We demonstrate optical arbitrary waveform measurement (OAWM) using a silicon pho-tonic spectral slicer. Exploiting maximal-ratio combining (MRC), we demonstrate the viability of the scheme by reconstructing 100-GBd 64QAM signals with high quality.
Electrical-optical signal processing has been shown to be a promising path to overcome the limitations of state-of-theart all-electrical data converters. In addition to ultra-broadband signal processing, it allows leveraging ultra-low jitter mode-locked lasers and thus increasing the aperture jitter limited effective number of bits at high analog signal frequencies. In this paper, we review our recent progress towards optically enabled time-and frequency-interleaved analog-to-digital converters, as well as their monolithic integration in electronic-photonic integrated circuits. For signal frequencies up to 65 GHz, an optoelectronic track-andhold amplifier based on the source-emitter-follower architecture is shown as a power efficient approach in optically enabled BiCMOS technology. At higher signal frequencies, integrated photonic filters enable signal slicing in the frequency domain and further scaling of the conversion bandwidth, with the reconstruction of a 140 GHz optical signal being shown. We further show how such optically enabled data converter architectures can be applied to a nonlinear Fourier transform based integrated transceiver in particular and discuss their applicability to broadband optical links in general.
In this paper a novel opto-electronic Track-and-Hold Amplifier (OE-THA) is presented. The OE-THA can be used as a sampler in a photonic analog-to-digital-converter (ADC). It is fabricated in a silicon photonic 250 nm SiGe BiCMOS technology to allow for monolithic integration of photonic and electronic components. The OE-THA chip exhibits a small signal bandwidth of over 65 GHz, a total harmonic distortion below −34 dB up to 75 GHz and a signal-to-noise and distortion ratio (SINAD) of over 35 dB (5.5 effective bits, ENOB) up to 45 GHz. The measured resolution bandwidth products result in a corresponding equivalent jitter of below 80 fs rms from 20 to 70 GHz. The best equivalent jitter is achieved at 41 GHz with a value of 55.8 fs rms. This is enabled by using a low-jitter optical pulse train, generated by a Mode-Locked-Laser (MLL), as an optical sampling clock. The circuit integrates all optical and electronic components besides the MLL. It draws 110 mA operated from a supply voltage of −4.6 V and occupies a silicon area of only 0.59 mm2.
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