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Appendix 1 Evolution of Telecommunication Technology 1. Telecommunication network physical layer architecture Customer Premises Network Access Network Core Network Access Network User Network Interface Customer Premises Network User Network Interface Subscriber Network Interface Access Network: (Local and Metropolitan Network) Cross-Connection, Multiplexing, Short Haul Transport Core Network: (Transport and Packet-Switch Network) Packet-Switch, Multiplexing, Long Haul Transport 2. Point-to-point lightwave communication system Electrical Signal Source Optical Transmitter E-O Conversion Fiber Link Optical Signal Transmission Optical Receiver Electrical Signal Source O-E Conversion 1. Fundamental requirements: Accuracy and Efficiency 2. Fundamental elements: Channel and Node Channel: signal transmission Node: signal processing 3. As the transmission media, optical fiber has many advantages 4. Serving for optical fiber, opto-electronic devices are used as the E-O/O-E converters 5. Integrated photonic device will be used as the node for signal processing as well, but just at the beginning stage 1 6. Current status: lightwave transmission or photonic technology is mainly used for point-topoint communication systems in Transport Network, and begins to enter into Access Network 7. Future: the application of photonic technology will not only be in the signal transmission part (channel) of the networks, but also be in the signal processing part (node). 3. Telecommunication technology evolution 1. Basic Technology and Services (Legacy Synchronous Communication Networks) Basic technology: Plain Old Telephony Service (POTS): Purely analog (acoustical) signal transmission through twisted pair of copper wires named as Tip and Ring (T&R). PCM and DS0: Analog (acoustical) signal (high cut-off at 3.4kHz) – PCM through CODEC (sampling rate 8000/s, 8-bit coding) at 64Kb/s named as Digital Signal level 0 (DS0). A frame is defined as the time length required for a single sample: 125s, therefore, a DS0 frame contains 8 bits or 1 byte. TDM: At the User-to-Network Interface (UNI) where the user signal (64Kb/s data stream organized in DS0 frames: 8-bit bytes) first meets the network, signals from many users arrive. These signals are synchronized with the system clock: 8kHz or a multiple of it. The signals are sequentially polled one byte at a time and placed one after the other in a fixed order, known as byte interleaving. DS1: Formed by 24 DS0 signals through TDM. A DS1 frame contains 24 bytes (each byte from 24 different signals) and an additional bit named as F-bit for frame marking. A DS1 frame contains 248+1=193(bits), since the time length of a frame is 125s, DS1 bit rate is 193bits/125s=1.544Mb/s. The function of this time-division multiplexer converts DS0 to DS1 is known as a M1 multiplexer. The F-bit constitute a subrate channel of 8Kb/s, it has three functions: framing, data link over which network data are sent between the transmitting and receiving end, error control. Basic transmission media: The copper twisted-pair cable that connects most homes (user or subscriber equipment) with the telephone service provider equipment, known as the local loop, is the traditional transmission medium for analog signals up to 3.4kHz. When the transmitted information over the loop is in digital form, the loop is known as a Digital Subscriber Line (DSL). DSL is a digital technology that can deliver high bit rates of DS1 and in some case up to 7Mb/s over existing twisted-pair copper cable. A digital signal transmitted over DSL requires modulation. It can be deployed in many digital transmission services including Internet. 2 DS1 signal can be transmitted through a pair of copper wires known as T1 line. An amplifier is required after 3,000 ft from user and every 6,000 ft between amplifiers, however, 50 is the maximum number of the amplifiers can be placed before signal regeneration. Basic services: BR-ISDN: Basic Rate Integrated Service Digital Network uses two 64Kb/s channels (channel B) and a 16Kb/s channel (channel D) to support a combination of voice and/or data services over a single pair of wires. ISDN: Two pairs, downstream bit rate 144Kb/s, upstream 144Kb/s, maximum length of loop 18,000 ft. xDSL: Single or two pairs bit rate from 768Kb/s to 6Mb/s, maximum length of loop from12,000 ft to 18,000 ft. 2. Hierarchical Multiplexing 1 2 24 F DS1: 1.544Mb/s 1 T1 2 M 1 4 C DS2: 6.312Mb/s 1 T2 2 M1 2 7 C DS3: 44.736Mb/s T3 M2 3 DS1: 24DS0 TDM (1 F-bit/24 DS0s) DS2: 4DS1 Bit Interleaving Multiplexer (1 C-bit after every 48 payload bits) DS3: 7DS2 Bit Interleaving Multiplexer (1 C-bit after every 84 payload bits) Stuffing bits are required to compensate DS1/DS2 signals at slightly different bit rates. 3 Legacy Telecommunication System T&R (TP at Analog 3.4kHz) Center Office Analog Line Interface Unit Analog Subscriber Interface Unit (LP Filter) Customer Premises Equipment DS0/1B (TP at Digital 64Kb/s) Center Office Digital Line Interface Unit Digital Subscriber Interface Unit (CODEC) Customer Premises Equipment BR-ISDN/(2B+D) (TP at Digital 144Kb/s) Center Office Digital Line Interface Unit Digital Subscriber Interface Unit (TCM/ECH) Customer Premises Equipment DS1/T1 (TP at Digital 1.5Mb/s) Center Office Digital Line Interface Unit Digital Subscriber Interface Unit (M1) Customer Premises Equipment HDSL (TP at Digital 768Kb/s) ADSL (STP at Digital D-6Mb/s U-640Kb/s) Center Office Digital Line Interface Unit Digital Subscriber Interface Unit (2B1Q/DMT/CAP) Customer Premises Equipment Digital Subscriber Interface Unit (M12) Customer Premises Equipment DS2/T2 (STP at Digital 6Mb/s) Center Office Digital Line Interface Unit DS3/T3 (Coax/RF at Digital 45Mb/s) Center Office Coax/RF Line Interface Unit Coax/RF Subscriber Interface Unit Customer Premises Equipment (M12) 4 4. Synchronous digital hierarchy (SDH)/Synchronous optical networking (SONET) SDH/SONET OC3,12,48,192 (Fiber at Digital 155Mb/s, 622Mb/s, 2.5Gb/s, 10Gb/s) Centre Office Fiber Line Interface Unit (O-E) Fiber Subscriber Interface Unit (E-O) Customer Premises Equipment SONET Multiplexing Structure DS1 1.544Mb/s E1 2.048Mb/s DS1C 3.152Mb/s DS2 6.312Mb/s VT1.5 SPE VT1.5 VT2 SPE VT2 VT3 SPE VT3 Legend 4 3 Pointer Processing VT Group 2 Multiplexing 1 VT6 SPE VT6 Mapping 7 DS3 44.736Mb/s ATM 48.384Mb/s STS1 SPE E4 139.264Mb/s STS3c SPE 1 1 STS-1 N STS-3c N/3 STS-N ATM 149.760Mb/s Reference: ANSI T1.105, “Draft Proposed American National Standard for Telecommunications-Digital Hierarchy-Synchronous Optical Networks (SONET)” 5 SDH Multiplexing Structure DS4NA 139.264Mb/s ATM 149.760Mb/s E3 34.368Mb/s DS3 44.736Mb/s ATM 48.384Mb/s C4 C3 VC4 VC3 TU3 1 TU G3 3 DS1 1.544Mb/s DS1A 2.048Mb/s C2 C12 VC2 VC12 TU2 TU12 1 TU G2 3 4 1 3 7 VC3 DS2 6.312Mb/s AU4 AU G N STM-N AU3 7 Legend Pointer Processing Multiplexing DS1 1.544Mb/s C11 VC11 TU11 Mapping Aligning Reference: ITU-T/R G. 707, “Synchronous Digital Hierarchy Bit Rates” ITU-T/R G. 708, “Network Interface for the Synchronous Digital Hierarchy” ITU-T/R G. 709, “Synchronous Multiplexing Structure” ITU-T/R G. 803, “Architectures of Transport Networks Based on the Synchronous Digital Hierarchy” 5. Legacy data networks Legacy synchronous communication networks do not address the requirements for voice and data applications in an equitable manner. Primary concerns in voice communication networks: short delay of the signal through the network; in data applications: high bit rate and low cost per unit time. The contrasting needs of these applications brought to bear a data network able to transport chunks of data, known as packets (about 9,000 bytes). Such systems are the Local Area Network (LAN), the Metropolitan Area Network (MAN), the Wide Area Network (WAN) and the Switched Multi-megabit Data Services (SMDS). 6 LAN networks are of two major types: Ethernet and Ring. Ethernet LANs are hierarchical and the transmission rate is at 10 or 100Mb/s. FDDI (Fiber Distributed Data Interface) is a counter-rotating fiber ring LAN specified at 100Mb/s effective data rate. Technology Hierarchy: Transmission media – Components – Point-to-point system - Network topology – Transmission protocol 7