ADCs key for high baud-rate coherent systems

Increasing the baud rate of coherent modems benefits optical transport. The higher the baud rate the more data can be sent on a wavelength, reducing the cost-per-bit of traffic.
But engineers have become so good at designing coherent systems that they are now approaching the Shannon limit.
At the OFC show earlier this year, Ciena showcased a coherent module operating at 107 gigabaud (GBd). And last year, Acacia, now part of Cisco, announced its next-generation 1.2 terabits-per-second (Tbps) wavelength coherent module operating at up to 140GBd.
The industry believes that increasing the baud rate to 240+GBd is possible, but each new symbol-rate hike is challenging.
All the components in a modem – the coherent DSP and its digital-to-analogue (DAC) and analogue-to-digital (ADC) converters, the optics, and the analogue drive circuitry – must scale in lockstep.
Gigabaud and giga-samples
Coherent DSPs continue to improve in optical performance with each new CMOS process. The latest DSPs will use 5nm CMOS, while the semiconductor industry is developing 3nm CMOS and beyond.
Optical device performance is also scaling. For example, a 220GBd thin-film lithium niobate modulator has been demonstrated in the lab, while photodetectors will also achieve similar rates.
However, the biggest challenge facing coherent modem engineers is the analogue drive circuitry and the coherent DSP’s ADCs and DACs.
A key performance metric is its sampling rate measured in giga-samples-per-second (Gsps).

According to Nyquist, a signal needs to be sampled at twice its baud rate to be perfectly reconstructed. But that doesn’t mean sampling is always done at twice the baud rate. Instead, depending on the DSP implementation, the sampling rate is typically 1.2-1.6x the symbol rate.
“So, for a 200 gigabaud coherent modem, the DSP’s converters must operate at 240+ giga-samples per second,” says Tomislav Drenski, marketing manager, wireline, at Socionext Europe.
Socionext
Socionext is a system-on-chip specialist founded in 2015 with the combination of the system LSI divisions of Fujitsu and Panasonic, with its headquarters in Japan. Its European arm focuses on mixed-signal design, especially ADC, DACs and serialisers/ deserialisers (Serdes).
The company has developed 8-bit converters for several generations of long-haul optical designs, at 200Gbps, 400Gbps and greater than 1Tbps (see bottom photo). These optical systems used ADCs and DACs operating at 65, 92 and 128Gsps, respectively.
Socionext works with leading coherent optical module and network system providers but is also providing 5G and wireless ASIC solutions.
“We design the ADCs and DACs, which are ultra-high-speed, state-of-the-art circuit blocks, while our partners have their ideas on how the DSP should look,” says Drenski. “They provide us the DSP block, and we integrate everything into one chip.”
It is not just the quality of the circuit block that matters but how the design is packaged, says Drenski: “If the crosstalk or the losses in the package are too high, then whatever you have got with the IP is lost in the packaging.”
Any package-induced loss or added capacitance decreases bandwidth. And bandwidth, like sampling rate, is key to achieving high baud-rate coherent systems.
Design considerations
An important ADC metric is its resolution: the number of bits it uses to sample a signal. For high-performance coherent designs, 8-bit ADCs are used. However, because of the high sampling rate required and the associated jitter performance, the effective number of bits (ENOB) – an ADC metric – reduces to some 6 bits.
“People are asking for 10-bit converters for newer generations of design; these are shorter reach, not ultra-long-haul,” says Drenski.
Extra bits add fidelity and enable the recovery of higher-order modulated signals. Still, for ultra-long-haul, where the optical loss is more significant, using a 10-bit ADC makes little sense.
For 5G and wireless applications, higher resolutions, even going up to 14bit, is the recent trend. But such solutions use a lower sampling rate – 30Gsps – to enable the latest, direct-RF applications.

ADC architecture
An interleaved architecture enables an 8-bit ADC to sample a signal 128 billion times a second.
At the input to the ADC sits a sample-and-hold circuit. This circuit feeds a hierarchy of interleaved ‘sub-ADCs’. The interleaving goes from 1 to 4, then 4 to 16, 16 to 64, with the sub-ADCs all multiplexed.
“You take the signal and sample-and-hold it, then push everything down to many sub-ADCs to have the necessary speed at the end, at the output,” says Drenski.
These sub-ADCs must be aligned, and that requires calibration.
An ADC has three key metrics: sampling rate, bandwidth and ENOB. All three are interdependent.
For example, if you have a higher bandwidth, you will have a higher frequency, and clock jitter becomes a limiting factor for ENOB. Therefore, the number of sub-ADCs used must be well balanced and optimised to realise the high sampling frequencies needed without affecting ENOB. The challenge for the designer is keeping the gain, bias and timing variations to a minimum.
Drenski says designing the ADC is more challenging than the DAC, but both share common challenges such as clock jitter and also matching the path lengths of the sub-DACs.
240 gigabaud coherent systems
Can the bandwidth of the ADC reach 240+GBd?
“It all comes down to how much power you can spend,” says Drenski. “The more power you can spend to linearise, equalise, or optimise, the better.”
Noise is another factor. The amount of noise allowed determines how far the bandwidth can be increased. And with higher bandwidth, there is a need for higher clock speeds. “If we have higher clock speeds, we have higher complexity, so everything gets more complicated,” says Drenski.
The challenges don’t stop there.
Higher sampling rates mean the number of sub-ADCs must be increased, affecting circuit size and power consumption. And limiting the power consumption of the coherent DSP is a constant challenge.
At some point, the physical limitations of the process – the parasitics – limit bandwidth, independent of how the ADC circuitry is designed.
Coherent optics specialists like Acacia, Nokia, ADVA and Lumentum say that 220-240 gigabaud coherent systems are possible and will be achieved before the decade’s end.
Drenski agrees but stresses just how challenging this will be.
For him, such high baud rate coherent systems will only be possible if the electronics and optics are tightly co-integrated. Upping the bandwidth of each essential element of the coherent system, like the coherent DSP’s ADCs and DACs, is necessary but will not work alone.
What is needed is bringing both worlds together, the electronics and the optics.
2020 vision
In a panel discussion at the recent Level123 Terabit Optical and Data Networking conference, Kim Roberts, senior director coherent systems at Ciena, shared his thoughts about the future of optical transmission.
Final part : Optical transmission in 2020
"Four hundred Gigabit and one Terabit are not going to start in long-haul"
Kim Roberts, Ciena
Kim Roberts starts on a cautionary note, warning of the dangers when predicting the future. "It is always wrong," he says. But in his role as a developer of systems, he must consider what technologies are going to be useful in 2020.
The simple answer is cheap, flexible optical spectrum and coherent modems (DSP-ASICs).
Since DSP-ASICs will become cheaper and consume less power as they are implemented using the latest CMOS processes, they will migrate from their initial use in long-haul/ regional networks to the metro and even the campus. "Four hundred Gigabit and one Terabit are not going to start in long-haul," says Roberts.
Traditionally, the long-haul network has been where new technology is introduced since it is the part of the network where premium prices can first be justified. "It is not going to start there; it won't have that reach," he says. Instead 400 Gigabit-per-second (Gbps) and one Terabit wavelengths will start over medium reaches - 500-700km - once they become more economical.
One consequence is that when going distances beyond medium reach, more spectrum will be required. "You'll have to light up more fibres [for long-haul], whereas in metro-regional you can put more down one fibre," says Roberts.
The current trend of greater functionality and intelligence being encapsulated in an ASIC will continue but Roberts does not rule out a new kind of optical device delivering a useful function. "It can happen quite suddenly - optical amplifiers happened really suddenly." That said, he does not see any such candidate optical technology for now.
The trends Roberts does expect through to 2020 are as follows:
- Optical pulse shaping: Technologies such as optical regeneration and optical demultiplexing have existed in the labs. But such techniques are not spectrally efficiency and are hot, large and expensive, he says. As a result, he does not expect them to become economical for commercial products by 2020.
- Photonic Switching: Optical burst switch, optical label switching, optical packet switching, all will not prove themselves to be economical by 2020. "Optics is not the right answer in the medium term," says Roberts.
- Optical wavelength conversion, optical logic, optical CDMA and optical solitons are other technologies in Roberts' view that will not be economical by 2020.
What Roberts does identify as being useful through 2020 are:
- Low loss, high dispersion, low non-linearities fibre: "New fibres from the likes of Sumitomo and Corning allow the exploitation of coherent modems," says Roberts. "High dispersion is good, it is your friend: it helps minimise non-linearities." This was not an accepted view as recently as 2005, he says, but now it is well accepted.
- Low cost, heat and noise, high-powered optical amplifiers: "This is a fairly simple function, let's just make them better and better," he says.
- Low cost, frequency-selective switching: This refers to taking a wavelength-selective switch (WSS) and getting rid of the ITU grid; making the WSS more flexible while lowering its cost and size.
- Coherent modems: As mentioned, these will improve in efficiency in terms of bits/s/dollar as well as higher performance in terms of decibels (dBs), reach and spectral efficiency. "Polishing these [metrics]," says Roberts.
Roberts admits that his useful items listed are not exciting, radical breakthroughs: "I think we are in an interval of improving on the trends we already have until there is some breakthrough."
Part 1: The capacity limits facing optical networking
Part 2: Optical transmission's era of rapid capacity growth
Further reading on photonic switching:
Packet optical transport: Hollowing the network core

