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Dive into the research topics where Cyril C. Renaud is active.

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Featured researches published by Cyril C. Renaud.


IEEE Transactions on Microwave Theory and Techniques | 2010

Millimeter-Wave Photonic Components for Broadband Wireless Systems

A Stöhr; S. Babiel; P. Cannard; B. Charbonnier; F. van Dijk; Sascha Fedderwitz; D. G. Moodie; Leon Pavlovic; Lalitha Ponnampalam; Cyril C. Renaud; D. Rogers; Vitaly Rymanov; A.J. Seeds; Andreas G. Steffan; A. Umbach; Marjan M. Weiss

We report on advanced millimeter-wave (mm-wave) photonic components for broadband radio transmission. We have developed self-pulsating 60-GHz range quantum-dash Fabry-Perot mode-locked laser diodes (MLLD) for passive, i.e., unlocked, photonic mm-wave generation with comparably low-phase noise level of -76 dBc/Hz @ 100-kHz offset from a 58.8-GHz carrier. We further report on high-frequency 1.55-μm waveguide photodiodes (PD) with partially p-doped absorber for broadband operation (f3dB ~70-110 GHz) and peak output power levels up to +4.5 dBm @ 110 GHz as well as wideband antenna integrated photomixers for operation within 30-300 GHz and peak output power levels of -11 dBm @ 100 GHz and 6-mA photocurrent. We further present compact 60-GHz wireless transmitter and receiver modules for wireless transmission of uncompressed 1080p (2.97 Gb/s) HDTV signals utilizing the developed MLLD and mm-wave PD. Error-free (BER = 10-9, 231 - 1 PRBS, NRZ) outdoor wireless transmission of 3 Gb/s over 25 m is demonstrated, as well as wireless transmission of uncompressed HDTV signals in the 60-GHz band. Finally, an advanced 60-GHz photonic wireless system offering record data throughputs and spectral efficiencies is presented. For the first time, we demonstrate photonic wireless transmission of data throughputs up to 27.04 Gb/s (EVM 17.6%) using a 16-QAM OFDM modulation format resulting in a spectral efficiency as high as 3.86 b/s/Hz. Wireless experiments were carried out within the regulated 57-64-GHz band in a lab environment with a maximum transmit power of - 1 dBm and 23 dBi gain antennas for a wireless span of 2.5 m. This span can be extended to some 100 m when using high-gain antennas and higher transmit power levels.


Optics Express | 2010

Traveling-wave Uni-Traveling Carrier photodiodes for continuous wave THz generation.

Efthymios Rouvalis; Cyril C. Renaud; D.G. Moodie; Michael J. Robertson; A.J. Seeds

The design, experimental evaluation and performance of a Traveling-Wave Uni-Traveling Carrier photodiode for Terahertz generation are described and its advantages in terms of frequency response are demonstrated. The device delivered 148 microW at 457 GHz, 24 microW at 914 GHz when integrated with resonant antennas and 105 microW at 255 GHz, 30 microW at 408 GHz, 16 microW at 510 GHz and 10 microW at 612 GHz. Record levels of Terahertz figure of merit (PTHz/Popt2 in W(-1)) were achieved ranging from 1 W(-1) at 110 GHz to 0.0024 W(-1) at 914 GHz.


Journal of Lightwave Technology | 2015

TeraHertz Photonics for Wireless Communications

A.J. Seeds; Haymen Shams; Martyn J. Fice; Cyril C. Renaud

Optical fibre transmission has enabled greatly increased transmission rates with 10 Gb/s common in local area networks. End users find wireless access highly convenient for mobile communication. However, limited spectrum availability at microwave frequencies results in per-user transmission rates limited to much lower values, e.g., 500 Mb/s for 5-GHz band IEEE 802.11ac. Extending the high data-rate capacity of optical fiber transmission to wireless devices requires greatly increased carrier frequencies. This paper will describe how photonic techniques can enable ultrahigh capacity wireless data distribution and transmission using signals at millimeter-wave and TeraHertz (THz) frequencies.


IEEE Photonics Technology Letters | 1999

Compact high-energy Q-switched cladding-pumped fiber laser with a tuning range over 40 nm

Cyril C. Renaud; Romeo Selvas-Aguilar; Johan Nilsson; P.W. Turner; A.B. Grudinin

We describe a compact Q-switched diode pumped double-clad ytterbium-doped fiber laser. The fiber laser was bidirectionally pumped by two laser diodes (2 W of output power each) via two side-injecting pump-couplers. We used a large multimode core of 15 /spl mu/m diameter to increase the laser gain volume and thus to achieve higher pulse energy. Experimentally this laser produced pulses with energy up to 170 /spl mu/J with a peak power of 2 kW (at a low repetition rate of 500 Hz) and was tunable from 1060 to 1100 nm.


Proceedings of SPIE , 6194 , Article 61940C. (2006) | 2006

A high responsivity, broadband waveguide uni-travelling carrier photodiode

Cyril C. Renaud; Michael J. Robertson; D. Rogers; R. Firth; P. Cannard; R. Moore; A.J. Seeds

A 0.2 A/W responsivity waveguide-uni-travelling carrier photodiode with a -3 dB electrical frequency response > 108 GHz is demonstrated. Up to -5 dBm electrical power at 110 GHz, and 28 mA photocurrent (DC excitation) were detected. The photodiode was also integrated with an antenna to permit a record breaking emission of up to 148 μW at 457 GHz and 25 μW at 914 GHz.


IEEE Journal of Selected Topics in Quantum Electronics | 2011

Hybrid Integrated Optical Phase-Lock Loops for Photonic Terahertz Sources

R. J. Steed; Lalitha Ponnampalam; Martyn J. Fice; Cyril C. Renaud; David Carnegie Rogers; D.G. Moodie; Graeme Maxwell; I. Lealman; Michael J. Robertson; Leon Pavlovic; Luka Naglic; Matjaz Vidmar; A.J. Seeds

We present the first hybrid-integrated optical phase-lock loop (OPLL) for use in high spectral purity photonic terahertz sources. We have achieved the necessary short loop delay to lock a 1-MHz linewidth slave laser by hybrid integration of the slave laser and photodetector on a silicon motherboard with silica optical waveguides and combining this with a custom-designed low-delay electronic loop filter circuit. The laser and photodetectors are InP-based and are flip chip bonded to silicon daughter boards, which are in turn attached to the motherboard. Delay between the slave laser and photodiode was approximately 50 ps. The heterodyne between slave and master sources has a linewidth of less than 1 kHz and achieved phase noise less than -80 dBc/Hz at an offset of 10 kHz. The slave laser can be offset from the master source by 2-7 GHz, using a microwave oscillator. This integrated OPLL circuit was used with an optical comb source and an injection-locked laser comb filter to generate high spectral purity signals at frequencies up to 300 GHz with linewidths <;1 kHz and powers of about -20 dBm, while the two integrated lasers could deliver a tunable heterodyne signal at frequencies up to 1.8 THz.


IEEE Transactions on Microwave Theory and Techniques | 2012

Continuous Wave Terahertz Generation From Ultra-Fast InP-Based Photodiodes

Efthymios Rouvalis; Cyril C. Renaud; D.G. Moodie; Michael J. Robertson; A.J. Seeds

We present theoretical analysis and experimental results for an optimized Traveling Wave Uni-Traveling Carrier Photodiode for continuous wave millimeter-wave and Terahertz generation. The devices employed a mode-converting waveguide for efficient coupling from a lensed fiber. A DC responsivity of 0.53 A/W at a wavelength of 1.55 μm and 3-dB electrical bandwidth of 108 GHz were obtained from temperature-controlled coplanar waveguide-integrated devices together with record levels of power from a photomixer in the millimeter-wave range with 1 mW at 200 GHz. High levels of Terahertz output power from broadband, heat sink-mounted antenna-integrated devices were measured with 5 μW at 1.02 THz.


Optics Express | 2012

146-GHz millimeter-wave radio-over-fiber photonic wireless transmission system

Martyn J. Fice; Efthymios Rouvalis; F. van Dijk; A. Accard; Francois Lelarge; Cyril C. Renaud; Guillermo Carpintero; A.J. Seeds

The broadband penetration and continuing growth of Internet traffic among residential and business customers are driving the migration of todays end users network access from cable to optical fiber and superbroadband wireless systems The integration of optical and wireless systems operating at much higher carrier frequencies in the millimeter-wave (mm-wave) range is considered to be one of the most promising solutions for increasing the existing capacity and mobility, as well as decreasing the costs in next-generation optical access networks. In this paper, several key enabling technologies for very high throughput wireless-over-fiber networks are reviewed, including photonic mm-wave generation based on external modulation or nonlinear effects, spectrum-efficient multicarrier orthogonal frequency-division multiplexing and single-carrier multilevel signal modulation. We also demonstrated some applications in wireless-over-fiber trials using these enabling techniques. The results show that the integrated systems are practical solutions to offer very high throughput wireless to end users in optically enabled wireless access networks.We report the experimental implementation of a wireless transmission system with a 146-GHz carrier frequency which is generated by optical heterodyning the two modes from a monolithically integrated quantum dash dual-DFB source. The monolithic structure of the device and the inherent low noise characteristics of quantum dash gain material allow us to demonstrate the transmission of a 1 Gbps ON-OFF keyed data signal with the two wavelengths in a free-running state at 146-GHz carrier wave frequency. The tuning range of the device fully covers the W-band (75 - 110 GHz) and the F-band (90 - 140 GHz).


Journal of Lightwave Technology | 2014

Microwave Photonic Integrated Circuits for Millimeter-Wave Wireless Communications

Guillermo Carpintero; Katarzyna Balakier; Z. Yang; A Antonio Corradi; A. Jimenez; Gaël Kervella; Martyn J. Fice; Marco Lamponi; M. Chitoui; F. van Dijk; Cyril C. Renaud; Adrian Wonfor; E.A.J.M. Bente; Richard V. Penty; I.H. White; A.J. Seeds

This paper describes the advantages that the introduction of photonic integration technologies can bring to the development of photonic-enabled wireless communications systems operating in the millimeter wave frequency range. We present two approaches for the development of dual wavelength sources for heterodyne-based millimeter wave generation realized using active/passive photonic integration technology. One approach integrates monolithically two distributed feedback semiconductor lasers along with semiconductor optical amplifiers, wavelength combiners, electro-optic modulators and broad bandwidth photodiodes. The other uses a generic photonic integration platform, developing narrow linewidth dual wavelength lasers based on arrayed waveguide gratings. Moreover, data transmission over a wireless link at a carrier wave frequency above 100 GHz is presented, in which the two lasers are free-running, and the modulation is directly applied to the single photonic chip without the requirement of any additional component.


Optics Express | 2013

Coherent terahertz photonics

A.J. Seeds; Martyn J. Fice; Katarzyna Balakier; Michele Natrella; Oleg Mitrofanov; M. Lamponi; Mourad Chtioui; Frederic van Dijk; M. Pepper; Gabriel Aeppli; A. Giles Davies; Paul Dean; E. H. Linfield; Cyril C. Renaud

We present a review of recent developments in THz coherent systems based on photonic local oscillators. We show that such techniques can enable the creation of highly coherent, thus highly sensitive, systems for frequencies ranging from 100 GHz to 5 THz, within an energy efficient integrated platform. We suggest that such systems could enable the THz spectrum to realize its full applications potential. To demonstrate how photonics-enabled THz systems can be realized, we review the performance of key components, show recent demonstrations of integrated platforms, and give examples of applications.

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A.J. Seeds

University College London

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Martyn J. Fice

University College London

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Haymen Shams

University College London

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Chris Graham

University College London

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