Frequency Transfer Techniques and Applications in Fiber Optic Communication Systems
Doctoral thesis, 2013

Modern society is dependent on communications and the developments of these increases constantly through a seemingly endless demand for communication services and thereby synchronization and time. This is confirmed by a vast range of research on communications, irrespective of technology and protocol. Historically, the national metrology institutes are the distributors of stable accurate time and frequency through national timescales, but that situation has changed with the arrival of Global Navigation Satellite Systems (GNSS) such as GPS (Global Positioning System). The introduction of GNSS-based solutions has resulted in improvement for system users and owners in need of time and frequency. When using a GNSS receiver, sufficient accuracy and precision is often achieved. However, a disadvantage of this development is that GNSS-solutions are based on weak radio signals that can be interfered with. The main objective of the research that forms the groundwork for this thesis is the development of new fiber based methods for time and frequency. The aim is to complement GNSS-based methods for redundancy, with the intention of strengthening the robustness of the Swedish infrastructure. The research has resulted in two unique and innovative transmission technologies, one of which has been patented (two-color, one-way). The first method is based on a non-insertion technology that utilizes passive listening to existing data frames in a fiber optical network and does not require any particular bandwidth. This technology only uses a fraction of the optical signal for time and frequency measurement from an indirect connection to the network. This method has resulted in a precision relative to the GPS carrier phase of less than 1 ns root mean square for distances exceeding 1,100 km. This precision has been achieved for all of the included experiments, conducted within the framework of the thesis, regardless of configuration. The other fiber based technology is a one-way method that uses two wavelengths (colors) for the realization of a correction algorithm and signals thereto. It was developed because the symmetry required for performing two-way time and frequency transfer is rarely precise enough. This optical fiber technique was evaluated with respect to a GPS precise point positioning technique in an urban fiber optical network. The difference in frequency stability between the two systems has been shown to be about 3 × 10-15 over an averaging interval of 10,000 s for a distance of 3 km. The method has also been evaluated in several laboratory experiments with fiber distances up to 160 km. The best performing result is presented as time resolved transit time variations compared with arrival time difference. The standard deviation of the difference between the reference measurement and the one-way, two-color technique result is 3.12 ns and the data showed temperature dependence in transit time of 6 ns / °C.

synchronous digital hierarchy (SDH)

UTC

synchronization

Time transfer

optical fiber

optical fiber network

GPS carrier phase

global positioning system (GPS)

synchronous optical networking (SONET)

Kollektorn A423
Opponent: Professor Steven Jefferts

Author

Sven-Christian Ebenhag

Chalmers, Microtechnology and Nanoscience (MC2), Photonics

Time Transfer between UTC(SP) and UTC(MIKE) Using Frame Detection in Fiber-Optical Communication networks

43rd Precise Time and Time Interval (PTTI) Systems and Applications Meeting,; (2011)p. 431-441

Paper in proceeding

Real-time Phase Stabilization Utilizing Two Color One-way Frequency Transfer

66th IEEE International Frequency Control Symposium, IFCS 2012; Baltimore, MD; United States; 21 May 2012 through 24 May 2012,; (2012)p. 667-672

Paper in proceeding

Time Transfer by Passive Listening Over a 10-Gb/s Optical Fiber

IEEE Transactions on Instrumentation and Measurement,; Vol. 57(2008)p. 2495 - 2501

Journal article

Measurements and Error Sources in Time Transfer Using Asynchronous Fiber Network

IEEE Transactions on Instrumentation and Measurement,; Vol. 59(2010)p. 1918-1924

Journal article

Two-Color One-Way Frequency Transfer in a Metropolitan Optical Fiber Data Network

NCSLI International Measure,; Vol. 8(2013)p. 10-

Journal article

TIME TRANSFER USING AN ASYNCHRONOUS COMPUTER NETWORK: RESULTS FROM A 500 KM BASELINE EXPERIMENT

Topical Meeting on Precise Time and Time Interval, 27-30/11, Long Beach, CA,; (2007)

Paper in proceeding

Active detection of propagation delay variations in single way time transfer utilizing dual wavelengths in an optical fiber network

Proceedings of the IEEE International Frequency Control Symposium and Exposition,; (2011)

Paper in proceeding

Fiber based one-way time transfer with enhanced accuracy

24th European Frequency and Time Forum, EFTF 2010; Noordwijk; Netherlands; 13 April 2010 through 16 April 2010,; (2010)

Paper in proceeding

One way time transfer utilizing active detection of propagation delay variations of dual wavelenghts in an optical fiber network

43rd Annual Precise Time and Time Interval Systems and Applications Meeting 2011; Long Beach, CA; United States; 14 November 2011 through 17 November 2011,; (2011)p. 9-16

Paper in proceeding

Time Transfer over a 560 km Fiber Link

EFTF 2008 - 22nd European Frequency and Time Forum,; (2008)p. Paper E5A04 -

Paper in proceeding

A fiber based frequency distribution system with enchanced output phase stability

Proceedings EFTF-IFCS2009 joint conference 20-24 April 2009, IEEE catalog number:CFP09FRE-CDR,; (2009)p. 1061-1064

Paper in proceeding

Areas of Advance

Information and Communication Technology

Nanoscience and Nanotechnology (SO 2010-2017, EI 2018-)

Building Futures (2010-2018)

Subject Categories

Telecommunications

Communication Systems

Other Electrical Engineering, Electronic Engineering, Information Engineering

ISBN

978-91-7385-825-0

Doktorsavhandlingar vid Chalmers tekniska högskola. Ny serie: 3506

Kollektorn A423

Opponent: Professor Steven Jefferts

More information

Created

10/7/2017