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Introduction Chapter 2 1 Outlines • Telecommunication networks • Optical communications • WDM network testbed and product comparison 2 2.1 Telecommunication Networks 3 Network design • A telecom network is typically constructed level-bylevel, i.e. hierarchically. • Traditionally, AT&T networks have used a 5-level hierarchy, but the current telecom networks uses only three levels: – dynamic routing tandem/international switching centre – toll centre – end-office. • There are three switching modes in telecom networks: – circuit switching – packet switching – cell switching. 4 Switching mode • Circuit-switched networks – offer connection-orientated services, where connections are set up endto-end before information transfer and resources are reserved for the whole duration of connection. – delays occur before and after information transfer, – but there is no extra delay and no overhead during information transfer. • Packet-switched networks – offer connectionless services in which there is no connection setup and no resource reservation. – offers connection orientated services in which virtual connections are set up end-to-end before information transfer but there is no resource reservation. – Information transfers as discrete packets each of which has a varying length. 5 Switching mode • connectionless packet switching – requires that each packet carries its global address of destination; – no delay before information transfer, but during information transfer, packets have to carry their header (overhead), expect packet-processing delays, and may suffer queuing delays (when packets compete for joint resources). • connection-orientated packet switching – uses only a local address, i.e. the logical channel index. • In connectionless packet switched networks, there is Cell-switching networks offer connection orientated services, where virtual connections are set up end-to-end before information transfer, and where resource reservation is possible but not mandatory. • Information transfers as cells, each of which has a fixed length and uses a local address. • In cell-switched networks, – no delay before information transfer, but during information transfer, – each cell carries a header (overhead), expects packet-processing delays, and – may suffer from queuing delays (if resources are not reserved beforehand). 6 Comparison 7 2.2 Optical Communications • light sources, LED and ILD are semiconductor devices that can generate beams of lights when a voltage is applied. – the light-emitting diode (LED) • The LED is comparatively cheaper and has a longer operational life. • can operate in a greater range of temperatures. – the injection laser diode (ILD). • operate on the laser principle and potentially produce higher data rates due to smaller range of light frequencies generated and less dispersion. • A cornerstone of optical networking is the creation of a tuneable laser diode operating around 1.55 mm. • ‘Tuneable’ means the same physical device (i.e. the laser diode) can be used to generate different wavelengths of light. 8 Receiver • An optical receiver is a semiconductor device that detects the light and then generates a flow of electricity. • Optical receivers can be described in terms of these parameters: – receiver efficiency (i.e. the ratio of output current power to input optical power), – the range of optical wavelengths (over which the receiver operates), – response time (how quickly the receiver can react to changes in the input optical power), and – the noise level of the receiver. 9 Wavelength • Three optical bandwidth regions with low attenuation have been selected in fibre transmission. They are centred on 0.85, 1.3 and 1.55 mm. The first wavelength band 10 11 2.2.1 Optical Communication Impairments • Attenuation – The phenomenon that signal power gradually reduces over distance as the signal propagates is known as attenuation. – To allow for attenuation, the signal must have sufficient strength for the receiver to detect that signal and therefore we must maintain a signal level sufficiently higher than any noise in the signal channel. – The signal power can be improved using amplifiers, for example, in the case oflong distance transmission. – In addition, attenuation is an increasing function of frequency. – As indicated in Figure 2.2, the lowest attenuation in fibre, 0.2 dB/km, occurs at 1.55 mm. Beyond that point, as wavelengths increase, the attenuation starts to pick up and then becomes high quickly. Attenuation in fibre is logarithmic as expressed below: 12 Dispersion • • Dispersion is the effect that different frequency components of the transmitted signal travel at different velocities in the fibre, arriving at different times at the receiver. Types of dispersion – multimode distortion, occurs in multimode fibres, in which the signal is spread in time because the velocity of propagation of the optical signal is not the same for all modes. – polarisation dispersion, describes the light wave orientation. The different polarisations of light travelling at different speeds through optical fibre can cause polarisation dispersion – chromatic dispersion. specifies the wavelength dependence of the velocity of propagation (of the optical signal) on the bulk material of which the fibre is made. • • • Multimode distortion Polarisation. The amount of dispersion is wavelength dependent. Dispersion is a problem because it results in inter-signal interference if fibre lengths (before amplifiers) are too long. One way to reduce dispersion is to increase the distance between the light pulses, but this lowers the signalling rate and so the overall data rate. 13 Nonlinear effects • When the optical power within an optical fibre is small such as in low bit-rate systems, fibre can be regarded as a linear medium, i.e. the loss and Refractive Index (RI) of the fibre are independent of the signal power. • RI is a property of the fibre core and determines how fast the light travels in the fibre. As the advent of WDM systems and the increasing demand of higher bit rates, the amount of optical power within the fibre increases. • When power levels reach a fairly high level in the system, the impact of nonlinear effects arises since both the loss and RI depend on the optical power of the signal in the fibre. 14 Nonlinear effects • Nonlinear effects include Kerr and Scattering effects. • Kerr effects refer to the relationship between the refractive index and the light intensity of the signal. This can result in: – self-phase modulation, where a wavelength can spread out into adjacent wavelengths; – cross-phase modulation, where different wavelengths spread out into each others; or – four-wave mixing, where several wavelengths interact to create a new wavelength. 15 Scattering effects • refer to the signal loss and stimulation due to the contact between light and fibre. • Scattering effects include Raman Scattering and Brillouin Scattering. – Raman Scattering re-emits a longer wavelength due to the loss of energy, while the latter ccurs because of the generated acoustic waves. – Nonlinear effects generally are nondesirable since they make it hard to read signals, and it is possible to misinterpret signals at the receiver. However, Raman Scattering boosts signal power so it is useful or amplification. 16 Crosstalk • Crosstalk represents the undesired coupling of a signal to another optical signal. • Crosstalk in fibre transmission is also known as optical coupling. • Interchannel crosstalk occurs when the two interfering optical signals have different wavelengths. • Intrachannel crosstalk can take place when two light sources are transmitting using the same wavelength (or very close wavelengths) and a small amount of light of the first signal ‘leaks’ to the second’s receiver. • Crosstalk can also happen when there are multiple paths for an optical signal. In that case, light is leaked into alternate path(s). The branching signal also reaches the receiver and therefore causes receiver confusion. 17 2.2.2 Optical Switching • Switching domains: There are several types of optical switching technology classified by switching domains. • The classification is also related to the switching traffic granularity (i.e. the size of the signal that a carrier needs to switch): – Fibre switching: switches an incoming fibre including all the wavelength channels on it to an outgoing fibre. – Wavelength band switching: switches a set of wavelengths on an incoming fibre to an outgoing fibre. – Wavelength switching: switches an individual wavelength to a wavelength on an outgoing fibre. – Subwavelength switching: in the case of aggregated traffic, switches subwavelength payloads onto the outgoing fibre, e.g. TDM slots. – Space switching: switches a signal from one input port to several different (possibly all) output ports. – Time switching: each input port is given a time slot for admitting a signal. Time switching is used in conjunction with other switching techniques. 18 Client interface vs. physical transport interface • Client interfaces – represent the boundary between the WDM network and external networks. – provides an interface from the WDM provider network to a client network. – may request specific client signal formats, e.g. SONET/SDH signals. • • • • • Client interfaces that are located at the WDM network edge-switch are directly connected to a switching fabric. An add port can insert a client signal into the WDM network through the switching fabric. The client signal is switched to a corresponding multiplexer for wavelength multiplexing and then amplified before being sent through the fibre to the receiver. A drop port can ‘drop’ a wavelength channel from the WDM network. The incoming wavelengths go through de-multiplexing, fabric switching, and then the drop port. Depending on the interface card supported at the drop port, the wavelength is converted into a specific client signal format. 19 Wavelength continuity vs. wavelength interchange • In WDM optical networks, optical cross-connect (OXC) requires wavelength switching, which connects a specific wavelength on an incoming fibre to the same wavelength on one or more ongoing fibres. Wavelength switching for an incoming signal depends not only on the availability of the specific optical frequency on the outgoing fibres but also on the capability of the fabric supporting wavelength interchange. • Therefore, wavelength continuity and interchange are the two conditions to describe the wavelength at the fabric physical transport interface. • Wavelength continuity means lack of wavelength interchange, i.e. the same wavelength or frequency is required in the signal for endto-end transmission. Supporting wavelength interchange not only can reduce the network bandwidth waste but also helps with contention for specific wavelengths. 20 1R, 2R, and 3R regeneration • The degree of transparency depends on the type of signal regeneration at the fabric. • 1R – simply just relays the signal by amplification without retiming and reshaping. • 2R – amplifies and then reshapes the signal to remove noise and dispersion without retiming during signal regeneration. – offers transparency to bit rate but does not support different modulation formats. • 3R – regenerates signals through amplification and reshaping and then retiming by synchronising with the network clock. – eliminates transparency to bit rates and framing formats completely since the signal is reclocked. – produces a cleaner signal at each regeneration node so 3R signals can travel a relatively long distance ‘safely’. – However, complex regeneration is expensive and time-consuming. 21 Arbitrary concatenation • Concatenation and grooming are used for improving bandwidth utilisation. • A grooming switch has the ability to divide the signal into smaller payload granularities and directs the payloads to different ports. • Arbitrary concatenation refers to the capability of precise band- width provisioning that is not confined to the standard SONET line rates. • For example, a conventional OC-48 OADM only handles OC-3 and OC-12, but with arbitrary concatenation, a switch can combine, for example, exactly 17 STS-1s to create an OC-17. • Arbitrary concatenation is an important feature for a WDM switch because it introduces flexibility and quality of service to traffic with finer granularities. 22 wavelength and subwavelength concatenation 23 ITU-T WDM system 24 2.2.3 Opaque vs. Transparent Switching • WDM switching functionality can be implemented in either the electrical or the optical domain. • electrical switching, known as opaque fabric – the optical signal is terminated at the entry of the switching fabric, – converted to electrical signals, and – regenerated as an optical signal at the output of the fabric. • All-optical switching, known as transparent fabric – the original optical signal passes through the fabric without the electrical and optical conversion. • In a circuit-switched network, switching control is provisioned through a shadowed data communication network. • A transparent optical network refers to the capability of supporting an end-to-end optical channel, upon which there is no O-E-O conversion in the intermediate hops. 25 Comparison • Opaque systems – are attractive for applications where subwavelength grooming and signal processing are required. – The majority of vailable opaque switches support or will support grooming at subwavelength granularity and provide the ability to arbitrarily concatenate lower-speed signals. • Transparent systems – are suitable for switching the entire wavelength and groups of wavelengths at the network core. 26 Comparison 27 WDM Network Testbed and Product Comparison • Bellcore’s LAMBDANET and IBM’s Rainbow are the two early WDM local area • network testbeds. • LAMBDANET – Both TDM and WDM technology are used in the Bellcore’s LAMBDANET – each node has a fixed wavelength for each transmitter (using a Distributed FeedBack laser, DFB) and an array of receivers (the size of the array is equal to the number of nodes in the network). The incoming wavelengths are separated using a grating demultiplexer. – aims at simplicity and also supports multicasting. – Each transmitter, in time slots, multiplexes the traffic destined to all other nodes into a single wavelength. – Each receiving node simultaneously receives all the traffic, buffers it, and selects the traffic destined for it in the electronic domain. – Two sets of experiments were performed, with 16 and 18 wavelengths, running at 1.5 and 2.0 Gbps per wavelength, respectively. 28 IBM’s Rainbow network • IBM’s Rainbow network – originally designed to interconnect 32 IBM PS/2 workstations using 32 X 200 Mbps channels. – was the first to demonstrate tunable components. – The network uses fixed transmitters and tunable receivers. – Each node has a DFB laser transmitter that is associated with a specific wavelength channel. – Before the transmitter sends data, the receiver needs to tune to the transmitter wavelength. – The synchronisation is completed in the connection setup process using out-of-band signalling. If a receiver is idle, it will check all the wavelength channels for a connection setup request. – Once the receiver finds the channel, it sends an acknowledgement to the corresponding transmitter. – Thereafter, the channel is set up and ready for transmission. 29 All-Optical Networking (AON) • The All-Optical Networking (AON) Consortium, formed by AT&T, DEC, and MIT Lincoln Laboratory also under DARPA sponsorship. • tried to develop architectures and technologies to exploit the unique properties of fibre optics for advanced broadband networking including both WDM and TDM. • AON deployed a static wavelength routing testbed in the Boston metropolitan area to demonstrate the feasibility and interaction of architectures, optical technologies and applications. • The testbed uses space switches to implement wavelength routers and converters. • It allows the establishment of semi-permanent physical circuits for teleconferencing or other scheduled services. • This is supported by DFB lasers with tuning times of tens of seconds. 30 Wdm NETWORK TESTBED 31 Testbed Comparison 32 Product Comparison 33