The Impact of Transceiver Noise on Digital Nonlinearity Compensation
Daniel Semrau, Domanic Lavery, Lidia Galdino, Robert I. Killey, Polina, Bayvel

TL;DR
This paper analyzes how transceiver noise affects digital nonlinearity compensation (NLC) in optical fiber systems, providing models and formulas to optimize split NLC configurations for improved signal quality and reach.
Contribution
It introduces an analytical model for SNR in split NLC systems considering transceiver noise, and derives formulas for optimal NLC split ratio and reach gains under different noise regimes.
Findings
Transceiver noise significantly impacts NLC performance at short distances.
Optimal NLC split ratio varies with noise regimes and distance.
Properly tailored split NLC can achieve up to 56% reach gain over conventional methods.
Abstract
The efficiency of digital nonlinearity compensation (NLC) is analyzed in the presence of noise arising from amplified spontaneous emission noise (ASE) as well as from a non-ideal transceiver subsystem. Its impact on signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) and reach increase is studied with particular emphasis on split NLC, where the digital back-propagation algorithm is divided between transmitter and receiver. An analytical model is presented to compute the SNR's for non-ideal transmission systems with arbitrary split NLC configurations. When signal-signal nonlinearities are compensated, the performance limitation arises from residual signal-noise interactions. These interactions consist of nonlinear beating between the signal and co-propagating ASE and transceiver noise. While transceiver noise-signal beating is usually dominant for short transmission distances, ASE noise-signal beating is…
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