Transmission Characteristics of 80 Gbit/s Nyquist-DWDM System in Atmospheric Turbulence.
Silun Du, Qiaochu Yang, Tuo Chen, Tianshu Wang
Abstract
Open AccessWe experimentally demonstrate an 80 Gbit/s Nyquist-dense wavelength division multiplexed (Nyquist-DWDM) transmission system operating in a simulated atmospheric turbulence channel. The system utilizes eight wavelength-tunable lasers with 100 GHz spacing, modulated by cascaded Mach-Zehnder modulators, to generate phase-locked Nyquist pulse sequences with a 10 GHz repetition rate and a temporal width of 66.7 ps. Each channel is synchronously modulated with a 10 Gbit/s pseudo-random bit sequence (PRBS) and transmitted through controlled weak turbulence conditions generated by a temperature-gradient convection chamber. Experimental measurements reveal that, as the turbulence intensity increases from Cn2=1.01×10-16 to 5.71×10-16 m-2/3, the signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) of the edge channel (C29) and central channel (C33) decreases by approximately 6.5 dB while maintaining stable Nyquist waveform profiles and inter-channel orthogonality. At a forward-error-correction (FEC) threshold of 3.8×10-3, the minimum receiver sensitivity is -17.66 dBm, corresponding to power penalties below 5 dB relative to the back-to-back condition. The consistent SNR difference (<2 dB) between adjacent channels confirms uniform power distribution and low inter-channel crosstalk under turbulence. These findings verify that Nyquist pulse shaping substantially mitigates phase distortion and scintillation effects, demonstrating the feasibility of high-capacity DWDM free-space optical (FSO) systems with enhanced spectral efficiency and turbulence resilience. The proposed configuration provides a scalable foundation for future multi-wavelength FSO links and hybrid fiber-wireless optical networks.