Photonic filter to support future 6G wireless communication


Thursday, 20 April, 2023


Photonic filter to support future 6G wireless communication

Researchers have developed a chip-sized microwave photonic filter to separate communication signals from noise and suppress unwanted interference across the full radio frequency spectrum.

The device could help next-generation wireless communication technologies efficiently convey data in an environment that is becoming crowded with signals from devices such as cell phones, self-driving vehicles, internet-connected appliances and smart city infrastructure.

Researcher Xingjun Wang from Peking University said the microwave filter chip could improve wireless communication, such as 6G, leading to faster internet connections, better overall communication experiences and lower costs and energy consumption for wireless communication systems. In the Photonics Research journal, the researchers described how their photonic filter overcomes the limitations of traditional electronic devices to achieve multiple functionalities on a chip-sized device with low power consumption. They also demonstrated the filter’s ability to operate across a broad radio frequency spectrum extending to over 30 GHz, showing its suitability for envisioned 6G technology.

“As the electro-optic bandwidth of optoelectronic devices continues to increase unstoppably, we believe that the integrated microwave photonics filter will certainly be one of the important solutions for future 6G wireless communications. Only a well-designed integrated microwave photonics link can achieve low-cost, low-power consumption and superior filtering performance,” Wang said.

6G technology is being developed to improve upon current 5G communications networks. To convey more data at a faster rate, 6G networks are expected to use millimetre wave and terahertz frequency bands. As this will distribute signals over a wide frequency spectrum with increased data rate, there is a high likelihood of interference between different communication channels. To solve this problem, researchers sought to develop a filter that can protect signal receivers from various types of interference across the full radio frequency spectrum. To be cost-effective and practical for widespread deployment, the filter had to be small, consume little power, achieve multiple filtering functions and be able to be integrated on a chip. However, previous demonstrations have been limited by their new functions, large size, limited bandwidth or requirements associated with electrical components.

For the new filter, researchers created a simplified photonic architecture with four main parts. First, a phase modulator serves as the input of the radio frequency signal, which modulates the electrical signal onto the optical domain. Next, a double-ring acts as a switch to shape the modulation format. An adjustable microring is the core unit for processing the signal, and a photodetector serves as the output of the radio frequency signal and recovers the radio frequency signal from the optical signal.

“The greatest innovation here is breaking the barriers between devices and achieving mutual collaboration between them. The collaborative operation of the double-ring and microring enables the realisation of the intensity-consistent single-stage-adjustable cascaded-microring (ICSSA-CM) architecture. Owing to the high reconfigurability of the proposed ICSSA-CM, no extra radio frequency device is needed for the construction of various filtering functions, which simplifies the whole system composition,” Wang said.

Researchers tested the device using high-frequency probes to load a radio frequency signal into the chip and collected the recovered signal with a high-speed photodetector. They used an arbitrary waveform generator and directional antennas to simulate the generation of 2 GB/s high-speed wireless transmission signals and a high-speed oscilloscope to receive the processed signal. By comparing the results with and without the use of the filter, the researchers were able to demonstrate the filter’s performance. The findings showed that the simplified photonic architecture achieves comparable performance with lower loss and system complexity compared with previous programmable integrated microwave photonic filters composed of hundreds of repeating units. This makes it more robust and more energy-efficient.

The researchers plan to further optimise the modulator and improve the filter architecture to achieve a high dynamic range and low noise while ensuring high integration at the device and system levels.

Image caption: Illustration of how the integrated microwave photonic filter helps to separate signals of interest from background noise or unwanted interference in complex electromagnetic environments. Image credit: Peking University research team.

Related Articles

You are here

The benefits of using cellular services and Wi-Fi to keep track of valuable goods.

A game changer for building robust distributed systems

Researchers have developed a new distributed algorithm that solves one of the key performance and...

A guide to implementing remote monitoring

Remote monitoring enables people and companies to collect data from locations where conventional...


  • All content Copyright © 2024 Westwick-Farrow Pty Ltd