs School of Engineering announced that they successfully used a parametric process in photonic crystal fiber to change the wavelengths of modulated optical channels from 1.55 micron (1550 nanometers) infrared to a visible light signal at half a micron -- a record 1 micron difference. The researchers measured a difference in frequency between the infrared starting point and the visible-light end point of 375 terahertz (THz), a factor of ten greater than previously achieved.

"This work demonstrates a revolutionary technology for new applications that include airborne and submarine communications, standoff spectroscopy and remote sensing," said Stojan Radic, a professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering (ECE) in the Jacobs School and leader of the UCSD team. "The parametric band translator means that mature telecom technology can be applied to any other wavelength, permitting development of new applications at various bands without requiring huge investment in new infrastructure to replace what already exists."

Radic Lab

Located on the 6th floor of Atkinson Hall,
the Calit2 Photonics Laboratory is one of
the first and largest labs to get up and
running since the insitute’s new building
opened last October. Four faculty members
based in the Jacobs School’s Electrical
and Computer Engineering departments—
Stojan Radic, Shaya Fainman, Joseph Ford and
George Papen—and their graduate students
are participating in four core projects that
focus on high-capacity and unconventional
networking research:

Universal Band Translator
This project explores new architectures
for distant band translation and casting (see
news release above). The lab uses its
parametric testbed to explore the feasibility
of frequency translation of standard
communication band over very large spectral
ranges, ranging from ultraviolet to far-infrared.
The technology expected to emerge from
this work will leverage the standard tele-
communication infrastructure across any
other optical band, opening new applications
in communications, spectroscopy and sensing.

Electronic Dispersion and ISI Mitigation 
Researchers in the Photonics Lab explore
qualitatively new, electronic technologies for
penalty removal in terrestrial and datacom
networks. The group has demonstrated a
world record in transmitting 10-gigabit-per-
second wave division multiplexing (WDM)
channels over more than 600 kilometers of
high-dispersion fiber. The new transmission
architecture holds a promise of dramatically
reducing the cost of existing high-capacity
networks, and, more importantly, the first
practical datacom distribution over large
distances and high data rates. 

Ultrawideband WDM Transmission
Conventional transmission utilizes the
conventional transmission window
in the 1.5- to 1.6-micron
(1500-1600nm) range, and is limited by
excessive fiber loss outside this band. A new
class of fibers offers considerably wider
spectral range, and potentially could
be extended from 1 to 2 microns (or 150
terahertz). The project investigates new
means for ultrawideband division multiplexing,
signal generation, amplification and reception,
which could eventually increase the
transmission capacity through a single
fiber one-hundredfold.

Ultrafast and Coherent Signal Processing
The Photonics Lab operates one of the most
advanced parametric testbeds capable of
ultra-fast signal processing, band conversion
and quantum-limited amplification. Parametric
interaction in high-confinement
fibers is used to perform
packet- and bit-level signal processing for
optical routing, line protection and ultrafast
pattern recognition applications. In contrast to
conventional approaches, the new technology
offers a new, transparent layer that is
inherently rate-independent.

In the UCSD tests, information was encoded into 1.55 micron light, the standard because that is where the glass fiber is most transparent and efficient for transmission, offering tremendous bandwidth up to 12,000 gigahertz. Using a nonlinear optical process, the signal was recreated in a very different 0.5 micron green light and received by a standard visible-light detector. "Other researchers have shown the ability to create new colors of light via nonlinear processes and to move data signals between nearly identical wavelengths," said Radic. "In this case we showed that the wavelengths can be very different and still carry the same high-speed data signal. We completed data recovery with zero errors, even though the new color was very different from the starting color."

Researchers also reported the first multiple channel mapping over the same spectral range, thus demonstrating arbitrary capacity mapping across the entire visible band.

"This is an amazing accomplishment, and Professor Radic never ceases to amaze me with his ambition and vision of what is possible," said Larry Smarr, a professor of computer science and engineering in the Jacobs School and director of the California Institute for Telecommunications and Information Technology (Calit2), which is supporting Radic's work through the institute's new Photonics Lab at UCSD. "This experiment is precisely the type of cutting-edge research that we expect will be a hallmark of the projects enabled as more and more faculty move into the new lab." (For more on the Calit2 Photonics Lab, see box at left.)

The ability to translate signals for transport through the fiber transmission window has dramatic implications for equipment manufacturers and users. Telecom and fiber-optic companies have built generations of lasers, detectors, amplifiers and sophisticated signaling devices around 1.55 micron infrared as the standard. But other wavelengths of light may be better suited for a variety of applications. 
 
Unfortunately, most technologies developed for 1.55 microns are not available for other parts of the spectral range. Complex, fast-phase or amplitude modulation is rarely possible outside of the this band, and fast 1.55 micron receivers are superior to those in any other band. There is also no equivalent of the erbium-doped fiber amplifier.

Critical new applications exist outside the standard telecommunication bandwidth. Free-space communication requires mid- and far-infrared bands. Undersea communication uses visible wavelengths, and general sensing applications can occupy any band from ultraviolet to infrared. "Unfortunately," explained Radic, "the development of these new, band-specific technologies would necessarily multiply enormous investments already made in fiber telecommunications."

The paper presented at OFC was co-authored by Radic and fellow ECE professors Shaya Fainman and Joseph Ford, their graduate students, and Bell Labs scientist Colin McKinstrie.* 

According to Radic, the 375 THz parametric translation paves the way for further work on a "universal band translator" (UBT), now under development at UCSD and Calit2. The project's goal is to extend the 1.55 micron technology across the entire optical spectrum, thereby leveraging the enormous investment in telecom so signals can move across any spectral window or application.

Wavelength
Typical measured spectrum in visible
band with the output coupling
Professor Radic and his colleagues have used their extensive experience in parametric fiber technology to pursue the translator concept. The team holds a record in parametric amplification, and it was the first to demonstrate 40-gigabit-per-second, bit-level optical switching and multicasting in parametric fiber.

As it currently stands, the UCSD translator architecture allows for arbitrary band mapping from half a micron to five microns. More demonstrations are planned for the testbed in the newly-built Calit2 Photonics Laboratory.

The translator work is currently funded by the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency, Lockheed Martin Corporation and the National Science Foundation.

* "375 THz Parametric Translation of Modulated Signal from 1550nm to Visible Band," Rui Jiang, Robert Saperstein, Nikola Alic, Maziar Nezhad, Colin J. McKinstrie, Joseph Ford, Yeshaiahu Fainman and Stojan Radic (all from UCSD Electrical and Computer Engineering except Bell Labs' McKinstrie). Postdeadline paper accepted at OFC-NFOEC 2006, March 5-10, 2006.

Related Links

OFC UCSD Paper
OFC-NFOEC 2006 Conference

Media Contacts

Media Contact: Doug Ramsey, (858) 822-5825, dramsey@ucsd.edu