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1.IntroductionThe generation and processing of high-speed optical signals are critical issues in current and next-generation information technology applications that require ultrahigh data rates, such as high-capacity communications inside data centers, optical interconnects, and supercomputers.1,2 Among various optical signal generation and processing techniques, the phase modulation (PM) of optical carriers has been widely investigated because of its promise to satisfy the ever-increasing requirements for high-speed data transmission.3–6 The PM of an optical carrier is typically achieved using an external optical modulator, such as an acoustooptic or electrooptic modulator.7,8 However, these external modulators exhibit several limitations, including large-form factors and high cost, and are typically difficult to integrate with other photonic devices.9–11 To overcome these limitations, optical injection-locked (OIL) lasers have been proposed and found effective for generating signals with PM simply by changing the injection-locking parameters, specifically, the detuning frequency between the master and free-running slave lasers and the injection ratio between the powers of the master and slave lasers.12–14 We recently reported the theoretical analysis of the PM of an OIL laser based on the direct modulation (DM) of a slave laser, the results of which demonstrated the successful enhancement of the PM range up to 360 deg using a cascaded connection of injection-locked laser stages.15 Although use of a DM-OIL laser is a simple and efficient means for producing a PM optical signal, the output signal contains a combination of both PM and amplitude modulation (AM) components, which limits the application of the resulting PM optical signal. To address this limitation, the PM component must be isolated and extracted. Herein, we present a simple phase extraction method applicable to the PM–AM combined signal produced by a DM-OIL. We analyze the PM–AM combined effect of the DM-OIL using coupled rate equations and perform a theoretical investigation of pure PM extraction using an optical homodyne method. The pure AM component can be captured by square-law photodetection and can then be used to compensate for the combined PM–AM signal. Using the AM compensation method, we successfully isolated the pure PM component. The proposed pure PM extraction technique enables the use of DM-OILs in real-field PM applications, such as complex-format optical signal generation, optical signal processing, coherent optical communications, and light detection and ranging (LIDAR) systems. 2.Operating PrincipleFigure 1 shows a schematic, the principles of a DM-OIL laser, and the mechanism of PM–AM combined optical signal generation. To generate a PM–AM optical signal using an OIL laser, two injection-locking parameters must be controlled, namely, the detuning frequency and the injection ratio , where and are the frequencies of the optical signals from the master and free-running slave lasers, respectively, and and are the photon numbers of the master and the free-running slave lasers, respectively. We recently proposed a simple and efficient method for producing a PM optical signal by controlling the injection-locking parameters of a directly modulated slave laser.15 The phase and amplitude of the injection-locked laser can be modulated by changing the bias current of the slave laser. The magnitude of the AM component in the PM–AM combined optical signal can be readily evaluated using affordable optical instruments, such as an optical spectrum analyzer or optical power meter; however, the magnitude of the PM component is not so easily measured. The optical homodyne method can be used to determine the magnitude of the PM, as shown in Fig. 2.16 The optical signal from the master laser is characterized by a field amplitude of , an angular frequency of , and an optical phase of . A portion of the master laser signal is used to achieve injection locking in the slave laser, while the remainder is sent to an external optical modulator. The OIL signal simultaneously modulates the field amplitude of and phase of by changing the bias current of the slave laser, whereas the angular frequency of is locked to the angular frequency of the master laser within a stable injection-locking range. The portion of the master laser signal sent to the external optical modulator is modulated by an electrical radio-frequency (RF) signal with an angular frequency of . The modulated optical signal produced by the external modulator exhibits optical double sidebands, as shown in Fig. 2. The PM–AM optical signal from the DM-OIL is mixed with an RF-modulated optical signal in an optical combiner and detected using a photodetector. The amplitude and phase of the master laser and the amplitude of the RF signal are all fixed at constant values, whereas the amplitude and phase of the DM-OIL are modulated by changing the bias current of the slave laser. The signal amplitude detected by the typical homodyne detection technique contains both the AM and PM optical components. However, to be useful in many real applications, the AM and PM components must be separated. To accomplish this, we propose a pure-PM extraction method in a DM-OIL semiconductor laser, as shown in Fig. 3. The signal from a DM-OIL semiconductor laser is divided into two separate signals, which is different than the typical homodyne detection configuration shown in Fig. 2. A portion of the signal is detected by a photodetector , from which the pure AM component is extracted. The remainder of the signal is combined with an RF-modulated optical signal to achieve homodyne detection using the same procedure as that shown in Fig. 2. The PM–AM combined optical signal is detected by a photodetector , and the AM component is compensated for by the signal acquired from . Correspondingly, the amount of PM can be determined from the AM compensation because the compensated signal contains only the variable , which is the pure PM of the DM-OIL semiconductor laser. 3.TheoryWe performed a theoretical analysis of the method used to extract the PM from the output of a DM-OIL semiconductor laser by AM compensating for the typical homodyne detection method. Our analysis was based on where and are the time-varying optical field expressions of the master and injection-locked lasers, respectively; , , and are the field amplitude, angular frequency, and initial phase of the master laser, respectively; and , are the amplitude and phase of the OIL laser, respectively. The term can be expressed as , where is the phase shift of the OIL laser. The and terms can be calculated using the standard coupled-rate equation that describes the behavior of an OIL laser17 where , , and are the photon number, phase, and carrier number of an injection-locked slave laser, respectively, and is the transparency carrier number of a free-running slave laser, which is defined as , where , , and are the threshold carrier number, photon decay rate, and linear gain, respectively. The term is the angular frequency difference between the master and free-running slave lasers, is the linewidth enhancement factor of the laser, is the number of electrons in the DC bias of the slave laser, is the field coupling ratio between the master and free-running slave lasers, and is the carrier decay rate. The phase shift of the injection-locked laser can be derived as where is the steady-state photon number given by where is the steady-state carrier number. From Eq. (7), can be modulated by either varying or , which are closely related to, or identical to, the definitions of the injection-locking parameters and . The modulated phase shift is in the rangeAlthough the optical PM obtained using an injection-locked semiconductor laser can be controlled by tuning the injection-locking parameters, the PM index is typically limited to . The index can be enhanced to if a cascaded OIL configuration is employed.15 The steady-state photon number can be modulated by varying either or , which changes the DC current of the slave laser. Using Eqs. (7) and (8), a time-varying optical field expression of the injection-locked laser can be obtained.13,17–20 The master laser signal is modulated by an external optical modulator with an electrical signal where , , and are the field amplitude, angular frequency, and phase of the modulating RF signal, respectively. The corresponding modulated optical signal is thenThe signal can be combined with in an optical combiner to achieve homodyne detection, and the combined signal can be detected using a square-law photodetector. The photodetector signal is The corresponding amplitude for an angular frequency term detected by the photodetector is The signal at detected by the square-law photodetector contains two variables and as in Eq. (13). This is because both the amplitude and phase of the OIL laser can be simultaneously modulated by changing the injection-locking parameters. The output of the DM-OIL laser clearly exhibits a PM–AM combined optical signal, which can be readily measured by a square-law photodetector, as in Eq. (13). Finally, the pure phase amount is 4.Simulation and ResultsFigure 4(a) shows the injection-locking map as a function of the detuning frequency and injection ratio. The shaded region is the stable locking regime. We used the standard coupled-rate equations [Eqs. (4)–(6)] to characterize the behavior of an OIL laser, as we did in our previous work.15 The simulation parameters are shown in Table 1.17 The slave laser DC bias current was used as a tuning parameter to modify the injection-locking conditions. When the slave laser DC bias current was varied, the two injection-locking parameters, namely, the detuning frequency and injection ratio , changed simultaneously. The arrow lines in Fig. 4(a) show the evolution of the locking conditions when the slave laser DC current changed from 3.6 to 22.9 mA. The two values of the bias currents, 3.6 and 22.9 mA, were chosen because the maximum phase shift of 70.1 deg can be achieved between these bias values. A linewidth enhancement factor of 1 was used for all analyses in this manuscript. The color map in Fig. 4(a) corresponds to a phase shift of the injection-locked laser as a function of the injection-locking parameters. The PM of the OIL laser caused by the DC current change of the slave laser is shown in Fig. 4(b) and ranges from 25.6 deg to 44.5 deg. Similarly, the color map in Fig. 4(c) shows the square root of the photon number of the OIL laser. This corresponds to the AM of the OIL laser caused by the change in the slave laser DC bias current. Figure 4(d) shows the amount of AM caused by the DC bias current change in the slave laser. Figures 4(b) and 4(d) clearly show the PM–AM combined effect in the DM-OIL semiconductor laser. Table 1Simulation parameters.
Figure 5(a) shows the amplitude of the PM–AM combined signal detected by a square-law photodetector using the typical homodyne detection method shown in Fig. 2. The signal amplitude contains both PM and AM components. The pure AM component in Fig. 4(d) can be measured either by an optical power meter or photodetector, whereas the pure PM component in Fig. 4(b) cannot be easily measured by commercially available optical instruments. Therefore, the PM–AM combined signal in Fig. 5(a) requires a compensation process based on the pure AM component to fully extract the PM component. Figure 5(b) shows the adjusted amount of PM after application of the AM compensation method using Eq. (14). The absolute phase shift range from 25.6 deg and 44.5 deg can be extracted, as shown by the red solid and blue dashed curves in Fig. 5(b). The phase of the OIL laser moves from a negative to positive value when the slave laser DC bias current increases. It can be seen that a lower bias than 9.9 mA produces a negative phase shift, whereas a higher bias causes a positive phase shift. The phase change from to 44.5 deg can be detected when the slave laser DC current changes from 3.6 to 22.9 mA, as shown by the red solid curve in Fig. 5(b). The results in Fig. 5(b) where the AM compensation method was employed are well matched with those in Fig. 4(b) and, thus, clearly demonstrate that the AM compensation technique can be used to extract the pure PM amount from the PM–AM combined signal. The degree of PM achieved by the DM-OIL semiconductor laser is significantly affected by the linewidth enhancement factor of the slave laser. For this reason, we performed phase extraction of the DM-OIL semiconductor laser for various values of slave lasers. Figure 6(a) shows the compensated homodyne-detected amplitude of the PM–AM combined signal as a function of the slave laser DC bias for various values. Figure 6(b) shows the extracted phase shift using the AM compensation method. The phase shift exhibited significantly different values depending on both the slave laser DC bias current and the parameter, although the shift range was maintained at 70 deg. In the future, it is possible that the relationship between the phase shift and DC bias current can be used to experimentally extract the laser parameter. 5.ConclusionWe performed a theoretical analysis of a method for extracting the PM of a DM-OIL semiconductor laser. First, we found that a DM-OIL semiconductor laser exhibits a PM–AM combined effect based on the coupled-rate laser equations. However, the typical homodyne detection method provides a PM–AM combined product that limits the application of DM-OIL semiconductor lasers. Second, we proposed a simple AM compensation technique based on the square-law detection of a photodetector to extract the PM amount, and the resulting pure AM component was used to compensate for the PM–AM combined component in an RF-modulated homodyne detection signal. The compensation technique enabled us to successfully extract the exact PM amplitude of the DM-OIL semiconductor laser. The application of this simple PM extraction technique to the PM optical signal of a DM-OIL semiconductor laser enables the use of these lasers in coherent optical communications, optical processing, and complex-format signal generation applications. AcknowledgmentsThis work was supported in part by the National Research Foundation of Korea (NRF) under the Basic Science Research Program (No. NRF-2016R1D1A1B03931971), and in part by the Korea Electric Power Corporation (No. R17XA05-74). ReferencesO. Wada,
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BiographyHyuk-Kee Sung received PhD in electrical engineering and computer sciences from the University of California, Berkeley, in 2006. He was a Postdoctoral Researcher with the University of California, Berkeley, and is now with the School of Electronic and Electrical Engineering, Hongik University, Seoul, Korea. His research interests include optoelectronic devices, optical injection locking of semiconductor lasers, optoelectronic oscillators, and optical sensors. |