<p>Terahertz-frequency (THz) carrier waves in free-space optical (FSO) communications offer the potential for &#xa0;&gt;&#xa0;1 Tbit/s data rates and stable latency. They offer wider bandwidths than available in the microwave region, together with reduced scattering and relaxed pointing requirements compared with visible and near-infrared regions. However, 1–10 THz FSO communications systems have thus far been limited to data rates several orders of magnitude lower than those of infrared systems. This work describes an experimental demonstration of multi-gigabit-per-second FSO communication using a THz quantum cascade laser (QCL), opening a new frontier for next-generation wireless communications. The FSO communication system consists of a 2.4 THz QCL source as the transmitter and a room-temperature Schottky barrier diode detector as the receiver. By directly modulating the terahertz QCL, we achieved non-return-to-zero on-off keying (NRZ-OOK) with a transmission rate of up to 4 Gbit/s. We evaluated the performance of the communication link by analyzing the bit error rate (BER) of the demodulated signal at the receiver while examining its relation to received optical power, QCL modulation power, and various bias points. Our work establishes the foundation for high-speed optical wireless communication based on terahertz QCL technology systems.</p>

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Free-space optical communications at 4 Gbit/s data rate with a terahertz laser

  • Jayaprasath Elumalai,
  • Mohammed Salih,
  • Martyn Fice,
  • Adam Brown,
  • Lianhe Li,
  • Edmund H. Linfield,
  • Alexander Valavanis,
  • Alwyn J. Seeds,
  • Alexander Giles Davies,
  • Joshua R. Freeman

摘要

Terahertz-frequency (THz) carrier waves in free-space optical (FSO) communications offer the potential for  > 1 Tbit/s data rates and stable latency. They offer wider bandwidths than available in the microwave region, together with reduced scattering and relaxed pointing requirements compared with visible and near-infrared regions. However, 1–10 THz FSO communications systems have thus far been limited to data rates several orders of magnitude lower than those of infrared systems. This work describes an experimental demonstration of multi-gigabit-per-second FSO communication using a THz quantum cascade laser (QCL), opening a new frontier for next-generation wireless communications. The FSO communication system consists of a 2.4 THz QCL source as the transmitter and a room-temperature Schottky barrier diode detector as the receiver. By directly modulating the terahertz QCL, we achieved non-return-to-zero on-off keying (NRZ-OOK) with a transmission rate of up to 4 Gbit/s. We evaluated the performance of the communication link by analyzing the bit error rate (BER) of the demodulated signal at the receiver while examining its relation to received optical power, QCL modulation power, and various bias points. Our work establishes the foundation for high-speed optical wireless communication based on terahertz QCL technology systems.