Comparative Performance Analysis of FWM Effect in DWDM System
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Abstract
The non linear effects degrade the system performance. Non linearity effects arose as optical
fiber data rates, transmission lengths, number of wavelengths and optical power levels
increased, there study become important in DWDM system. The two types of nonlinearities
occur in optical fiber are:-
Stimulated scattering such as SRS and SBS
Optical Kerr effect, due to changes in the refractive index of fiber with optical power
Depending upon the type of input sign Kerr-non-linearity represented in three different types
of effects such as Self-Phase Modulation (SPM), Cross-Phase Modulation (CPM) and Four-
Wave Mixing (FWM). At high power level, the inelastic scattering phenomenon can induce
stimulated effects such as Stimulated-Raman Scattering (SRS) and Stimulated Brillion
Scattering (SBS). Four-wave mixing (FWM) is one of the dominating degradation effects in
wavelength-division-multiplexing (WDM) systems with dense channel spacing and low
chromatic dispersion on the fiber. If in a WDM system the channels are equally spaced, the
new waves generated by FWM will fall at channel frequencies and, thus, will give rise to
crosstalk. Four-wave mixing (FWM) is a parametric process in which different frequencies
interact and by frequency mixing generate new spectral components.
In this dissertation single and combined effect of input power, effective area, length of fiber
and channel spacing are studied on FWM in Dense Wavelength Division Multiplexing
(DWDM) optical communication system. The simulation is carried with eight channels in
Optisystem software. Results show that increasing fiber length, effective area, channel
spacing and decreasing input power reduces four wave mixing power to -70dbm. BER and
Q factor are estimated using BER analyzer at the receiver side
