Traditional quartz optical fibers can not overcome their own shortcomings in non-linearity, Rayleigh scattering, dispersion and high delay[1,2], while anti-resonant hollow fibers can break through Shannon limit, and have the characteristics of low loss, low delay, high bandwidth and high damage threshold. With the development of new technologies such as Internet of Things and large data, people's increasing demand for information and traditional reuse. Ways including wavelength division multiplexing, frequency division multiplexing and space division multiplexing have gradually encountered bottlenecks [3]. We need to explore new ways of multiplexing, improve the information capacity of communication networks, and meet the growing information needs of people. Through research, we find a new type of cylindrical vector beams, which is not only the spatial orthogonal mode, but also the basis of optical fibers. The signature mode can improve the communication capacity of the channel.
The data rate in a single-mode fiber is approaching the capacity limit given by the Shannon theory. Mode division multiplexing, such as few modes, orbital angular momentum, and cylindrical vector beam (CVB) multiplexing, has shown great potential to further increase data capacity in both free-space and fiber communication. We propose and demonstrate high-order CVB multiplexing communication in an air-core photonics crystal fiber (PCF). The simulation results show that the 19-cell air-core PCF supports transmission of CVB modes from ±1 to ±4 orders. In the experiment, ±1- to ±4-orders CVBs are transmitted in 8.25-m-long air-core PCF with the mode purities higher than 76.5%. We demonstrate four coaxial CVB channel communication by multiplexing the ±2- and ±3-orders CVB modes. Each CVB channel carries 10-Gbit/s on–off keying signals and the measured bit error rates satisfy the forward error correction threshold. CVB communications based on air-core PCF can be used in short-distance optical communication with high capacity and low optical latency.
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