Optical communications using orbital angular momentum beams

Alan E. Willner(University of Southern California), Hao Huang(University of Southern California), Yuqi Yan(University of Southern California), Yongxiong Ren(University of Southern California), N. Ahmed(University of Southern California), Guodong Xie(University of Southern California), Changjing Bao(University of Southern California), L. Li(University of Southern California), Yinwen Cao(University of Southern California), Zhe Zhao(University of Southern California), J. Wang(Huazhong University of Science and Technology), Martin P. J. Lavery(University of Glasgow), Moshe Tur(Tel Aviv University), Siddharth Ramachandran(Boston University), Andreas F. Molisch(University of Southern California), Nima Ashrafi(HealthPartners), Solyman Ashrafi(HealthPartners)
Advances in Optics and Photonics
March 31, 2015
Cited by 1,902

Abstract

Orbital angular momentum (OAM), which describes the “phase twist” (helical phase pattern) of light beams, has recently gained interest due to its potential applications in many diverse areas. Particularly promising is the use of OAM for optical communications since: (i) coaxially propagating OAM beams with different azimuthal OAM states are mutually orthogonal, (ii) inter-beam crosstalk can be minimized, and (iii) the beams can be efficiently multiplexed and demultiplexed. As a result, multiple OAM states could be used as different carriers for multiplexing and transmitting multiple data streams, thereby potentially increasing the system capacity. In this paper, we review recent progress in OAM beam generation/detection, multiplexing/demultiplexing, and its potential applications in different scenarios including free-space optical communications, fiber-optic communications, and RF communications. Technical challenges and perspectives of OAM beams are also discussed.


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