Optical nonlinear impairment compensation based on Deep Neural Network (DNN) for coherent modulation systems

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Abstract

One and most important of the intrinsic challenges facing the optical fibers communication systems and main restriction to limited the system capacity is the fiber nonlinearity impairments. Classical Nonlinear Impairments Compensation (NLC) techniques are widely used and exist on the basis of the approximate Nonlinear Schrodinger Equation (NLSE) solution, their use and requires excessive signal resources, and high-level knowledge accuracy. In addition, their parameterizations can be numerically unstable. Algorithms of Artificial Intelligence (AI) are utilized to determine and resolve the deficiencies by learning from the receiving information itself. To the best of our knowledge, this novel approach is implemented. Therefore, this article proposes a system nonlinearity and single-step compensation algorithm according to a Deep Neural Network (DNN) as a new alternative framework for future optical communications. So, we proposed to use the DNN to compensation the nonlinearity impairments in optical communication systems. The suggested DNN is accessible to higher-order QAM modulations with achieving greater gain in nonlinear impairments compensation compare to classical NLC techniques based on Digital Back Propagation (DBP). Its performance is evaluated experimentally on coherent 65536-bit sequence length with 25 Gbaud single polarization 4-16-64 QAM with 50 and 120 Gb/s back-to-back measurements through using pre-distort symbols at the transmitter for showing Q factor development after 5000 km standard single-mode fiber transmission link. The DNN's weights are to train data with the intrachannel cross-phase modulation (XPM) and self-phase modulation (SPM) that used as input features.

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APA

Jarah, A. H., & Murdas, D. I. A. (2022). Optical nonlinear impairment compensation based on Deep Neural Network (DNN) for coherent modulation systems. Periodicals of Engineering and Natural Sciences, 10(1), 431–441. https://doi.org/10.21533/pen.v10i1.2662

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