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A high-sensitivity and large-capacity free space optical (FSO) communication scheme based on the soliton microcomb (SMC) is proposed. Using ultra-large bandwidth stabilized SMC with a frequency interval of 48.97 GHz as the laser source, 60 optical wavelengths modulated by 2.5 Gbit/s 16-Pulse position modulation (PPM) are transmitted in parallel. A corresponding outfield high-sensitivity 150 Gbit/s FSO communication experiment based on the SMC was carried out with 1 km space distance. Our experimental results show that the best sensitivity of the single comb wavelength which has higher OSNR can reach -52.62 dBm, and the difference is only 1.38 dB from the theoretical limit under the BER of 1 × 10 without forward error correction (FEC). In addition, at BER of 1 × 10, 16-PPM has a higher received sensitivity of 6.73dB and 3.72dB compared to on-off keying (OOK) and differential phase shift keying (DPSK) respectively. Meanwhile, taking the advantage of multi-channel SMC, 60 × 2.5 Gbit/s can achieve 150 Gbit/s large-capacity free-space transmission. For comparison, commercially available single-wavelength laser based FSO communication system have also been performed in the outfield. The outfield experimental results demonstrated the feasibility of high-sensitivity, large-capacity PPM FSO communication based on SMCs and provided a new perspective for the future development of large-capacity, long-haul FSO communication.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1364/OE.465803 | DOI Listing |
Sensors (Basel)
August 2025
School of Communications and Information Engineering, Nanjing University of Posts and Telecommunications, Nanjing 210003, China.
The rapid development of intelligent high-speed railways (HSRs) has significantly improved the transportation efficiency of modern transit systems, while also imposing higher bandwidth demands on mobile communication systems. Free-space optical (FSO) communication technology, as a promising solution, can effectively meet the high-speed data transmission requirements in intelligent HSR scenarios. In this paper, we consider an intelligent HSR system based on beamwidth-adaptive FSO communication and investigate the coverage performance of the system.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe non-perfect factors of the practical photon-counting receiver are recognized as a significant challenge for long-distance photon-limited free-space optical (FSO) communication systems. This paper presents a comprehensive analytical framework for modeling the statistical properties of time-gated single-photon avalanche diode (TG-SPAD) based photon-counting receivers in the presence of dead time, non-photon-number-resolving and afterpulsing effects. Drawing upon the non-Markovian afterpulsing effect, we formulate a closed-form approximation for the probability mass function (PMF) of photon counts.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThis paper proposes a probabilistic convolutional neural network-low density parity check (PCNN-LDPC) demodulation scheme for orbital angular momentum shift keying free-space optical (OAM-SK-FSO) communication systems, with a focus on its bit error rate (BER) performance. Initially, the original information sequences were encoded by a low-density parity check (LDPC) and transformed into superposition state Laguerre Gaussian (LG) beams using a 16-Ary mapping scheme. The transmission of LG beams through atmospheric turbulence was then simulated using the power spectral inversion method, and the dataset was constructed and trained using a convolutional neural network (CNN).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFree-space optical (FSO) communication has emerged as a transformative solution for bridging connectivity gaps in infrastructure-limited regions. This study presents the first, to our knowledge, high-altitude field validation of FSO systems capable of addressing the critical "last mile" connectivity challenge in China's most extreme uninhabited terrain. Through engineered deployment along 5 km of highway G109 in the high-altitude (4856 m) uninhabited Hohxil terrain, we demonstrated a multi-rate (1.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThis paper presents a novel, to the best of our knowledge, high-speed optical communication system achieving a 240 Gbps transmission capacity by integrating step-index few-mode fiber (SI-MMF) and free space optics (FSO). Knowing that Hermite-Gaussian modes (HGMs) are eigenmodes of a free space medium and the linearly polarized modes (LPMs) are eigenmodes of step-index few-mode fiber (SI-FMF), and by considering the similarity between HGM ( and ) and LPM ( and ), respectively, the system employs dual-polarization (DP) and linearly polarized (LP) modes (, , and ), combined with optical code division multiple access (OCDMA) using permutation vector (PV) codes. Each polarization state carries data from three LP modes, with each mode supporting four OCDMA channels, each assigned a unique PV code.
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