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Dive into the research topics where Christos Spatharakis is active.

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Featured researches published by Christos Spatharakis.


Journal of Lightwave Technology | 2016

High Speed Direct Modulation of a Heterogeneously Integrated InP/SOI DFB Laser

Amin Abbasi; Christos Spatharakis; Giannis Kanakis; Nuno Sequeira André; Hadrien Louchet; Andrew Katumba; Jochem Verbist; Hercules Avramopoulos; Peter Bienstman; Xin Yin; Johan Bauwelinck; Günther Roelkens; Geert Morthier

An integrated laser source to a silicon photonics circuit is an important requirement for optical interconnects. We present direct modulation of a heterogeneously integrated distributed feedback laser on and coupled to a silicon waveguide. We demonstrate a 28 Gb/s pseudo-random bit sequence non-return-to-zero data transmission over 2 km non-zero dispersion shifted fiber with a 1-dB power penalty. Additionally, we show 40-Gb/s duobinary modulation generated using the bandwidth limitation of the laser for both back-to-back and fiber transmission configurations. Furthermore, we investigate the device performance for the pulse amplitude modulation (PAM-4) at 20 GBd for high-speed short-reach applications.


international conference on transparent optical networks | 2015

ORCHESTRA - Optical performance monitoring enabling flexible networking

Konstantinos Christodoulopoulos; P. Kokkinos; A. Di Giglio; A. Pagano; N. Argyris; Christos Spatharakis; Stefanos Dris; Hercules Avramopoulos; Jean-Christophe Antona; C. Delezoide; P. Jenneve; Jelena Pesic; Yvan Pointurier; Nicola Sambo; Filippo Cugini; Piero Castoldi; Giacomo Bernini; Gino Carrozzo; Emmanouel A. Varvarigos

An optical network, like any system, has to be observable before it can become subject to optimization, and this is the main capability that ORCHESTRA project introduces. ORCHESTRAs high observability will rely on information provided by the coherent transceivers that can be extended, almost for free, to operate as software defined optical performance monitors (soft-OPM). Novel digital signal processing (DSP) OPM algorithms will be developed and combined with a novel hierarchical monitoring plane, cross-layer optimization algorithms and active-control functionalities. ORCHESTRA vision is to close the control loop, enabling true network dynamicity and unprecedented network capacity efficiency.


optical fiber communication conference | 2015

A 64 Gb/s PAM-4 linear optical receiver

Bart Moeneclaey; Giannis Kanakis; Jochen Verbrugghe; Nikos Iliadis; Wouter Soenen; Dimitrios Kalavrouziotis; Christos Spatharakis; Stefanos Dris; Xin Yin; Paraskevas Bakopoulos; Elad Mentovich; Hercules Avramopoulos; Johan Bauwelinck

We present a linear optical receiver realized on 130 nm SiGe BiCMOS. Error-free operation assuming FEC is shown at bitrates up to 64 Gb/s (32 Gbaud) with 165mW power consumption, corresponding to 2.578 pJ/bit.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2014

Photonic integration enabling new multiplexing concepts in optical board-to-board and rack-to-rack interconnects

Dimitrios Apostolopoulos; Paraskevas Bakopoulos; Dimitrios Kalavrouziotis; Giannis Giannoulis; Giannis Kanakis; Nikos Iliadis; Christos Spatharakis; Johan Bauwelinck; Hercules Avramopoulos

New broadband applications are causing the datacenters to proliferate, raising the bar for higher interconnection speeds. So far, optical board-to-board and rack-to-rack interconnects relied primarily on low-cost commodity optical components assembled in a single package. Although this concept proved successful in the first generations of opticalinterconnect modules, scalability is a daunting issue as signaling rates extend beyond 25 Gb/s. In this paper we present our work towards the development of two technology platforms for migration beyond Infiniband enhanced data rate (EDR), introducing new concepts in board-to-board and rack-to-rack interconnects. The first platform is developed in the framework of MIRAGE European project and relies on proven VCSEL technology, exploiting the inherent cost, yield, reliability and power consumption advantages of VCSELs. Wavelength multiplexing, PAM-4 modulation and multi-core fiber (MCF) multiplexing are introduced by combining VCSELs with integrated Si and glass photonics as well as BiCMOS electronics. An in-plane MCF-to-SOI interface is demonstrated, allowing coupling from the MCF cores to 340x400 nm Si waveguides. Development of a low-power VCSEL driver with integrated feed-forward equalizer is reported, allowing PAM-4 modulation of a bandwidth-limited VCSEL beyond 25 Gbaud. The second platform, developed within the frames of the European project PHOXTROT, considers the use of modulation formats of increased complexity in the context of optical interconnects. Powered by the evolution of DSP technology and towards an integration path between inter and intra datacenter traffic, this platform investigates optical interconnection system concepts capable to support 16QAM 40GBd data traffic, exploiting the advancements of silicon and polymer technologies.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2016

112 Gb/s sub-cycle 16-QAM Nyquist-SCM for intra-datacenter connectivity

Paraskevas Bakopoulos; Stefanos Dris; Nikolaos Argyris; Christos Spatharakis; Hercules Avramopoulos

Datacenter traffic is exploding. Ongoing advancements in network infrastructure that ride on Moore’s law are unable to keep up, necessitating the introduction of multiplexing and advanced modulation formats for optical interconnects in order to overcome bandwidth limitations, and scale lane speeds with energy- and cost-efficiency to 100 Gb/s and beyond. While the jury is still out as to how this will be achieved, schemes relying on intensity modulation with direct detection (IM/DD) are regarded as particularly attractive, due to their inherent implementation simplicity. Moreover, the scaling-out of datacenters calls for longer transmission reach exceeding 300 m, requiring single-mode solutions. In this work we advocate using 16-QAM sub-cycle Nyquist-SCM as a simpler alternative to discrete multitone (DMT), but which is still more bandwidth-efficient than PAM-4. The proposed optical interconnect is demonstrated at 112 Gb/s, which, to the best of our knowledge, is the highest rate achieved in a single-polarization implementation of SCM. Off-the-shelf components are used: A DFB laser, a 24.3 GHz electro-absorption modulator (EAM) and a limiting photoreceiver, combined with equalization through digital signal processing (DSP) at the receiver. The EAM is driven by a low-swing (<1 V) arbitrary waveform generator (AWG), which produces a 28 Gbaud 16-QAM electrical signal with carrier frequency at ~15 GHz. Tight spectral shaping is leveraged as a means of maintaining signal fidelity when using low-bandwidth electro-optic components; matched root-raised-cosine transmit and receive filters with 0.1 excess bandwidth are thus employed. Performance is assessed through transmission experiments over 1250 m and 2000 m of SMF.


communication systems and networks | 2014

Frequency offset estimation and carrier phase recovery for high-order QAM constellations using the Viterbi-Viterbi monomial estimator

Christos Spatharakis; Nikolaos Argyris; Stefanos Dris; Hercules Avramopoulos

We present two novel, low-complexity feedforward algorithms for frequency offset estimation (FOE) and carrier phase recovery (CPR) in coherent optical M-QAM systems, employing the Viterbi-Viterbi monomial-based estimator. The FOE scheme is an extension of the phase-increment algorithm used for QPSK, while CPR is achieved with a robust, two-stage algorithm that does not rely on a computationally expensive Blind Phase Search (BPS) stage. Simulations show performance close to that of BPS for square constellations up to 256-QAM, while the penalty when both FOE and CPR are operated together is shown to be negligible.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2016

Scaling single-wavelength optical interconnects to 180 Gb/s with PAM-M and pulse shaping

Stefanos Dris; Paraskevas Bakopoulos; Nikolaos Argyris; Christos Spatharakis; Hercules Avramopoulos

Faced with surging datacenter traffic demand, system designers are turning to multi-level optical modulation with direct detection as the means of reaching 100 Gb/s in a single optical lane; a further upgrade to 400 Gb/s is envisaged through wavelength-multiplexing of multiple 100 Gb/s strands. In terms of modulation formats, PAM-4 and PAM-8 are considered the front-runners, striking a good balance between bandwidth-efficiency and implementation complexity. In addition, the emergence of energy-efficient, high-speed CMOS digital-to-analog converters (DACs) opens up new possibilities: Spectral shaping through digital filtering will allow squeezing even more data through low-cost, low-bandwidth electro-optic components. In this work we demonstrate an optical interconnect based on an EAM that is driven directly with sub-volt electrical swing by a 65 GSa/s arbitrary waveform generator (AWG). Low-voltage drive is particularly attractive since it allows direct interfacing with the switch/server ASIC, eliminating the need for dedicated, power-hungry and expensive electrical drivers. Single-wavelength throughputs of 180 and 120 Gb/s are experimentally demonstrated with 60 Gbaud optical PAM-8 and PAM-4 respectively. Successful transmission over 1250 m SMF is achieved with direct-detection, using linear equalization via offline digital signal processing in order to overcome the strong bandwidth limitation of the overall link (~20 GHz). The suitability of Nyquist pulse shaping for optical interconnects is also investigated experimentally with PAM-4 and PAM-8, at a lower symbol rate of 40 Gbaud (limited by the sampling rate of the AWG). To the best of our knowledge, the rates achieved are the highest ever using optical PAM-M formats.


optical fiber communication conference | 2015

High performance carrier phase recovery for coherent optical QAM

Nikolaos Argyris; Stefanos Dris; Christos Spatharakis; Hercules Avramopoulos

A simple feedforward phase recovery algorithm for M-QAM constellations is presented. Performance is evaluated as a function of laser linewidth and SNR for 16- and 64-QAM, and is compared to that of the Blind Phase Search algorithm.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2013

Blind SNR estimation for QAM constellations based on the signal magnitude statistics

Stefanos Dris; Christos Spatharakis; Paraskevas Bakopoulos; Ioannis Lazarou; Hercules Avramopoulos

We present a novel non-data-aided algorithm that uses only the magnitude of the received signal for accurate estimation of the signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) in M-QAM optical coherent digital receivers. The Koay inversion method that only works with constant-modulus signals, is extended through analytically exact expressions so as to allow application to any multi-level, complex modulation scheme. Performance is evaluated via simulation for formats up to 64-QAM and is shown to be superior than the decision-directed error vector magnitude (EVM) method at low SNR, while outperforming schemes based on the method of moments at high SNR.


Optical Interconnects XVIII | 2018

Optical datacenter network employing slotted (TDMA) operation for dynamic resource allocation

Konstantinos Tokas; Hercules Avramopoulos; Dionysios I. Reisis; Ioannis Patronas; Angelos Kyriakos; Giada Landi; Marco Capitani; Muzzamil Aziz; Konstantinos Christodoulopoulos; E. Varvarigos; Eitan Zahavi; Paraskevas Bakopoulos; Christos Spatharakis

The soaring traffic demands in datacenter networks (DCNs) are outpacing progresses in CMOS technology, challenging the bandwidth and energy scalability of currently established technologies. Optical switching is gaining traction as a promising path for sustaining the explosive growth of DCNs; however, its practical deployment necessitates extensive modifications to the network architecture and operation, tailored to the technological particularities of optical switches (i.e. no buffering, limitations in radix size and speed). European project NEPHELE is developing an optical network infrastructure that leverages optical switching within a software-defined networking (SDN) framework to overcome the bandwidth and energy scaling challenges of datacenter networks. An experimental validation of the NEPHELE data plane is reported based on commercial off-the-shelf optical components controlled by FPGA boards. To facilitate dynamic allocation of the network resources and perform collision-free routing in a lossless network environment, slotted operation is employed (i.e. using time-division multiple-access - TDMA). Error-free operation of the NEPHELE data plane is verified for 200 μs slots in various scenarios that involve communication between Ethernet hosts connected to custom-designed top-of-rack (ToR) switches, located in the same or in different datacenter pods. Control of the slotted data plane is obtained through an SDN framework comprising an OpenDaylight controller with appropriate add-ons. Communication between servers in the optical-ToR is demonstrated with various routing scenarios, concerning communication between hosts located in the same rack or in different racks, within the same or different datacenter pods. Error-free operation is confirmed for all evaluated scenarios, underpinning the feasibility of the NEPHELE architecture.

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Hercules Avramopoulos

National Technical University of Athens

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Paraskevas Bakopoulos

National Technical University of Athens

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Stefanos Dris

National Technical University of Athens

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Giannis Kanakis

National Technical University of Athens

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Konstantinos Tokas

National Technical University of Athens

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Nikolaos Argyris

National Technical University of Athens

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Dionysios I. Reisis

National and Kapodistrian University of Athens

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Ioannis Patronas

National Technical University of Athens

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N. Argyris

National Technical University of Athens

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