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Dive into the research topics where Domanic Lavery is active.

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Featured researches published by Domanic Lavery.


Journal of Lightwave Technology | 2013

Digital Coherent Receivers for Long-Reach Optical Access Networks

Domanic Lavery; Robert Maher; David S. Millar; Benn C. Thomsen; Polina Bayvel; Seb J. Savory

The relative merits of coherent-enabled optical access network architectures are explored, with a focus on achievable capacity, reach and split ratio. We review the progress in implementing the particular case of the ultra dense wavelength division multiplexed (UDWDM) passive optical network (PON), and discuss some challenges and solutions encountered. The applicability of digital signal processing (DSP) to coherent receivers in PONs is shown through the design and implementation of parallelized, low-complexity application-specific digital filters. In this work, we focus on mitigating the impact of local oscillator laser (LO) relative intensity noise (RIN) on receiver sensitivity, and propose an algorithm which compensates for this impairment. This phenomenon is investigated theoretically and then experimentally by evaluating the sensitivity of a coherent receiver incorporating different tunable light sources; a low-RIN external cavity laser (ECL) and a monolithically integrated digital supermode distributed Bragg reflector (DS-DBR) laser. It is shown that the RIN of the signal laser does not significantly contribute to the degradation of the receiver sensitivity. Finally, a 10 Gbit/s coherent PON is demonstrated using a DS-DBR laser as the LO laser. It is found that a receiver sensitivity of -38.8 dBm is achievable assuming the use of hard-decision forward error correction.


Optics Express | 2010

A long-reach ultra-dense 10 Gbit/s WDM-PON using a digital coherent receiver

Domanic Lavery; Maria Ionescu; Sergejs Makovejs; Enrico Torrengo; Seb J. Savory

We investigate the impact of channel spacing and nonlinear transmission over 120 km of standard single mode fiber for a 10 Gbit/s long-reach wavelength division multiplexed passive optical network (WDM-PON). We employed polarization division multiplexed quadrature phase shift keying (PDM-QPSK), which allowed data transmission at 3.125 GBaud, including a 25% overhead for forward error correction. To receive this spectrally efficient modulation format, a digital coherent receiver was employed, allowing for both frequency selectivity and an increased sensitivity of -45 dBm (25 photons/bit).We investigated a channel spacing as low as 5 GHz, for which the loss budget was 48.6 dB, increasing to 54.0 dB for a 50 GHz grid.


Journal of Lightwave Technology | 2015

Replacing the Soft-Decision FEC Limit Paradigm in the Design of Optical Communication Systems

Alex Alvarado; Erik Agrell; Domanic Lavery; Robert Maher; Polina Bayvel

The FEC limit paradigm is the prevalent practice for designing optical communication systems to attain a certain bit error rate (BER) without forward error correction (FEC). This practice assumes that there is an FEC code that will reduce the BER after decoding to the desired level. In this paper, we challenge this practice and show that the concept of a channel-independent FEC limit is invalid for soft-decision bit-wise decoding. It is shown that for low code rates and high-order modulation formats, the use of the soft-decision FEC limit paradigm can underestimate the spectral efficiencies by up to 20%. A better predictor for the BER after decoding is the generalized mutual information, which is shown to give consistent post-FEC BER predictions across different channel conditions and modulation formats. Extensive optical full-field simulations and experiments are carried out in both the linear and nonlinear transmission regimes to confirm the theoretical analysis.


Optics Express | 2011

Generation and long-haul transmission of polarization-switched QPSK at 42.9 Gb/s

David S. Millar; Domanic Lavery; Sergejs Makovejs; Carsten Behrens; Benn C. Thomsen; Polina Bayvel; Seb J. Savory

We demonstrate, for the first time, the generation and transmission of polarization-switched QPSK (PS-QPSK) signals at 42.9 Gb/s. Long-haul transmission of PS-QPSK is experimentally investigated in a recirculating loop and compared with transmission of dual-polarization QPSK (DP-QPSK) at 42.9 Gb/s per channel. A reduction in the required OSNR of 0.7 dB was found at a BER of 3.8 x 10(-3), resulting in an increase in maximum reach of more than 30% for a WDM system operating on a 50 GHz frequency grid. The maximum reach of 13640 km for WDM PS-QPSK is, to the best of our knowledge, the longest distance reported for 40 Gb/s WDM transmission, over an uncompensated link, with standard fiber and amplification.


Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society A | 2016

Maximizing the optical network capacity

Polina Bayvel; Robert Maher; Tianhua Xu; Gabriele Liga; Nikita A. Shevchenko; Domanic Lavery; Alex Alvarado; Robert I. Killey

Most of the digital data transmitted are carried by optical fibres, forming the great part of the national and international communication infrastructure. The information-carrying capacity of these networks has increased vastly over the past decades through the introduction of wavelength division multiplexing, advanced modulation formats, digital signal processing and improved optical fibre and amplifier technology. These developments sparked the communication revolution and the growth of the Internet, and have created an illusion of infinite capacity being available. But as the volume of data continues to increase, is there a limit to the capacity of an optical fibre communication channel? The optical fibre channel is nonlinear, and the intensity-dependent Kerr nonlinearity limit has been suggested as a fundamental limit to optical fibre capacity. Current research is focused on whether this is the case, and on linear and nonlinear techniques, both optical and electronic, to understand, unlock and maximize the capacity of optical communications in the nonlinear regime. This paper describes some of them and discusses future prospects for success in the quest for capacity.


Journal of Lightwave Technology | 2016

4 Tb/s Transmission Reach Enhancement Using 10 × 400 Gb/s Super-Channels and Polarization Insensitive Dual Band Optical Phase Conjugation

Andrew D. Ellis; Mingming Tan; Asif Iqbal; Mohammad Ahmad Zaki Al-Khateeb; Vladimir Gordienko; Gabriel Saavedra Mondaca; Simon Fabbri; Marc Stephens; Mary Elizabeth McCarthy; Andreas Perentos; Ian Phillips; Domanic Lavery; Gabriele Liga; Robert Maher; Paul Harper; Nick Doran; Sergei K. Turitsyn; Stylianos Sygletos; Polina Bayvel

In this paper, we experimentally demonstrate the benefit of polarization insensitive dual-band optical phase conjugation for up to ten 400 Gb/s optical super-channels using a Raman amplified transmission link with a realistic span length of 75 km. We demonstrate that the resultant increase in transmission distance may be predicted analytically if the detrimental impacts of power asymmetry and polarization mode dispersion are taken into account.


Scientific Reports | 2016

Increasing the information rates of optical communications via coded modulation: a study of transceiver performance

Robert Maher; Alex Alvarado; Domanic Lavery; Polina Bayvel

Optical fibre underpins the global communications infrastructure and has experienced an astonishing evolution over the past four decades, with current commercial systems transmitting data rates in excess of 10 Tb/s over a single fibre core. The continuation of this dramatic growth in throughput has become constrained due to a power dependent nonlinear distortion arising from a phenomenon known as the Kerr effect. The mitigation of fibre nonlinearities is an area of intense research. However, even in the absence of nonlinear distortion, the practical limit on the transmission throughput of a single fibre core is dominated by the finite signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) afforded by current state-of-the-art coherent optical transceivers. Therefore, the key to maximising the number of information bits that can be reliably transmitted over a fibre channel hinges on the simultaneous optimisation of the modulation format and code rate, based on the SNR achieved at the receiver. In this work, we use an information theoretic approach based on the mutual information and the generalised mutual information to characterise a state-of-the-art dual polarisation m-ary quadrature amplitude modulation transceiver and subsequently apply this methodology to a 15-carrier super-channel to achieve the highest throughput (1.125 Tb/s) ever recorded using a single coherent receiver.


Optics Express | 2010

Characterization of long-haul 112Gbit/s PDM-QAM-16 transmission with and without digital nonlinearity compensation

Sergejs Makovejs; David S. Millar; Domanic Lavery; Carsten Behrens; Robert I. Killey; Seb J. Savory; Polina Bayvel

In this paper long-haul, single channel, polarization multiplexed 16-state quadrature amplitude modulation (PDM-QAM-16) transmission at 112 Gbit/s is investigated. Novel digital signal processing techniques are used to perform carrier phase estimation and symbol estimation, in combination with nonlinear digital backpropagation. The results obtained demonstrate that the use of digital nonlinear backpropagation increases the optimum launch power from -4 dBm to -1 dBm with a consequent increase in maximum reach from 1440 km to 2400 km, which is a record transmission distance for QAM-16 reported to date for an SMF link with EDFAs only. Furthermore, experimental measurements are supported by simulations, based on the link used in the experiment.


Scientific Reports | 2015

Equalization enhanced phase noise in Nyquist-spaced superchannel transmission systems using multi-channel digital back-propagation

Tianhua Xu; Gabriele Liga; Domanic Lavery; Benn C. Thomsen; Seb J. Savory; Robert I. Killey; Polina Bayvel

Superchannel transmission spaced at the symbol rate, known as Nyquist spacing, has been demonstrated for effectively maximizing the optical communication channel capacity and spectral efficiency. However, the achievable capacity and reach of transmission systems using advanced modulation formats are affected by fibre nonlinearities and equalization enhanced phase noise (EEPN). Fibre nonlinearities can be effectively compensated using digital back-propagation (DBP). However EEPN which arises from the interaction between laser phase noise and dispersion cannot be efficiently mitigated, and can significantly degrade the performance of transmission systems. Here we report the first investigation of the origin and the impact of EEPN in Nyquist-spaced superchannel system, employing electronic dispersion compensation (EDC) and multi-channel DBP (MC-DBP). Analysis was carried out in a Nyquist-spaced 9-channel 32-Gbaud DP-64QAM transmission system. Results confirm that EEPN significantly degrades the performance of all sub-channels of the superchannel system and that the distortions are more severe for the outer sub-channels, both using EDC and MC-DBP. It is also found that the origin of EEPN depends on the relative position between the carrier phase recovery module and the EDC (or MC-DBP) module. Considering EEPN, diverse coding techniques and modulation formats have to be applied for optimizing different sub-channels in superchannel systems.


optical fiber communication conference | 2013

Spectral shaping for mitigating backreflections in a bidirectional 10 Gbit/s coherent WDM-PON

Domanic Lavery; Milen Paskov; Seb J. Savory

Receiver sensitivity penalty due to backreflections in a 10 Gbit/s bidirectional coherent WDM-PON is evaluated for 3 GBd PDM-QPSK. Pulse shaping is applied to reduce the impact of backreflections and enable tolerance to reflections up to -20 dBm.

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Polina Bayvel

University College London

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Robert Maher

University College London

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Benn C. Thomsen

University College London

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Lidia Galdino

University College London

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Alex Alvarado

Eindhoven University of Technology

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Gabriele Liga

University College London

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Milen Paskov

University College London

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David S. Millar

Mitsubishi Electric Research Laboratories

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