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Optical Receivers Theory and Operation

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Title: Optical Receivers Theory and Operation


1
Optical Receivers Theory and Operation
  • Xavier Fernando
  • Ryerson Communications Lab
  • http//www.ee.ryerson.ca/fernando

2
Photo Detectors
  • Optical receivers convert optical signal (light)
    to electrical signal (current/voltage)
  • Hence referred O/E Converter
  • Photodetector is the fundamental element of
    optical receiver, followed by amplifiers and
    signal conditioning circuitry
  • There are several photodetector types
  • Photodiodes, Phototransistors, Photon
    multipliers, Photo-resistors etc.

3
Requirements
  • Compatible physical dimensions (small size)
  • Low sensitivity (high responsivity) at the
    desired wavelength and low responsivity elsewhere
    ? wavelength selectivity
  • Low noise and high gain
  • Fast response time ? high bandwidth
  • Insensitive to temperature variations
  • Long operating life and low cost

4
Photodiodes
  • Photodiodes meet most the requirements, hence
    widely used as photo detectors.
  • Positive-Intrinsic-Negative (pin) photodiode
  • No internal gain, robust detector
  • Avalanche Photo Diode (APD)
  • Advanced version with internal gain M due to self
    multiplication process
  • Photodiodes are sufficiently reverse biased
    during normal operation ? no current flow without
    illumination, the intrinsic region is fully
    depleted of carriers

5
Physical Principles of Photodiodes
  • As a photon flux F penetrates into a
    semiconductor, it will be absorbed as it
    progresses through the material.
  • If as(?) is the photon absorption coefficient at
    a wavelength ?, the power level at a distance x
    into the material is

 
Absorbed photons trigger photocurrent Ip in the
external circuitry
6
Examples of Photon Absorption
7
pin energy-band diagram
Cut off wavelength
Cut off wavelength depends on the band gap energy
8
Quantum Efficiency
  • The quantum efficiency ? is the number of the
    electronhole carrier pairs generated per
    incidentabsorbed photon of energy h? and is
    given by

Ip is the photocurrent generated by a
steady-state optical power Pin incident on the
photodetector.
9
Avalanche Photodiode (APD)
  • APD has an internal gain M, which is obtained by
    having a high electric field that energizes
    photo-generated electrons.
  • These electrons ionize bound electrons in the
    valence band upon colliding with them which is
    known as impact ionization
  • The newly generated electrons and holes are also
    accelerated by the high electric field and gain
    energy to cause further impact ionization
  • This phenomena is the avalanche effect

10
APD Vs PIN
  •  

11
Responsivity (?)
  • Quantum Efficiency (?) number of e-h pairs
    generated / number of incident photons
  • APDs have an internal gain M, hence
  • where, M IM/Ip
  • IM Mean multiplied current

mA/mW
M 1 for PIN diodes
12
Responsivity
 
When ?ltlt ?c absorption is low When ? gt ?c no
absorption
13
Light Absorption Coefficient
  • The upper cutoff wavelength is determined by the
    bandgap energy Eg of the material.
  • At lower-wavelength end, the photo response
    diminishes due to low absorption (very large
    values of as).

14
Photodetector Noise
  • In fiber optic communication systems, the
    photodiode is generally required to detect very
    weak optical signals.
  • Detection of weak optical signals requires that
    the photodetector and its amplification circuitry
    be optimized to maintain a given signal-to-noise
    ratio.
  • The power signal-to-noise ratio S/N (also
    designated by SNR) at the output of an optical
    receiver is defined by

SNR Can NOT be improved by amplification
15
Notation Detector Current
  • The direct current value is denoted by, IP
    (capitol main entry and capital suffix).
  • The time varying (either randomly or
    periodically) current with a zero mean is denoted
    by, ip (small main entry and small suffix).
  • Therefore, the total current Ip is the sum of the
    DC component IP and the AC component ip .

 
16
Quantum (Shot Noise)
Quantum noise arises due optical power
fluctuation because light is made up of discrete
number of photons
F(M) APD Noise Figure F(M) Mx (0 x 1)
Ip Mean Detected Current B Bandwidth q
Charge of an electron
17
Dark/Leakage Current Noise
There will be some (dark and leakage ) current
without any incident light. This current
generates two types of noise
Bulk Dark Current Noise
ID Dark Current
Surface Leakage Current Noise
IL Leakage Current
(not multiplied by M)
18
Thermal Noise
The photodetector load resistor RL contributes
to thermal (Johnson) noise current
KB Boltzmanns constant 1.38054 X 10(-23) J/K
T is the absolute Temperature
  • Quantum and Thermal are the significant noise
  • mechanisms in all optical receivers
  • RIN (Relative Intensity Noise) will also appear
    in analog links

19
Signal to Noise Ratio
Detected current AC (ip) DC (Ip)
Signal Power ltip2gtM2
Typically not all the noise terms will have equal
weight. Often thermal and quantum noise are the
most significant.
20
Noise Calculation Example
21
Limiting Cases for SNR
  • When the optical signal power is relatively high,
    then the shot noise power is much greater than
    the thermal noise power. In this case the SNR is
    called shot-noise or quantum noise limited.
  • When the optical signal power is low, then
    thermal noise usually dominates over the shot
    noise. In this case the SNR is referred to as
    being thermal-noise limited.

22
Limiting Cases of SNR
  • In the shot current limited case the SNR is
  • For analog links, there will be RIN (Relative
    Intensity Noise) as well

23
Typical SNR vs. Received Power
  • Note, APD has an advantage only at low received
    power levels

24
Noise-Equivalent Power
  • The sensitivity of a photodetector is describable
    in terms of the minimum detectable optical power
    to have SNR 1.
  • This optical power is the noise equivalent power
    or NEP.
  • Example Consider the thermal-noise limited case
    for a pin photodiode. Then

To find the NEP, set the SNR 1 and solve for P
25
Response Time in pin photodiode
Transit time, td and carrier drift velocity vd
are related by
For a high speed Si PD, td 0.1 ns
26
Rise and fall times
  • Photodiode has uneven rise and fall times
    depending on
  • Absorption coefficient ?s(?) and
  • Junction Capacitance Cj

27
Junction Capacitance
eo 8.8542 x 10(-12) F/m free space
permittivity er the semiconductor dielectric
constant A the diffusion layer (photo
sensitive) area w width of the depletion layer
Large area photo detectors have large junction
capacitance hence small bandwidth (low speed) ? A
concern in free space optical receivers
28
Various pulse responses
Pulse response is a complex function of
absorption coefficient and junction capacitance
29
Comparisons of pin Photodiodes
NOTE The values were derived from various vendor
data sheets and from performance numbers reported
in the literature. They are guidelines for
comparison purposes.
30
Comparisons of APDs
NOTE The values were derived from various vendor
data sheets and from performance numbers reported
in the literature. They are guidelines for
comparison purposes only.
31
Optical receiver
  • Part B

32
Signal Path through an Optical Link
33
Fundamental Receiver Operation
  • The first receiver element is a pin or an
    avalanche photodiode, which produces an electric
    current proportional to the received power level.
  • Since this electric current typically is very
    weak, a front-end amplifier boosts it to a level
    that can be used by the following electronics.
  • After being amplified, the signal passes through
    a low-pass filter to reduce the noise that is
    outside of the signal bandwidth.
  • The also filter can reshape (equalize) the pulses
    that have become distorted as they traveled
    through the fiber.
  • Together with a clock (timing) recovery circuit,
    a decision circuit decides whether a 1 or 0 pulse
    was received,

34
Optical receiver schematic
Bandwidth of the front end CT Total
Capacitance CdCa RT Total Resistance Rb //
Ra Try Example 6.7 in Keiser
35
Noise Sources in a Receiver
  • The term noise describes unwanted components of
    an electric signal that tend to disturb the
    transmission and processing of the signal
  • The random arrival rate of signal photons
    produces quantum (shot) noise
  • Dark current comes from thermally generated eh
    pairs in the pn junction
  • Additional shot noise arises from the statistical
    nature of the APD process
  • Thermal noises arise from the random motion of
    electrons in the detector load resistor and in
    the amplifier electronics

36
Probability of Error (BER)
  • BER is the ratio of erroneous bits to correct
    bits
  • A simple way to measure the error rate in a
    digital data stream is to divide the number Ne of
    errors occurring over a certain time interval t
    by the number Nt of pulses (ones and zeros)
    transmitted during this interval.
  • This is the bit-error rate (BER)
  • Here B is the bit rate.
  • Typical error rates for optical fiber telecom
    systems range from 109 to 1012 (compared to
    10-6 for wireless systems)
  • The error rate depends on the signal-to-noise
    ratio at the receiver (the ratio of signal power
    to noise power).

37
Logic 0 and 1 probability distributions
Asymmetric distributions
Select Vth to minimize Pe
38
Deciding Threshold Voltage
Probability of error assuming Equal ones and
zeros
Where,
Depends on the noise variance at on/off levels
and the Threshold voltage Vth that is decided to
minimize the Pe
Question Do you think Vth ½ Von Voff ?
39
Derived BER Expression
  • A simple estimation of the BER can be calculated
    by assuming the equalizer output is a gaussian
    random variable.
  • Let the mean and variance of the gaussian output
    for a 1 pulse be bon and s2on, respectively, and
    boff and s2off for a 0 pulse.
  • If the probabilities of 0 and 1 pulses are
    equally likely, the bit error rate or the error
    probability Pe becomes

40
Probability of Error Calculation
  • The factor Q is widely used to specify receiver
    performance, since it is related to the SNR
    required to achieve a specific BER.
  • There exists a narrow range of SNR above which
    the error rate is tolerable and below which a
    highly unacceptable number of errors occur. The
    SNR at which this transition occurs is called the
    threshold level.

41
BER as a Function of SNR
  • BER as a function of SNR when the standard
    deviations are equal (son soff) and when boff
    0

42
Receiver Sensitivity
  • A specific minimum average optical power level
    must arrive at the photodetector to achieve a
    desired BER at a given data rate. The value of
    this minimum power level is called the receiver
    sensitivity.
  • Assuming there is no optical power in a received
    zero pulse, then the receiver sensitivity is

Where, including an amplifier noise figure Fn,
the thermal noise current variance is
43
Receiver Sensitivity Calculation
  • The receiver sensitivity as a function of bit
    rate will change for a given photodiode depending
    on values of parameters such as wavelength, APD
    gain, and noise figure.

44
The Quantum Limit
  • The minimum received optical power required for a
    specific bit-error rate performance in a digital
    system.
  • This power level is called the quantum limit,
    since all system parameters are assumed ideal and
    the performance is limited only by the detection
    statistics.

45
Eye Diagrams
  • Eye pattern measurements are made in the time
    domain and immediately show the effects of
    waveform distortion on the display screen of
    standard BER test equipment.
  • The eye opening width defines the time interval
    over which signals can be sampled without
    interference from adjacent pulses (ISI).
  • The best sampling time is at the height of the
    largest eye opening.
  • The eye opening height shows the noise margin or
    immunity to noise.
  • The rate at which the eye closes gives the
    sensitivity to timing errors.
  • The rise time is the interval between the 10 and
    90 rising-edge points

46
Stressed Eye Tests
  • The IEEE 802.3ae spec for testing 10-Gigabit
    Ethernet (10-GbE) devices describes performance
    measures using a degraded signal.
  • This stressed eye test examines the worst-case
    condition of a poor extinction ratio plus
    multiple stresses, ISI or vertical eye closure,
    sinusoidal interference, and sinusoidal jitter.
  • The test assumes that all different possible
    signal impairments will close the eye down to a
    diamond shaped area (0.10 and 0.25 of the full
    pattern height).
  • If the eye opening is greater than this area, the
    receiver being tested is expected to operate
    properly in an actual fielded system.

The inclusion of all possible signal distortion
effects results in a stressed eye with only a
small diamond-shaped opening
47
Architecture of a Typical PON
  • A passive optical network (PON) connects
    switching equipment in a central office (CO) with
    N service subscribers
  • Digitized voice and data are sent downstream from
    the CO to customers over an optical link by using
    a 1490-nm wavelength.
  • The upstream (customer to central office) return
    path for the data and voice uses a 1310-nm
    wavelength.

48
Burst-Mode Receivers
  • The amplitude and phase of packets received in
    successive time slots from different user
    locations can vary widely from packet to packet.
  • If the fiber attenuation is 0.5 dB/km, there is a
    10-dB difference in the signal amplitudes from
    the closest and farthest users.
  • If there are additional optical components in one
    of the transmission paths, then the signal levels
    arriving at the OLT could vary up to 20 dB.
  • A fast-responding burst-mode receiver with high
    sensitivity is needed

The guard time provides a sufficient delay time
to prevent collisions between successive packets
that may come from different ONTs.
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