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Physical Layer Propagation: UTP and Optical Fiber Chapter 3 Updated January 2009 XU Zhengchuan Fudan University Orientation • Chapter 2 – Data link, internet, transport, and application layers – Characterized by message exchanges • Chapter 3 – Physical layer (Layer 1) – There are no messages—bits are sent individually – Concerned with transmission media, plugs, signaling methods, propagation effects – Chapter 3: Signaling, UTP, optical fiber, and topologies – Wireless transmission is covered in Chapter 5 2 Figure 3-1: Signal and Propagation Received Signal (Attenuated & Distorted) Transmitted Signal Propagation Transmission Medium Sender Receiver A signal is a disturbance in the media that propagates (travels) down the transmission medium to the receiver If propagation effects are too large, the receiver will not be able to read the received signal 3 • Test Your Understanding • P 141 4 Data Representation Binary-Encoded Data • Computers store and process data in binary representations – Binary means “two” – There are only ones and zeros – Called bits 1101010110001110101100111 6 Binary-Encoded Data • Non-Binary Data Must be Encoded into Binary – Text – Integers (whole numbers) – Decimal numbers – Alternatives (North, South, East, or West, etc.) – Graphics – Human voice – etc. Hello 11011001… 7 Binary-Encoded Data • Some data are inherently binary – 48-bit Ethernet addresses – 32-bit IP addresses – Need no further encoding 8 Figure 3-2: Arithmetic with Binary Numbers Binary Arithmetic for Whole Numbers (Integers) (Counting Begins with 0, not 1) Integer 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Binary 0 1 10 11 100 101 110 111 1000 “There are 10 kinds of people— those who understand binary and those who don’t” 9 Figure 3-2: Arithmetic with Binary Numbers, Continued Binary Arithmetic for Binary Numbers Basic Rules 0 +0 =0 0 +1 =1 1 +0 =1 1 +1 =10 1 +1 +1 =11 10 Figure 3-2: Arithmetic with Binary Numbers, Continued Examples Binary 1000 +1 =1001 +1 =1010 +1 =1011 +1 =1100 Decimal 8 +1 =9 +1 =10 +1 =11 +1 =12 11 Figure 3-3: Binary Encoding for Alternatives Encoding Alternatives (Product number, region, gender, etc.) (N bits can represent 2N Alternatives) Number of Bits In Field (N) 1 2 3 4 8 16 … Number of Alternatives That Can be Encoded with N bits 2 (21) 4 (22) 8 (23) 16 (24) 256 (28) 65,536 (216) … Each added bit doubles the number of alternatives that can be represented 12 Figure 3-3: Binary Encoding for Alternatives Bits Alternatives Examples 1 21=2 Male = 0, Female = 1 2 22=4 Spring = 00, Summer = 01, Autumn = 10, Winter = 11 8 28=256 Keyboard characters for U.S. keyboards. Space=00000000, etc. ASCII code actually uses 7 bits 13 Powers of 2 Bits Alternatives 1 2 2 4 Start with one you know and double or halve until you have what you need 3 8 4 16 5 32 E.g., if you know 8 is 256, 10 must be 4 times as large or 1,024. 6 64 7 128 8 256 Memorize for 1, 4, 8, and 16 bits 10 1,024 16 65,536 Each additional bit doubles the number of possibilities 14 Figure 3-3: Binary Encoding for Alternatives • Quiz – How many flavors of ice cream can you represent in half a byte of storage? – How many bits do you need to represent 64 flavors of ice cream? – How many bits do you need to represent 6 sales districts? 15 Figure 3-4: ASCII and Extended ASCII • ASCII Code to Represent Text – ASCII is the traditional binary code to represent text data – Seven bits per character • 27 (128) characters possible – Sufficient for all keyboard characters (including shifted values) • Capital letters (A is 1000001) • Lowercase letters (a is 1100001) – Each character is stored in a byte • The 8th bit in a byte normally is not used 16 Figure 3-4: ASCII and Extended ASCII, Continued • Extended ASCII – Used on PCs – Uses a full 8 bits per character – 28 (256) characters possible – Extra characters can represent formatting in word processing, etc. • Converters – Text-to-ASCII and Text-to-Extended ASCII Converters are Readily Available on the Internet 17 Figure 3-5: Binary Coding for Graphics Image • Pixels – 1. Screen is divided into small squares called pixels (picture elements) – 2. Each pixel has three dots—red, green, and blue. Sometimes a black dot too 3. JPEG stores one byte per color (24 bits total) This gives 256 intensity levels for each color or 16.8 million colors overall (2563) 18 • Test Your Understanding • P 146 • 3c 19 Signaling Figure 3-6: Data Encoding and Signaling Data “Now is the …” Male or Female Graphics Human Voice 1. First, data must be converted to binary, as we have just seen Binary Encoding BinaryEncoded Data 1101010 Signaling 2. Second, bits must be covered Into signals (voltage changes, etc.). Voltage change, etc. 21 Figure 3-7: On/Off Binary Signaling Clock Cycle Light Source Off= 0 On= 1 On= 1 Off= 0 On= 1 Off= 0 On= 1 Optical Fiber During each clock cycle, light is turned on for a one or off for a zero. 22 Figure 3-8: Binary Signaling in 232 Serial Ports In a clock cycle, 15 Volts Clock Cycle 0 3 Volts 0 3 to 15 volts represents a zero -3 to -15 volts is a ONE 0 0 Volts -3 Volts 1 -15 Volts 1 This type of signaling is used in 232 serial ports. 23 Figure 3-9: Relative Immunity to Errors in Binary Signaling 15 Volts 0 Transmitted Signal (12 Volts) Received Signal (6 volts) 3 Volts 0 Volts -3 Volts 1 Despite a 50% drop in voltage, the receiver will still know that the signal is a zero -15 Volts 24 Binary and Binary Signaling • In binary signaling, there are two states – This can represent a single bit per clock cycle. • In digital signaling, there are a few bits per clock cycle—2, 4, 8, 16, 32, … • With more states, several bits to be sent per clock cycle • Note that all binary transmission (2 states) is digital (few states) • But not all digital transmission is binary 11 11 10 01 00 10 01 Clock Cycle 01 00 25 • Test Your Understanding • P 149 • 4 a, b, c 26 Figure 3-10: 4-State Digital Signaling Box Clock Cycle 11 11 10 01 00 Client PC 10 01 01 00 Server Digital signaling has a FEW possible states per clock cycle (4 in this slide) This allows it to send multiple bits per clock cycle This increases the bit transmission rate per clock cycle It reduces error resistance because differences between states are smaller 27 Quiz Box • Which Is Binary? Which Is Digital? 2. Number of Fingers 3. On/Off Switch 1. Calendar 4. Day of the Week 5. Gender Male or Female 28 Figure 3-10: 4-State Digital Signaling, Continued Box • Equation 3-1: Bit rate = Baud rate * Bits sent per clock cycle – Baud rate is the number of clock cycles per second • If the clock cycle is 1/1000 of a second, the baud rate is 1,000 baud – Bit rate is then the number of clock cycles per second times the number of bits sent per clock cycle • If the three bits are sent per clock cycle, the bit rate is 3,000 bps or 3 kbps 29 Figure 3-10: 4-State Digital Signaling, Continued • Equation 3-2: States = 2Bits – Bits is the number of bits to be sent per clock cycle – States is the number of states needed to send that many bits • Doubling the number of states transmits one more bit per clock cycle. Box Bits to be Number of sent per states clock cycle required 1 2 2 4 3 8 4 16 30 Figure 3-10: 4-State Digital Signaling, Continued Box • Example: – The clock cycle is 1/100,000 second • The baud rate is 100 kbaud (not kbauds) – You want a bit rate of 500,000 bps • Solution: – You have to send 5 bits per clock cycle (baud) – This will require 32 states • States = 2bits • States = 25 • States = 32 31 Figure 3-10: 4-State Digital Signaling, Continued Box • Example: – Suppose there a system has 8 states – Suppose that the clock cycle is 1/10,000 second – How fast can the system transmit? • Solution: – With four states, 3 information bits can be sent per clock cycle (8=2X) [Equation 3-2] X=3 – With a clock cycle of 1/10,000, baud rate is 10,000 baud – The bit rate will be 30 kbps (3 bits/clock cycle times 10,000 clock cycles per second). [Equation 3-1] 32 • Test Your Understanding • P 151 33 UTP Propagation Unshielded Twisted Pair wiring Figure 3-12: 4-Pair UTP Cord with RJ45 Connector 3. RJ-45 Connector 1. UTP Cord Industry Standard Pen 2. 8 Wires Organized as 4 Twisted Pairs UTP Cord 35 RJ-45 Jacks and Connectors RJ-45 Jack RJ-45 Jack RJ-45 Jack RJ-45 Connectors 36 Figure 3-11: Unshielded Twisted Pair (UTP) Wiring, Continued • UTP Characteristics – Inexpensive and to purchase and install – Dominates media for access links between computers and the nearest switch 37 • Test Your Understanding • P 154 38 Figure 3-13: Attenuation and Noise Power 1. Signal Signals in UTP attenuate with propagation distance. If attenuation is too great, the signal will not be readable by the receiver. Distance 39 Figure 3-14: Decibels • Attenuation is Sometimes Expressed in Decibels (dB) • The equation for decibels is – dB = 10 log10(P2/P1) – Where P1 is the initial power and P2 is the final power after transmission – If P2 is smaller than P1, then the answer will be negative 40 Figure 3-14: Decibels, Continued • Example – Over a transmission link, power drops to 37% of its original value – P2/P1 = 37/100 = .37 (37%/100%) – LOG10(0.37) = -0.4318 – 10*LOG10(0.37) = -4.3 dB (negative, reflecting power reduction through attenuation) – In calculations, the Excel LOG10 function can be used 41 Figure 3-14: Decibels, Continued • There are two useful approximations • 3 dB loss is a reduction to very nearly 1/2 the original power – 6 dB loss is a decrease to 1/4 the original power – 9 dB loss is a decrease to 1/8 the original power –… • 10 dB loss is a reduction to very nearly 1/10 the original power – 20 dB loss is a decrease to 1/100 the original power –… 42 Figure 3-13: Attenuation and Noise, Continued Power Signal Signalto-Noise Ratio (SNR) Noise Spike Error Noise Floor Noise Distance Noise is random unwanted energy within the wire Its average is called the noise floor (噪声基底) Random noise spikes (噪声毛刺) cause errors -A high signal-to-noise ratio reduces noise error problems As a signal attenuates with distance, damaging noise spikes become more common 43 Limiting UTP Cord Length • Limit UTP cord length to 100 meters – Limits attenuation to being a negligible problem – Limits noise problems being a negligible problem – Note that limiting cord lengths limits BOTH noise and attenuation problems 100 Meters Maximum Cord Length 44 • Test Your Understanding • P 157-158 45 Figure 3-11: Unshielded Twisted Pair (UTP) Wiring, Continued • Electromagnetic Interference (EMI) (Fig. 3-15) – Electromagnetic interference (电磁干扰) is electromagnetic energy from outside sources that adds to the signal • From fluorescent lights, electrical motors, microwave ovens, etc. – The problem is that UTP cords are like long radio antennas. • They pick up EMI energy nicely • When they carry signals, they also send EMI energy out from themselves 46 Figure 3-15: Electromagnetic Interference (EMI) and Twisting Electromagnetic Interference (EMI) Twisted Wire Interference on the Two Halves of a Twist Cancels Out 47 Figure 3-16: Crosstalk Interference and Terminal Crosstalk Interference (交互干扰) Untwisted at Ends Signal Crosstalk Interference Terminal Crosstalk Interference Terminal crosstalk interference Normally is the biggest EMI problem for UTP 48 Figure 3-11: Unshielded Twisted Pair (UTP) Wiring, Continued • Electromagnetic Interference (EMI) (Fig. 3-15) – Terminal crosstalk interference dominates interference in UTP – Terminal crosstalk interference is limited to an acceptable level by not untwisting wires more than a half inch (1.25 cm) at each end of the cord to fit into the RJ-45 connector – This reduces terminal crosstalk interference to a negligible level. 1.25 cm or 0.5 inches 49 UTP Limitations • Limit cords to 100 meters – Limits BOTH noise AND attenuation problems to an acceptable level • Do not untwist wires more than 1.25 cm (a half inch) when placing them in RJ-45 connectors – Limits terminal crosstalk interference to an acceptable level • Neither completely eliminates the problems but they usually reduce the problems to negligible levels 50 • Test Your Understanding • P 160 51 Figure 3-17: Serial Versus Parallel Transmission One Clock Cycle 1. Serial 1 bit Transmission (1 bit per clock cycle) 2. Parallel Transmission (1 bit per clock cycle per wire pair) 4 bits per clock cycle on 4 pairs 1 bit 1 bit 1 bit 1 bit Parallel transmission increases speed. But it is only workable over short distances. Parallel is not 4. It is more than one. 52 • Test Your Understanding • P 161 53 Figure 3-18: Wire Quality Standards • Wiring Quality Standards – Rated by Category (Cat) Numbers • Category Standards are Set by ANSI/TIA/EIA and ISO/IEC – In the United States, the TIA/EIA/ANSI-568 governs UTP and optical fiber standards – In Europe and many other parts of the world, the standard is ISO/IEC 11801 – The two sets of standards are close but not identical 54 Figure 3-18: Wire Quality Standards • UTP Categories 3 and 4 – Early data wiring, which could only handle Ethernet speeds up to 10 Mbps • UTP Categories 5 and 5e – Most wiring installed today is Category 5e (enhanced) – Cat 5e and Cat 5 can handle Ethernet up to 1 Gbps – Most wiring sold today is Cat 5e 55 Figure 3-18: Wire Quality Standards • UTP Category 6 Errors – Relatively new – No better than Cat 5 or Cat 5e at 1 Gbps – Developed for higher Ethernet speeds of 10 Gbps • But can only span 55 meters at that speed • Book says cannot be used. This is an error. • Category 6A (Augmented) – Able to carry Ethernet signals at 10 Gbps up 100 meters – The book said 55 meters, but this is an error 56 Figure 3-18: Wire Quality Standards • Category 7 STP – Shielded twisted pair (STP) rather than unshielded twisted pair (UTP) • Metal foil shield around each pair to reduce crosstalk interference • Metal mesh around all four pairs to reduce crosstalk from other cords – STP is expensive and awkward to lay – Can 10 Gbps Ethernet to 100 meters 57 • Test Your Understanding • P 164 58 Optical Fiber Transmission Light through Glass Better than UTP: More Easily Spans Longer Distances at High Speeds Figure 3-19: UTP in Access Lines and Optical Fiber in Trunk Lines 1. Workgroup Switches Link Computers to the Network Workgroup Switch UTP Access Line 2. UTP dominates access lines between stations and their workgroup switches UTP Access Line UTP Access Line 60 Figure 3-19: UTP in Access Lines and Optical Fiber in Trunk Lines, Continued 1. Core switches connect other switches Fiber Trunk Fiber Trunk Fiber Trunk Core Switch Core Switch Core Fiber Trunk Core Switch Fiber Trunk 2. Fiber dominates trunk lines between switches 61 • Test Your Understanding • P 165 • 14-15 62 Figure 3-20: Optical Fiber Transceiver and Strand Strand(股) 3. Cladding (镀层) 125 micron diameter Transceiver 1. (Transmitter/Receiver) Light Source 5. 850 nm, Perfect internal reflection at 1,310 nm, core/cladding boundary; and 1,550 nm No signal loss, so low attenuation 2. Core 8.3, 50 or 62.5 micron diameter 4. Light Ray 63 Figure 3-22: Two-Strand Full-Duplex Optical Fiber Cord with SC and ST Connectors Cord Two Strands A fiber cord has two-fiber strands for full-duplex (twoway) transmission SC Connectors ST Connectors 64 Figure 3-22: Pen and Full-Duplex Optical Fiber Cord with SC and ST Connectors SC Connectors (Push in and Snap) ST Connectors (Bayonet: Push in and Twist) 65 Figure 3-23: Frequency and Wavelengths 2. Wavelength Distance between comparable points in successive cycles (Measured in nanometers for light) 1. Amplitude Power, Voltage, etc. Wave Amplitude 1 Second 3. Frequency is the number of cycles per second. 1 Hz = 1 cycle per second In this case, there are two cycles in 1 second, so frequency is two hertz (2 Hz). 66 Light Wavelengths • Light signals are measured by wavelength • Light wavelengths measured in nanometers (nm) • There are three fiber wavelength “windows” with good propagation characteristics – 850 nm – 1310 nm – 1550 nm • Shorter wavelength allows cheaper transceivers • Longer-wavelength light travels farther 67 • Test Your Understanding • P 169 • 16 68 Figure 3-24: Carrier Fiber and LAN Fiber • LAN Fiber – Uses multimode fiber, which has a “thick” core diameter of 50 or 62.5 microns • Less expensive than single-mode fiber (later) • 62.5 micron fiber is more common in the US but does not carry signals as far as 50 micron fiber – Also uses inexpensive 850 nm transceivers – Multimode fiber (多模光纤)with 850 nm signaling cannot span the kilometer distances needed by carriers, but can span the 200-300 meters needed in LAN fiber cords 69 Figure 3-24: Multimode and Single-Mode Optical Fiber Mode 2 Light Source (Usually Laser) Core Multimode Fiber Mode 1 Arrives Later In thicker fiber, light only travels in one of several allowed modes. Different modes travel different distances and arrive at different times (See that Mode 1 light takes longer to arrive than Mode 2 light.) If distance is too long, modes from successive light pulses will overlap. This is modal distortion(模态散射). If it is too large, signals will be unreadable. Modal distortion is the main limitation on distance in multimode fiber. 70 • Test Your Understanding • P 172 • 17 71 Figure 3-24: Carrier Fiber and LAN Fiber • LAN Fiber – All multimode fiber today is graded-index multimode fiber • The index of refraction (折射级数)decreases from the center of the core to the core’s outer edge. Lower Higher Incidence of Refraction 72 Figure 3-24: Carrier Fiber and LAN Fiber • LAN Fiber – Graded-index multimode fiber • Light speed increases when the index decreases • The central mode (Mode 2) is slowed • High-angle modes (Mode 1) are speeded up Mode 2 (Slowed) Mode 1 (Speeded Up Near Edge of Core) Lower Modal Dispersion 73 Figure 3-24: Carrier Fiber and LAN Fiber • LAN Fiber – UTP quality is measured by category number. – Multimode Fiber Quality • Measured as modal bandwidth (MHz.km or MHz-km) • More modal bandwidth is better • Increases the speed–distance product – With greater mobile bandwidth, can go faster, farther, or some combination of the two 74 Figure 3-24: Carrier Fiber and LAN Fiber • LAN Fiber – Example: 1000BASE-SX Ethernet • Uses inexpensive 850 nm light • With 62.5 micron fiber and 160 MHz-km modal bandwidth, maximum distance is 220 m • With 62.5 micron fiber and 200 MHz-km bandwidth, maximum distance is 275 m • Some vendors with higher-than-standard modal bandwidth can carry traffic farther 75 Figure 3-24: Carrier Fiber and LAN Fiber • LANs and WAN carriers use different types of fiber • Carrier Fiber – Carrier fiber must span long distances – This requires expensive long-wavelength laser light sources (1,310 and 1,550 nm) – It also requires expensive “single-mode” fiber with a very narrow core (8.3 microns) 76 Figure 3-24: Multimode and Single-Mode Optical Fiber , Continued Single Mode Light Source Cladding Core Single-Mode Fiber Light enters only at certain angles called modes Single-mode fiber cores are so thin that only one mode can propagate—the one traveling straight through No modal dispersion (discussed earlier), so can span long distances without this distortion Expensive but necessary in WANs 77 • Test Your Understanding • P 174 • 18 78 Figure 3-24: Carrier Fiber and LAN Fiber • Carrier Fiber – Main propagation effect for single-mode fiber is attenuation, which is very low • For 850 nm light, attenuation is around 2.5 dB/km • At 1,310 nm, attenuation is lower—about 0.8 dB/km • At 1,550 nm, attenuation falls even lower—about 0.2 dB/km – Longer wavelengths carry farther but cost more – Carrier fiber uses wavelengths of 1,310 or 1,550 nm 79 Figure 3-24: Carrier Fiber and LAN Fiber • Noise and Electromagnetic Interference (EMI) Are Not Problems for Either LAN or Carrier Fiber – Noise from moving electrons cannot interfere with light signals – EMI would have to be light signals • Wrapping the cladding in an opaque covering prevents light from coming in 80 Figure 3-24: Carrier Fiber and LAN Fiber Cost Fiber Type Corporate LAN Multimode Fiber Only 200-300 meters Much Lower ($) Multimode ($) Wavelength Usually 850 nm ($) Needed Distance Carrier (WAN) Single-Mode Fiber Many kilometers Very high ($$$$) Single-mode ($$$$) Typical Core Usually 1,310 or 1,550 nm ($$$$) 50/62.5 microns ($) 8.3 microns ($$$) Propagation Limit Modal Distortion Is Modal Bandwidth Yes Important? Attenuation No. Only attenuation matters 81 • Test Your Understanding • P 174 • 19 82 Topology Figure 3-26: Major Topologies • Topology – Network topology refers to the physical arrangement of a network’s computers, switches, routers, and transmission lines – Topology is a physical layer concept – Different network (and internet) standards specify different topologies Point-to-Point Topology (Telephone Modem Communication, Private Lines) 84 Figure 3-26: Major Topologies, Continued Star (Modern Ethernet) Example: Pat Lee’s House in Chapter 1a 85 Figure 3-26: Major Topologies, Continued Extended Star or Hierarchy (Modern Ethernet) A C B X Only one possible path between any two computers For computers X and Y, the path is XBACDY E D Y Z 86 Figure 3-26: Major Topologies, Continued Mesh (Routers, Frame Relay, ATM) A Path ABD B C D Multiple alternative paths between two computers Path ACD 87 Figure 3-26: Major Topologies, Continued Ring (SONET/SDH) 88 • Test Your Understanding • P 176 • 20 89 Figure 3-26: Major Topologies, Continued Bus Topology (Broadcasting) Used in Wireless LANs 90 Topics Covered Topics Covered • Binary Data Encoding • Inherently binary data (IP addresses, etc.) • Integers (binary arithmetic) • Alternatives (N bits can represent 2N Alternatives) • Text (ASCII and Extended ASCII) • Graphics (pixels, bits per pixel color) •… • For transmission the sender converts bits to signals (on/off, voltage levels, etc.) 92 Topics Covered, Continued • Digital Transmission (Box) • A few states instead of just two states (binary) • All binary transmission is digital transmission • Only some digital transmission (transmission with two states) is binary • In the box: bit rates and baud rates 93 Topics Covered, Continued • UTP – 4-pair UTP cords and RJ-45 connectors and jacks – Attenuation (often expressed in decibels) and noise • Limit UTP cords to 100 meters – Electromagnetic interference, crosstalk interference, and terminal crosstalk interference • Limit wire unwinding to 1.25 cm (a half inch) to limit terminal crosstalk interference – Serial versus parallel transmission 94 Topics Covered, Continued • Optical Fiber – On/off light pulses from transceiver – Core and cladding; perfect internal reflection – Dominates for trunk lines among core switches – 2 fiber strands/fiber cord for full-duplex transmission – SC and ST connectors are the most common – Carriers use single-mode fiber and long wavelengths – LANs use multimode fiber and short wavelengths 95 Topics Covered, Continued • Multimode Optical Fiber Distance Increases With … – Greater Wavelength • 850 nm < 1310 nm < 1550 nm “windows” • But larger-wavelength transceivers cost more – Smaller Core Diameter • 50 microns > 62.5 microns – Greater Modal Bandwidth (MHz.km) • Measure of multimode fiber quality 96 Topics Covered, Continued • Topologies – Organization of devices and transmission links – Physical layer concept – Point-to-point, star, hierarchy, ring, etc. 97