KEYWORDS: Crystals, Modulation, Monte Carlo methods, Laser crystals, Modulators, Laser communications, Electro optics, Signal attenuation, Ocean optics, Refractive index
Indirect modulation with electro-optical crystal is a useful way to generate optical signal for underwater blue-green laser communication. However, as crystal surface is not strictly flat in practical application, light intensity distribution in the cross section is non-uniform, which would affect extinction ratio of modulated signal and system performance. In this letter, we study this issue with Monte Carlo method. The result shows that with the increase of crystal flatness, extinction ratio is decreasing dramatically, and it should be smaller than 0.78μm in order to make the extinction ratio greater than 10dB while 0.25μm for 20dB, 0.08μm for 30dB, and 0.025μm for 40dB.
In underwater wireless optical communication (UWOC), one of the key technologies is to generate high-speed communication signal for transmitter. In this paper, we designed such transmitter based on laser diode (LD) arrays, which is composed of three LDs with central wavelength 450nm. The modulation format is non-return-to-zero on-off keying (NRZ-OOK) with data rate up to 50Mbps. Using such transmitter, we established a point-to-point underwater wireless optical communication link in an experimental tank with 20m length, 20m width and 14 depth. The experimental results show that the maximum error-free data rate of the system can reach 50Mbps with 10.7m transmission distance, while the maximum error-free transmission rate is 30Mbps with 14.7m transmission distance. These results verify the feasibility of the LD-based modulation scheme for high-speed UWOC applications.
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