This paper describes the advantages that the introduction of photonic integration technologies can bring to the development of photonic-enabled wireless communications systems operating in the millimeter wave frequency range. We present two approaches for the development of dual wavelength sources for heterodyne-based millimeter wave generation realized using active/passive photonic integration technology. One approach integrates monolithically two distributed feedback semiconductor lasers along with semiconductor optical amplifiers, wavelength combiners, electro-optic modulators and broad bandwidth photodiodes. The other uses a generic photonic integration platform, developing narrow linewidth dual wavelength lasers based on arrayed waveguide gratings. Moreover, data transmission over a wireless link at a carrier wave frequency above 100 GHz is presented, in which the two lasers are free-running, and the modulation is directly applied to the single photonic chip without the requirement of any additional component. © 2012 IEEE.
CITATION STYLE
Carpintero, G., Balakier, K., Yang, Z., Guzmán, R. C., Corradi, A., Jimenez, A., … Seeds, A. J. (2014). Microwave photonic integrated circuits for millimeter-wave wireless communications. Journal of Lightwave Technology, 32(20), 3495–3501. https://doi.org/10.1109/JLT.2014.2321573
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