AlcaLu Climbs to 16.4 Tbit/s    FEBRUARY 29, 2008   lightreading.com     SAN DIEGO -- OFC/NFOEC -- It's not quite like winning the Super Bowl, but Alcatel-Lucent (NYSE: ALU - message board) appears to have claimed the championship for most 100 Gbit/s signals jammed onto a fiber. 
  In a post-deadline paper presented here yesterday, AlcaLu described how it sent a 16.4-Tbit/s transmission over 2,550 kilometers of fiber in the lab. It was one of four post-deadline papers the company published. (See AlcaLu Claims Optical Records.)
  An OFC/NFOEC post-deadline paper is a big deal. The technical sessions here are filled with new experimental results, but companies sometimes save their niftiest work for the post-deadline papers, which traditionally get published and presented on the conference's penultimate day. 
  Last year's post-deadline crop included an experiment involving 10 wavelengths of 111 Gbit/s apiece, sent down 2,400 km of fiber. That one was presented by CoreOptics Inc. , the Eindhoven University of Technology, and Siemens AG (NYSE: SI - message board; Frankfurt: SIE). (See CoreOptics Demos 100G.)
  AlcaLu's 16.4-Tbit/s result is a kind of sequel to that paper. Both experiments used a modulation scheme called (deep breath) polarization division multiplexed quadrature phase-shift keying (PDM-QPSK). But AlcaLu took the idea further by packing many more wavelengths, using up the entire C and L bands. 
  PDM-QPSK is designed to be robust to polarization mode dispersion (PMD), one of the optical effects that causes high-speed signals to degrade as they traverse long distances. Companies often cite PMD as one of the bugaboos that arises with serial 100-Gbit/s transmission. 
  Post-deadline papers don't represent products that are coming out any time soon. But AlcaLu's results -- and CoreOptics's a year ago -- show that it's feasible to send 100 Gbit/s signals down the infrastructure that was built for 10 Gbit/s. That's considered a critical factor in developing 100-Gbit/s Ethernet. 
  One of the biggest questions around serial 100-Gbit/s transmission is the modulation scheme. Most companies prefer some kind of "quad" format, where data gets sent four bits at a time. That would turn the 100 Gbit/s problem into an easier 25 Gbit/s one. 
  Differential quadrature phase shift keying (DQPSK) is the modulation scheme most talked about as a 100 Gbit/s candidate.
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