- Journal of Optical Communications and Networking
- Vol. 6,
- Issue 1,
- pp. 54-61
- (2014)
- •https://doi.org/10.1364/JOCN.6.000054
20 Gbit/s Wireless Bridge at 220 GHz Connecting Two Fiber-Optic Links
Swen Koenig, Jochen Antes, Daniel Lopez-Diaz, René Schmogrow, Thomas Zwick, Christian Koos, Wolfgang Freude, Juerg Leuthold, and Ingmar Kallfass
Author Affiliations
Swen Koenig,1Jochen Antes,1Daniel Lopez-Diaz,2René Schmogrow,1Thomas Zwick,1Christian Koos,1Wolfgang Freude,1Juerg Leuthold,1and Ingmar Kallfass1,2
1S. Koenig (e-mail: swen.koenig@kit.edu), J. Antes, R. Schmogrow, T. Zwick, C. Koos, W. Freude, J. Leuthold, and I. Kallfass are with the Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (KIT), 76131 Karlsruhe, Germany.
2D. Lopez-Diaz and I. Kallfass are with the Fraunhofer Institute for Applied Solid-State Physics (IAF), 79108 Freiburg, Germany.
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Get CitationCopy Citation TextSwen Koenig, Jochen Antes, Daniel Lopez-Diaz, René Schmogrow, Thomas Zwick, Christian Koos, Wolfgang Freude, Juerg Leuthold, and Ingmar Kallfass, "20 Gbit/s Wireless Bridge at 220 GHz Connecting Two Fiber-Optic Links," J. Opt. Commun. Netw.6, 54-61 (2014)Export Citation
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- Table of Contents Category
- Research Papers
Optics & Photonics TopicsThe topics in this list come from theOptics and Photonics Topics applied to this article.- Fiber optic communications
- Frequency division multiplexing
- Optical networks
- Optical signal to noise ratio
- Quadrature phase shift keying
- Signal transmission
- History
- Original Manuscript: January 2, 2013
- Revised Manuscript: June 4, 2013
- Manuscript Accepted: October 23, 2013
- Published: December 16, 2013
Abstract
The feasibility of a wireless link at 220 GHz based on electronic upconversion and downconversion is demonstrated, connecting two optical links at data rates of up to. We use either non-return-to-zero on–off keying with data rates up to or electrical orthogonal frequency division multiplexing with data rates up to. The wireless bridge connects the gateways of two spatially separated fiber sections, each with a length of up to 20 km.
© 2013 Optical Society of America
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