2005
DOI: 10.1109/jstqe.2004.841698
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Widely tunable DS-DBR laser with monolithically integrated SOA: design and performance

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Cited by 230 publications
(96 citation statements)
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“…A commercially available Oclaro DS-DBR laser [8], which exhibited a Lorentzian phase noise of 1.4MHz (measured as in [9]), was employed as the LO in the coherent receiver. A 250MSa/s AWG generated the switching signals for the tunable laser.…”
Section: Fast Wavelength Switching Digital Coherent Receivermentioning
confidence: 99%
“…A commercially available Oclaro DS-DBR laser [8], which exhibited a Lorentzian phase noise of 1.4MHz (measured as in [9]), was employed as the LO in the coherent receiver. A 250MSa/s AWG generated the switching signals for the tunable laser.…”
Section: Fast Wavelength Switching Digital Coherent Receivermentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Bragg reflector (DS-DBR) lasers [4]. Tunable lasers based on surface gratings have also been demonstrated, which has the cost advantages due to its simple process [5,6] compared with the conventional buried DBR based lasers.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…New approaches to data transmission such as coherent WDM (CoWDM (Healy, Garcia Gunning et al 2007)) require discrete tuning between particular wavelength channels on a grid. There is additionally an urgent need to integrate semiconductor lasers with other optical components such as amplifiers, modulators and detectors (Coldren 2000;Ward, Robbins et al 2005;Welch, Kish et al 2006;Raring & Coldren 2007) in order to reduce chip cost, system size and complexity. Tunable lasers are also needed in other important markets such as trace gas detection for environmental emission motoring (Phelan, Lynch et al 2005).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%