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Dive into the research topics where Andrew D. Ellis is active.

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Featured researches published by Andrew D. Ellis.


Journal of Lightwave Technology | 2010

Approaching the Non-Linear Shannon Limit

Andrew D. Ellis; Jian Zhao; D. Cotter

We review the recent progress of information theory in optical communications, and describe the current experimental results and associated advances in various individual technologies which increase the information capacity. We confirm the widely held belief that the reported capacities are approaching the fundamental limits imposed by signal-to-noise ratio and the distributed non-linearity of conventional optical fibres, resulting in the reduction in the growth rate of communication capacity. We also discuss the techniques which are promising to increase and/or approach the information capacity limit.


IEEE Photonics Technology Letters | 2005

Spectral density enhancement using coherent WDM

Andrew D. Ellis; Fatima C. Garcia Gunning

It is shown by numerical simulations that a significant increase in the spectral density of a 40-Gb/s wavelength-division-multiplexing (WDM) system can be obtained by controlling the phase of adjacent WDM channels. These simulations are confirmed experimentally at 40 Gb/s using a coherent comb source. This technique allows the spectral density of a nonreturn-to-zero WDM system to be increased from 0.4 to 1 b/s/Hz in a single polarization. Optical filter optimization is required to minimize power crosstalk, and appropriate strategies are discussed in this letter.


Journal of Lightwave Technology | 2001

Rectangular pulse generation based on pulse reshaping using a superstructured fiber Bragg grating

Periklis Petropoulos; M. Ibsen; Andrew D. Ellis; David J. Richardson

We present a technique for the shaping of short pulses based on the use of superstructured fiber Bragg gratings (SSFBGs). We apply this technique to demonstrate the generation of 20-ps rectangular pulses by phase and amplitude profiling of 2.5-ps soliton pulses. Numerical calculations validate our experimental findings.


Optics Express | 2012

73.7 Tb/s (96 x 3 x 256-Gb/s) mode-division-multiplexed DP-16QAM transmission with inline MM-EDFA

V.A.J.M. Sleiffer; Yongmin Jung; V. Veljanovski; R.G.H. van Uden; Maxim Kuschnerov; Haoshuo Chen; Beril Inan; Lars Grüner-Nielsen; Y. Sun; David J. Richardson; Shaif-ul Alam; Francesco Poletti; J.K. Sahu; Anirban Dhar; A.M.J. Koonen; Brian Corbett; R. Winfield; Andrew D. Ellis; H. de Waardt

Transmission of a 73.7 Tb/s (96 x 3 x 256-Gb/s) DP-16QAM mode-division-multiplexed signal over 119 km of few-mode fiber transmission line incorporating an inline multi mode EDFA and a phase plate based mode (de-)multiplexer is demonstrated. Data-aided 6 x 6 MIMO digital signal processing was used to demodulate the signal. The total demonstrated net capacity, taking into account 20% of FEC-overhead and 7.5% additional overhead (Ethernet and training sequences), is 57.6 Tb/s, corresponding to a spectral efficiency of 12 bits/s/Hz.


Optics Express | 2007

Multi-wavelength source using low drive-voltage amplitude modulators for optical communications

T. Healy; Fatima C. Garcia Gunning; Andrew D. Ellis; Jeff D. Bull

A simple and cost-effective technique for generating a flat, square-shaped multi-wavelength optical comb with 42.6 GHz line spacing and over 0.5 THz of total bandwidth is presented. A detailed theoretical analysis is presented, showing that using two concatenated modulators driven with voltages of 3.5 V(pi) are necessary to generate 11 comb lines with a flatness below 2dB. This performance is experimentally demonstrated using two cascaded Versawave 40 Gbit/s low drive voltage electro-optic polarisation modulators, where an 11 channel optical comb with a flatness of 1.9 dB and a side-mode-suppression ratio (SMSR) of 12.6 dB was obtained.


Optics Express | 2011

Impact of signal-ASE four-wave mixing on the effectiveness of digital back-propagation in 112 Gb/s PM-QPSK systems

Danish Rafique; Andrew D. Ellis

Limitations in the performance of coherent transmission systems employing digital back-propagation due to four-wave mixing impairments are reported for the first time. A significant performance constraint is identified, originating from four-wave mixing between signals and amplified spontaneous emission noise which induces a linear increase in the standard deviation of the received field with signal power, and linear dependence on transmission distance.


Optics Express | 2011

Digital back-propagation for spectrally efficient WDM 112 Gbit/s PM m-ary QAM transmission

Danish Rafique; Jian Zhao; Andrew D. Ellis

We report the performance of coherently-detected nine-channel WDM transmission over high dispersion fibers, using polarization multiplexed m-ary quadrature amplitude modulation (m=4, 16, 64, 256) at 112 Gbit/s. Compensation of fiber nonlinearities via digital back-propagation enables up to 10 dB improvement in maximum transmittable power and ~8 dB Qeff improvement which translates to a nine-fold enhancement in transmission reach for PM-256QAM, where the largest improvements are associated with higher-order modulation formats. We further demonstrate that even under strong nonlinear distortion the transmission reach only reduces by a factor of ~2.5 for a 2 unit increase in capacity (log2m) when full band DBP is employed, in proportion to the required back-to-back OSNR.


Optics Express | 2011

Compensation of intra-channel nonlinear fibre impairments using simplified digital back-propagation algorithm

Danish Rafique; Marco Mussolin; Marco Forzati; Jonas Mårtensson; Mohsan N. Chugtai; Andrew D. Ellis

We investigate a digital back-propagation simplification method to enable computationally-efficient digital nonlinearity compensation for a coherently-detected 112 Gb/s polarization multiplexed quadrature phase shifted keying transmission over a 1,600 km link (20 x 80 km) with no inline compensation. Through numerical simulation, we report up to 80% reduction in required back-propagation steps to perform nonlinear compensation, in comparison to the standard back-propagation algorithm. This method takes into account the correlation between adjacent symbols at a given instant using a weighted-average approach, and optimization of the position of nonlinear compensator stage to enable practical digital back-propagation.


Optics Express | 2013

Demonstration of amplified data transmission at 2 µm in a low-loss wide bandwidth hollow core photonic bandgap fiber

M.N. Petrovich; Francesco Poletti; J.P. Wooler; A.M. Heidt; Naveen K. Baddela; Z. Li; D. R. Gray; Radan Slavík; Francesca Parmigiani; Natalie V. Wheeler; John R. Hayes; E. Numkam; L. Grüner-Nielsen; Bera Palsdottir; Richard Phelan; Brian Kelly; John O'Carroll; Martin Becker; Naoise MacSuibhne; Jian Zhao; F. C. Garcia Gunning; Andrew D. Ellis; Periklis Petropoulos; Shaif-ul Alam; David J. Richardson

The first demonstration of a hollow core photonic bandgap fiber (HC-PBGF) suitable for high-rate data transmission in the 2 µm waveband is presented. The fiber has a record low loss for this wavelength region (4.5 dB/km at 1980 nm) and a >150 nm wide surface-mode-free transmission window at the center of the bandgap. Detailed analysis of the optical modes and their propagation along the fiber, carried out using a time-of-flight technique in conjunction with spatially and spectrally resolved (S2) imaging, provides clear evidence that the HC-PBGF can be operated as quasi-single mode even though it supports up to four mode groups. Through the use of a custom built Thulium doped fiber amplifier with gain bandwidth closely matched to the fibers low loss window, error-free 8 Gbit/s transmission in an optically amplified data channel at 2008 nm over 290 m of 19 cell HC-PBGF is reported.


Journal of Lightwave Technology | 1995

Ultra-high-speed OTDM networks using semiconductor amplifier-based processing nodes

Andrew D. Ellis; D.M. Patrick; D. Flannery; R.J. Manning; D.A.O. Davies; D.M. Spirit

The use of semiconductor amplifiers in high speed communications systems is reviewed. Processing of signals at 10 Gb/s in a 40-Gb/s OTDM network is demonstrated using nonlinear loop mirror configurations, and mode locked ring lasers. Particular attention is paid to the role of carrier density modulation, long believed to be a detrimental effect, and its useful exploitation. >

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Jian Zhao

Tyndall National Institute

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Danish Rafique

Tyndall National Institute

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