4.7 Article

Integrated Remote Laser Source for 6G Advanced Antenna Systems

Journal

JOURNAL OF LIGHTWAVE TECHNOLOGY
Volume 40, Issue 2, Pages 519-526

Publisher

IEEE-INST ELECTRICAL ELECTRONICS ENGINEERS INC
DOI: 10.1109/JLT.2021.3111694

Keywords

Transceivers; Lasers; Fiber lasers; Optical interconnections; Laser beams; Power lasers; Optical transmitters; Antenna array system; MIMO; remote laser source; silicon photonics

Funding

  1. Regione Toscana POR FESR

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Future generations of mobile communications promise unlimited access to information and data sharing, leading to new design challenges. Next generation Radio Access Network (RAN) will increase the radio bandwidth and utilize technologies like beamforming and spatial multiplexing. Optical technologies are a natural choice to support the traffic increase, but there is a mismatch in temperature requirements between lasers and advanced antenna systems (AAS).
Future generations of mobile communications promise near unlimited access to information and data sharing with ubiquitous wireless connectivity for any kind of device and application that may benefit from being connected. This poses new design challenges and requires a renewal of the hardware platforms to meet the increased demand of capacity and reliability of the network. Next generation Radio Access Network (RAN) will evolve towards an increase of the radio bandwidth, with carrier frequency extended to the millimeter waves (mmW) range. Other technologies that will be extensively used to increase the RAN capacity will be beamforming and spatial multiplexing with advanced antenna systems (AAS) comprising hundreds of antenna elements. Optical technologies are the natural candidates to support the traffic increase, by providing high-capacity interconnection within the radio unit and towards the base band unit (BBU). However, the higher level of integration of AAS will cause an increase of the temperature to values >100 degrees C, due to power dissipation of RF power amplifiers (PA), digital front-end (DFE) and baseband processing Application Specific Circuits (ASIC). This makes the AAS an inhospitable environment for optical transceivers that include lasers, typically operating at temperatures <85 degrees C. A promising approach to solve this issue is to place the laser outside the transceiver as a remote laser source (RLS) in a less harsh environment or in a thermally controlled environment e.g., in the same cabinet of the BBU. In this article we demonstrate a fully integrated RLS enabling a reduction of power consumption and packaging cost.

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