Tunable Lasers | High Speed Communication Illustration of Network

How Tunable Lasers Are Enabling High-Speed Communications


Do you know that all the text and images you are seeing right now were, at some point, transmitted as light signals over optic fibers? Fiber optic communication networks are the heart of all the communication networks in data centers and inter-continental undersea cables that enable you to read this article, receive calls and emails on your smartphone, and watch your favorite videos.

Lasers are essential to the operations and testing of such networks. As the world's data volume grows, pushing more data over existing fibers becomes imperative. This is where tunable lasers can help improve network capacity and performance.

In this article, find out what are tunable lasers, where they're used, and how they operate.

What are tunable lasers?

Lasers are monochromatic, meaning that they emit light at a particular wavelength. For regular lasers, this wavelength is fixed.

In contrast, a tunable laser is an optical source whose emission wavelength can be selected from a wide range and dynamically changed to meet the needs of different applications.

For example, the Keysight N7776C tunable laser source can emit at any wavelength in its tuning range. That is, for example, the 1,240-1,380 nanometer (nm) O-band, the 1,340-1,495 nm E-band, or the 1,450-1,650 nm bands covering the C-, L- and U-bands.

Laser Wavelength Bands | Wavelength in Tuning Range

Fig 1. Laser wavelength bands

At each wavelength in the tuning range, a tunable laser achieves coherence and narrow spectral linewidths of less than 500 MHz to as low as a few thousand Hertz (kHz). This is remarkable because regular lasing itself is a complex phenomenon requiring precise engineering, and tunable lasers go a step further by lasing coherently at any wavelength within their tuning range.

What are the key applications of tunable lasers?

Some common applications of tunable lasers are explained below.

High-speed communication networks

Modern data centers and 5G/6G mobile networks require high-speed fiber optic networks that can reach speeds of 400 gigabits to tens of terabits per second.

To accommodate thousands of concurrent network users on a single fiber, they use techniques like dense wavelength division multiplexing. Each data channel, itself aggregating the data of hundreds of users, is transmitted at a different wavelength on the same fiber.

Tunable lasers are essential for such high-speed, high-throughput multiplexing at low costs. Laser sources operating within the C-band and L-band achieve optimal transmission properties like low loss and good signal-to-noise ratios. Combined with arrayed waveguide grating techniques, they help modulate the bandwidth demand, dynamically change wavelengths, and reconfigure optical channels on demand.

Optical equipment testing Optical Equipment Testing Illustration of Lighted Optimal Cables

Tunable lasers are used with optical power meters and light polarization controllers to test a variety of photonics components and phenomena, like:

All these are used in fast fiber optic networks that take multiple signals and merge or split them. These high-speed signals in modern networks change very quickly and can be easily thrown off by even minor imperfections in components.

Therefore, it's crucial for manufacturers to comply with very precise specifications. Tunable laser sources are indispensable for such precise quality control.

Tunable lasers also play a pivotal role in optical-sensing applications, where devices like an interferometer rely on their precise wavelength control.

Safety inspections

Tunable laser spectrometers are being used in safety equipment to check for leaks in pipelines carrying natural gas.

Medical imaging

Optical coherence tomography is a non-invasive imaging technique that provides high-resolution pictures of the internal microstructure of materials and biological tissues.

Material characterization using spectroscopy

Tunable layers, with their high resolutions and precise wavelength tuning, enable accurate substance identification and material analysis using Raman spectroscopy.

When light interacts with a material, it can be absorbed, emitted, or scattered. Each substance has a unique spectral fingerprint of such interactions.

A tunable laser source is configured to emit at specific wavelengths to selectively probe different aspects of a sample, such as identifying chemical bonds or concentrations of certain elements.

For such applications, continuous-wave tunable lasers that emit constant light without interruption are preferred over pulsed lasers because a steady uniform signal is essential for high-precision measurements.

Nanosecond-pulse tunable lasers are especially valuable in time-resolved spectroscopy and laser-induced breakdown spectroscopy, where brief, intense pulses allow for the study of rapid physical, chemical, or biological processes and materials analysis with minimal sample damage.

What are the types of tunable lasers?

There are multiple axes of categorization for tunable lasers.

Based on their construction and operating principles, tunable lasers can be:

Alternatively, based on the resolution of their emission wavelengths, we can categorize them as:

How do tunable lasers work, and what are the mechanisms for changing wavelengths?

Cables Closeup of Network System

A tunable laser source contains the following elements essential for lasing:

As hinted in the previous section, there are many mechanisms to achieve tunable wavelengths.

In addition to the primary tuning mechanism, a tunable laser source contains the following elements essential for lasing:

What are the key specifications for tunable lasers?

Regardless of the tuning mechanism, some key characteristics of a tunable laser module or laser source are:

What are some disadvantages and challenges of tunable lasers?

Tunable lasers have their pros but also exhibit some common challenges that may turn into disadvantages compared to fixed-wavelength lasers:

Emerging trends in tunable laser technology include the following:

Tunable lasers may be the future of all laser technology

Tunable Laser Technology | Keysight Tunable Laser Measurement Product

In this article, we learned about tunable lasers and how they work. The cost savings and versatility of tunable lasers make them no-brainers for any application that requires lasers.

Currently, tunable laser technology still has some disadvantages and challenges. However, with rapid advances in semiconductor research, quantum engineering, and MEMS, it appears that its current problems will be successfully solved over the next decade, making it a ubiquitous component of communication networks of the future.

Keysight's state-of-the-art high-precision benchtop tunable laser measurement products and tunable laser sources enable the testing and measurement of high-speed optical communication networks, scientific instruments, and fiber optic systems.

Contact us to learn how you can buy or rent our tunable lasers — like the top line N7776C, the value line N7778C or the basic line N7779C — for testing and qualifying your optical systems and communication networks.

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