A photonic microwave frequency divider that is capable to realise tunable high order frequency division, is presented. It is based on injecting an RF phase modulated optical signal into an… Click to show full abstract
A photonic microwave frequency divider that is capable to realise tunable high order frequency division, is presented. It is based on injecting an RF phase modulated optical signal into an off-the-shelf DFB laser operating at period-N state. Optical frequency components with a frequency separation of 1/N times the input RF signal frequency are generated by the DFB laser. An optical bandpass filter can be employed to select two optical frequency components to be detected by a photodetector to obtain a divide-by-N RF signal without harmonic components. The proposed frequency divider can be operated over a wide frequency range and has high reconfigurability as it is free of electrical components. Experimental results demonstrate the realisation of frequency division operation with a tunable 1/2 to 1/5 division ratio for different input RF signal frequencies of 8 to 20 GHz by adjusting the DFB laser forward bias current. Over 35 dB harmonic component suppression is demonstrated. A proof-of-concept experiment is also set up to show the frequency divider based on an optically injected semiconductor laser is capable to operate at a high input RF signal frequency of 50 GHz and has a tunable high order division ratio of 1/2 to 1/8.
               
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