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NTT Sets Optical Record: 14 Tbps over a Single Fiber

Nippon Telegraph and Telephone Corporation (NTT) set a new optical transmission record — 14 terabits per second (Tbps) over a single 160 km long optical fiber. Significantly, the demonstration ran optical signals at 111 Gbps over a DWDM system supporting 140 channels. This greatly exceeded the current record of about 10 Tbps over a single fiber.

NTT said its reach is driven to increase the core capacity of its optical transport network, which currently stands at about 1 Tbps. Current networks use wavelength-division-multiplexing (WDM) of 10 Gbps signals.

While 10 Tbps transmission over a single optical fiber has been achieved in the laboratory, NTT said it was necessary to use linear amplifiers that covered two or three amplification bands because of the limited range of existing amplifiers. However, this multi-band configuration is not cost-effective. To increase the transmission capacity, NTT set out to achieve two goals simultaneously: WDM transmission with high spectral efficiency and optical amplifiers with greatly enlarged bandwidth.

Some key points of NTT’s optical transmission breakthrough:

Further details on the technology are posted on the NTT site.

http://www.ntt.co.jp/news/news06e/0609/060929a.html

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