Simulate the Tx + Rx directly connected (0 km fiber). Adjust the LO power and receiver ADC bits until you hit the theoretical BER for your modulation format. If you can’t match theory here, you won’t match reality later.
Discipline is key. Start with datasheet values from real components (Finisar, II-VI, Broadcom). Add realistic connector loss (0.5 dB per mated pair). Include filter penalties from ROADMs. Add a safety margin of 2 dB OSNR to your target. optiwave optisystem
Now enable the full nonlinear Manakov solver. Re-run the launch power sweep. At low power, you’ll match Step 2. At high power, BER will degrade above a certain threshold. That threshold (e.g., 0 dBm launch power per channel) is your nonlinear limit . In a WDM system, this threshold will drop by ~1 dB per extra channel due to XPM. Simulate the Tx + Rx directly connected (0 km fiber)
In the world of high-speed optical communications, the gap between a brilliant component design and a functional, robust link is vast. You can have the perfect laser, the most efficient modulator, and the cleanest fiber, but will they work together at 800G? Will nonlinearities kill your Q-factor? Will dispersion close your eye diagram before the first repeater? Discipline is key
For decades, OptiSystem has been the industry standard for system-level photonic simulation. Unlike FDTD or FEM tools that focus on the physics of a structure , OptiSystem focuses on the physics of a signal . It’s where abstract concepts like OSNR, CD, PMD, and Kerr nonlinearities become visible, tunable, and—crucially—fixable.
Let’s move beyond the basics and explore how to leverage OptiSystem’s advanced capabilities to solve real-world link engineering problems. The first hurdle new users face is thinking OptiSystem is just a "block diagram tool." It is not Simulink for light. Every component—from a CW laser to a 100 km DCF-compensated span—has a rich, physically-based parameter set.
The power emerges when you stop wiring components and start designing signal flow . Ask not "What block do I need?" but "How does the statistical distribution of my signal evolve?"