We experimentally investigate the performance of an active and passive optical fronthaul to be employed in a cloud/centralized radio access network (C-RAN) architecture based on software-defined radio (SDR) for 4G systems, and we discuss the viability to integrate these fronthaul configurations in coexisting 4G/5G systems based on SDR by considering the reconfigurable characteristics of SDRs and the capacity and latency characteristics of the optical fronthaul. The active optical fronthaul consists of two transponders employing dense wavelength division multiplexing (DWDM), whereas the passive optical fronthaul consists of a point-to-point scheme based on DWDM only. To perform a comparative study between the active and passive optical fronthaul in the C-RAN architecture, we have measured the throughput (bit rate) generated via iPerf® for uplink and downlink transmissions at different DWDM channels, and we analyze the losses and latency presented in both optical fronthaul schemes. We found that for different optical fronthaul lengths up to 21.76 km, the bit rate is practically the same for the passive and active fronthaul despite the higher optical losses present in the passive fronthaul in comparison to the active fronthaul. In addition, the latency among active and passive fronthaul are almost similar with an estimated increment of 20 μs in the active fronthaul. These results are independently of the number of remote radio heads (RRHs) and user equipment (UEs) considered in the C-RAN architecture. Our findings put forward the proposed DWDM passive fronthaul as a viable, less complex, and cost-sensitive solution for C-RAN systems with fronthaul lengths up to 21.76 km. These results and all the experiences reported on the C-RAN implementation provide valuable information to design and develop 4G and 5G C-RAN architectures based on SDR with the capability to operate in a DWDM optical fronthaul infrastructure.
We present a numerical analysis of the average intercore crosstalk (IC-XT) of wavelength-division multiplexed (WDM) optical channels in a homogeneous two-core fiber system. This analysis is performed considering cores with zero-dispersion wavelengths at 1550 nm. In the analysis, we consider 11 WDM channels spaced 100 GHz apart transmitted in three different schemes, one centered at 1510 nm with negative dispersion D = − 3.5 ps / nm · km, one centered at 1550 nm with D = 0, and one centered at 1590 nm with D = + 3.5 ps / nm · km. This selection allows for the observation of how the IC-XT of WDM channels is modified using positive, zero, and negative dispersion parameters. To analyze more realistic scenarios of IC-XT in multicore fibers, we considered random bending and twisting perturbations along the fiber. In addition, we considered fiber nonlinearities such as four-wave mixing (FWM) among WDM channels. The results show that FWM produces a power transfer among the transmitted WDM channels that depends on the dispersion parameter D at core 1, and this effect is transferred to the average crosstalk of the WDM channels at core 2. Therefore, the average IC-XT of WDM channels can be modified in a controlled way by selecting an adequate dispersion parameter D in combination with FWM nonlinearity. These results provide valuable information for understanding the wavelength dependence of the average IC-XT of homogeneous multichannel MCF systems working around a zero-dispersion wavelength.
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