High-capacity millimetre-wave communications with orbital angular momentum multiplexing

Yan Yan, Guodong Xie(University of Southern California), Martin P. J. Lavery, Hao Huang(University of Southern California), Nisar Ahmed(University of Southern California), Changjing Bao(University of Southern California), Yongxiong Ren(University of Southern California), Yinwen Cao(University of Southern California), Long Li(University of Southern California), Zhe Zhao(University of Southern California), Andreas F. Molisch(University of Southern California), Moshe Tur(Tel Aviv University), Miles J. Padgett(University of Glasgow), Alan E. Willner(University of Southern California)
Nature Communications
September 16, 2014
Cited by 1,338Open Access
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Abstract

One property of electromagnetic waves that has been recently explored is the ability to multiplex multiple beams, such that each beam has a unique helical phase front. The amount of phase front ‘twisting’ indicates the orbital angular momentum state number, and beams with different orbital angular momentum are orthogonal. Such orbital angular momentum based multiplexing can potentially increase the system capacity and spectral efficiency of millimetre-wave wireless communication links with a single aperture pair by transmitting multiple coaxial data streams. Here we demonstrate a 32-Gbit s−1 millimetre-wave link over 2.5 metres with a spectral efficiency of ~16 bit s−1 Hz−1 using four independent orbital–angular momentum beams on each of two polarizations. All eight orbital angular momentum channels are recovered with bit-error rates below 3.8 × 10−3. In addition, we demonstrate a millimetre-wave orbital angular momentum mode demultiplexer to demultiplex four orbital angular momentum channels with crosstalk less than −12.5 dB and show an 8-Gbit s−1 link containing two orbital angular momentum beams on each of two polarizations. High speed data transmission using orbital angular momentum beams has been recently demonstrated. Here, Yan et al. demonstrate a 32 Gbit/s millimetre-wave communication link using eight coaxially propagating independent orbital angular momentum beams with four orbital angular momentum states on two orthogonal polarizations.


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