This work presents the design and experimental validation of a 2 × 2 MIMO communication system assisted by a directly modulated analog radio-over-fiber (A-RoF) fronthaul, targeting low-complexity connectivity solutions for underserved/remote regions. The study details the complete end-to-end architecture, including a wireless access segment to complement the 20-km optical fronthaul link. The system is implemented on an software defined radio (SDR) platform using GNU Radio 3.7.11, running on Ubuntu 18.04 with kernel 4.15.0-213-generic. It also employs adaptive modulation driven by real-time signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) estimation to keep bit error rate (BER) close to zero while maximizing throughput. Performance is characterized over 20 km of single-mode fiber (SMF) using coarse wavelength division multiplexing (WDM) and assessed through root mean square error vector magnitude (EVMRMS), throughput, and spectral integrity. The results identify an optimum radio-frequency drive region around −16 dBm enabling high-order modulation (e.g., 256-QAM), whereas RF input powers above approximately −10 dBm increase EVMRMS due to nonlinearity in the RF front-end/low-noise amplifier (LNA) and direct modulation stage, forcing the adaptive scheme to reduce modulation order and throughput. Over the optical-power sweep, when the incident optical power exceeds approximately −8 dBm, the system reaches ∼130 Mbps (24-MHz channel) with EVMRMS approaching ∼1%, highlighting the need for careful joint tuning of RF drive, optical launch power, and wavelength allocation across transceivers. Finally, the integrated access link employs diplexers for transmitter/receiver separation in a 2 × 2 configuration with 2.8 m antenna separation and low channel correlation, demonstrating a 10 m proof-of-concept range and enabling end-to-end spectrum/EVM/throughput observations across the full communication chain.
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