RESUMO
We demonstrate photonic reservoir computing (RC) utilizing cross-gain modulation (XGM) in a membrane semiconductor optical amplifier (SOA) on a Si platform. The membrane SOA's features of small active volume and strong optical confinement enable low-power nonlinear operation of the reservoir, with 101-mW-scale power consumption and 102-µW-scale optical input power. The power consumption is about an order of magnitude lower than that of conventional SOAs that exhibit saturable nonlinearity. The XGM-based reservoir is configured by injecting a delayed feedback signal into the SOA from a direction opposite to the input signal. This configuration provides robust operation of the feedback circuit because of the phase insensitivity and the elimination of loop oscillation risk. The RC performance is evaluated via the information processing capacity (IPC) and a nonlinear benchmark task. It is revealed that the XGM-based reservoir performs strong nonlinear transformation of input time-series signals. The series of results consistently show that the membrane SOA performs RC-applicable nonlinear operations through XGM at a low power scale.
RESUMO
Toward the realization of low-cost, long-, and extended-reach 400GbE data-center applications, the performance of pulse amplitude modulated (PAM) signals is studied using a state-of-the-art, high-performance 1.3-µm distributed feedback directly modulated laser, without any optical amplification or complex digital processing. Amplifierless PAM-4 transmissions of up to 64-Gb/s are achieved over 40 km of standard single-mode fiber (SSMF) for standard KP4-FEC, while 84-Gb/s PAM-8 signals are evaluated over 10 km SSMF.