4.7 Article

300-Gbit/s/λ 8-Level Pulse-Amplitude-Modulation (PAM8) with a silicon microring modulator utilizing long short term memory regression and deep neural network classification

Journal

OPTICS AND LASER TECHNOLOGY
Volume 171, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.optlastec.2023.110379

Keywords

Silicon photonics; Pulse amplitude modulation (PAM); Long Short Term Memory (LSTM); Deep Neural Network

Ask authors/readers for more resources

We present the first experimental demonstration of a high-capacity short-reach optical communication link which utilizes LSTM and DNN to achieve 300 Gbit/s 8-level pulse amplitude modulation (PAM8) generated by a single microring modulator. The experimental results show that 300 Gbit/s and 270 Gbit/s PAM8 modulation can be achieved at back-to-back and after 1 km transmission respectively.
We present the first experimental demonstration up the authors' knowledge a high-capacity short-reach optical communication link which employs a long-short-term-memory (LSTM) and deep-neural-network (DNN) for enabling 300-Gbit/s (100 Gbaud) 8-level pulse amplitude modulation (PAM8) generated by a single 55-GHz bandwidth silicon microring modulator (SiMRM) with a driving voltage of 1.8-Vpp. As PAM8 modulation has a lower average level-to-level transition energy when compared with that in PAM4, it could be possible to achieve higher energy efficiency when utilizing PAM8 at the same driving voltage. To recover the PAM8 modulation, LSTM and DNN are utilized for regression and classification respectively. The LSTM contains memory cells for dealing with signal time domain dependencies, and has the ability to store, read, and reject data passing through the neural network. The subsequent DNN performs the classification of the 8 levels. Experimental results show that 300 Gbit/s PAM8 modulation is achieved at back-to-back (B2B) and 270 Gbit/s PAM8 is achieved after 1 km standard single-mode-fiber (SSMF) transmission satisfying the soft-decision forward error correction (SD-FEC) bit-error-rate requirement (BER) of 2.4 x 10-2.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.7
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available