4.7 Article

Semiconductor Laser-Based Multi-Channel Wideband Chaos Generation Using Optoelectronic Hybrid Feedback and Parallel Filtering

Journal

JOURNAL OF LIGHTWAVE TECHNOLOGY
Volume 40, Issue 3, Pages 751-761

Publisher

IEEE-INST ELECTRICAL ELECTRONICS ENGINEERS INC
DOI: 10.1109/JLT.2021.3123653

Keywords

Optical feedback; Optical filters; Chaos; Bandwidth; Optical fibers; Optical attenuators; High-speed optical techniques; Chaos; filtering; optical feedback; phase modulation; semiconductor lasers

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [62171087, 61671119, 61805031]
  2. Sichuan Science and Technology Program [2021JDJQ0023]
  3. Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities [ZYGX2019J003]
  4. Exchange Project for Key Lab of Optical Fiber Sensing and Communications [ZYGX2021K010]
  5. STCSM [SKLSFO2020-05]

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The proposed scheme can simultaneously generate multiple chaotic outputs with different central wavelengths and low correlations, and the bandwidths of these chaotic outputs are flexible and can be adjusted within a wide range by controlling the filter bandwidths. In addition, the scheme demonstrates high-speed random bit generation with verified randomness.
We propose and experimentally demonstrate a novel multi-channel chaos generation scheme, which can simultaneously produce multiple chaotic signals with wideband spectrum and suppressed time-delay signature (TDS). In this scheme, we introduce an external self-phase-modulated feedback (ESPMF) to improve the optical bandwidth of the initial chaos generated by a conventional external-cavity semiconductor laser (ECSL), then optical tunable filters (OTFs) are utilized to simultaneously extract three-channel chaotic outputs. The experimental results show that the proposed scheme has three main advantages. Firstly, it can simultaneously generate multiple chaotic outputs with different central wavelengths and low correlations. Secondly, the bandwidth of original ECSL-based chaos can be improved by several times, and the undesired TDS characteristics in the original chaos can be completely suppressed to an indistinguishable level (lower than 0.02). Thirdly, the bandwidths of these chaotic outputs are flexible and can be adjusted within a wide range of 20 GHz by controlling the filter bandwidths. In addition, we demonstrate an application of the proposed chaos generation scheme in random bit generation (RBG), and multi-channel high-speed random bit sequences with a total generation rate over Tb/s and NIST verified randomness are simultaneously obtained.

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