Ultra-high bandwidth fiber-optic data transmission with a single chip source
David J. Moss

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates a record-breaking 44.2 Tb/s data transmission over standard fiber using a single chip micro-comb source, showcasing the potential for ultra-high bandwidth optical communications.
Contribution
The work introduces the use of soliton crystal micro-combs for high spectral efficiency data transmission, achieving unprecedented data rates with a single integrated source.
Findings
Achieved 44.2 Tb/s data rate over 75 km fiber in lab and field trials.
Used soliton crystal micro-combs with 48.9 GHz spacing for high spectral efficiency.
Demonstrated error-free transmission with a single chip source.
Abstract
We report world record high data transmission over standard optical fiber from a single optical source. We achieve a line rate of 44.2 Terabits per second (Tb/s) employing only the C-band at 1550nm, resulting in a spectral efficiency of 10.4 bits/s/Hz. We use a new and powerful class of micro-comb called soliton crystals that exhibit robust operation and stable generation as well as a high intrinsic efficiency that, together with an extremely low spacing of 48.9 GHz enables a very high coherent data modulation format of 64 QAM. We achieve error free transmission across 75 km of standard optical fiber in the lab and over a field trial with a metropolitan optical fiber network. This work demonstrates the ability of optical micro-combs to exceed other approaches in performance for the most demanding practical optical communications applications.
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