Infinera’s ICE flow
Infinera’s newest Infinite Capacity Engine 5 (ICE5) doubles capacity to 2.4 terabits. The ICE, which comprises a coherent DSP and a photonic integrated circuit (PIC), is being demonstrated this week at the OFC show being held in San Diego.
Infinera has also detailed its ICE6, being developed in tandem with the ICE5. The two designs represent a fork in Infinera’s coherent engine roadmap in terms of the end markets they will address.
The ICE5 is targeted at data centre interconnect and applications where fibre in being added towards the network edge. The next-generation access network of cable operators is one such example. Another is mobile operators deploying fibre in preparation for 5G.
First platforms using the ICE5 will be unveiled later this year and will ship early next year.
Infinera’s ICE6 is set to appear two years after the ICE5. Like the ICE4, Infinera’s current Infinite Capacity Engine, the ICE6 will be used across all of Infinera’s product portfolio.
Meanwhile, the 1.2 terabit ICE4 will now be extended to work in the L-band of optical wavelengths alongside the existing C-band, effectively doubling a fibre’s capacity available for service providers.
Infinera’s decision to develop two generations of coherent designs follows the delay in bringing the ICE4 to market.
“The fundamental truth about the industry today is that coherent algorithms are really hard,” says Geoff Bennett, director, solutions and technology at Infinera.
By designing two generations in parallel, Infinera seeks to speed up the introduction of its coherent engines. “With ICE5 and ICE6, we have learnt our lesson,” says Bennett. “We recognise that there is an increased cadence demanded by certain parts of the industry, predominately the internet content providers.”
ICE5
The ICE5 uses a four-wavelength indium-phosphide PIC that, combined with the FlexCoherent DSP, supports a maximum symbol rate of 66Gbaud and a modulation rate of up to 64-ary quadrature amplitude modulation (64-QAM).
Infinera says that the FlexCoherent DSP used for ICE5 is a co-development but is not naming its partners.
Using 64-QAM and 66Gbaud enables 600-gigabit wavelengths for a total PIC capacity of 2.4 terabits. Each PIC is also ‘sliceable’, allowing each of the four wavelengths to be sent to a different location.
Infinera is not detailing the ICE5’s rates but says the design will support lower rates, as low as 200 gigabit-per-second (Gbps) or possibly 100Gbps per wavelength.
Bennett highlights 400Gbps as one speed of market interest. Infinera believes its ICE5 design will deliver 400 gigabits over 1,300km. The 600Gbps wavelength implemented using 64-QAM and 66Gbaud will have a relatively short reach of 200-250km.
“A six hundred gigabit wavelength is going to be very short haul but is ideal for data centre interconnect,” says Bennett, who points out that the extended reach of 400-gigabit wavelengths is attractive and will align with the market emergence of 400 Gigabit Ethernet client signals.
Probabilistic shaping squeezes the last bits of capacity-reach out of the spectrum
Hybrid Modulation
The 400-gigabit will be implemented using a hybrid modulation scheme. While Infinera is not detailing the particular scheme, Bennett cites several ways hybrid modulation can be implemented.
One hybrid modulation technique is to use a different modulation scheme on each of the two light polarisations as a way of offsetting non-linearities. The two modulation schemes can be repeatedly switched between the two polarisation arms. “It turns out that the non-linear penalty takes time to build up,” says Bennett.
Another approach is using blocks of symbols, varying the modulation used for each block. “The coherent receiver has to know how many symbols you are going to send with 64-QAM and how many with 32-QAM, for example,” he says
A third hybrid modulation approach is to use sub-carriers. In a traditional coherent system, a carrier is the output of the transmit laser. To generate sub-carriers, the coherent DSP’s digital-to-analogue converter (DAC) applies a signal to the modulator which causes the carrier to split into multiple sub-carriers.
To transmit at 32Gbaud, four sub-carriers can be used, each modulated at 8Gbaud, says Bennett. Nyquist shaping is used to pack the sub-carriers to ensure there is no spectral efficiency penalty.
“You now have four parallel streams and you can deal with them independently,” says Bennett, who points out that 8Gbaud turns out to be an optimal rate in terms of minimising non-linearities made up of cross-phase and self-phase modulation components.
Sub-carriers can be described as a hybrid modulation approach in that each sub-carrier can be operated at a different baud rate and use a different modulation scheme. This is how probabilistic constellation shaping - a technique that improves spectral efficiency and which allows the data rate used on a carrier to be fine-tuned - will be used with the ICE6, says Infinera.
For the ICE5, sub-carriers are not included. “For the applications we will be using ICE5 for, the sub-carrier technology is not as important,” says Bennett. “Where it is really important is in areas such as sub-sea.”
Silicon photonics has a lower carrier mobility. It is going to be harder and harder to build such parts of the optics in silicon.
Probabilistic constellation shaping
Infinera is not detailing the longer-term ICE6 beyond highlights two papers that were presented at the ECOC show last September that involved a working 100Gbaud sub-carrier-driven wavelength and probabilistic shaping applied to a 1024-QAM signal.
The 100Gbaud rate will enable higher capacity transponders while the use of probabilistic shaping will enable greater spectral efficiency. “Probabilistic shaping squeezes the last bits of capacity-reach out of the spectrum,” says Bennett.
“In ICE6 we will be doing different modulation on each sub-carrier,” says Bennett. “That will be part of probabilistic constellation shaping.” And assuming Infinera adheres to 8Gbaud sub-carriers, 16 will be used for a 100Gbaud symbol rate.
Infinera argues that the interface between the optics and the DSP becomes key at such high baud rates and it argues that its ability to develop both components will give it a system design advantage.
The company also argues that its use of indium phosphide for its PICs will be a crucial advantage at such high baud rates when compared to silicon photonics-based solutions. “Silicon photonics has a lower carrier mobility,” says Bennett. “It is going to be harder and harder to build such parts of the optics in silicon.”
ICE4 embraces the L-band
Infinera’s 1.2 terabit six-wavelength ICE4 was the first design to use Nyquist sub-carriers and SD-FEC gain sharing, part of what Infinera calls its advanced coherent toolkit.
At OFC, Infinera announced that the ICE4 will add the L-band in addition to the C-band. It also announced that the ICE4 has now been adopted across Infinera’s platform portfolio.
The first platforms to use the ICE4 were the Cloud Xpress 2, the compact modular platform used for data centre interconnect, and the XT-3300, a 1 rack-unit (1RU) modular platform targeted at long-haul applications.
A variant of the platform tailored for submarine applications, the XTS-3300, achieved a submarine reach of 10,500km in a trial last year. The modulation format used was 8-QAM coupled with SD-FEC gain-sharing and Nyquist sub-carriers. The resulting spectral efficiency achieved was 4.5bits/s/Hz. In comparison, standard 100-gigabit coherent transmission has a spectral efficiency of 2bits/s/Hz. The total capacity supported in the trial was 18.2 terabits.
Since then, the ICE4 has been added the various DTN-X chassis including the XT-3600 2.4 terabit 4RU platform.
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