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Nexans Cabling Solutions, Jan 2004 1 Agenda Facts about Nexans Technics Cabling evolution Parameters Cat 6 versus Cat 5 Standardization – What is Deembedding? Nexans Solutions Class D/E/F, Essential Installation Issues/Installation practice FO theory/FO practice Tendencies in Structured Cabling / FTTW Nexans Cabling Solutions, Jan 2004 2 Cabling Evolution Why Universal Cabling ? Nexans Cabling Solutions, Jan 2004 3 Cabling Evolution Telephone Informatics Unstructured Structured Universal Cabling System Pre-engineered Cabling System Nexans Cabling Solutions, Jan 2004 4 Cabling Evolution Telephony Basic Star Structure: still applicable today PABX Voice Grade Cable: not installed any more Nexans Cabling Solutions, Jan 2004 5 Cabling Evolution Data networking (80 - 90) LAN introduction New cable media SAS 10BASE5 FDDI DAS Token Ring HO ST Nexans Cabling Solutions, Jan 2004 6 Cabling Evolution Unstructured Each system had a different kind of transmission medium (UTP, STP, coax, twinax, ...) The Solution installed is not compatible with other Solutions Costly moves and changes No overview Spaghetti cabling Nexans Cabling Solutions, Jan 2004 7 Cabling Evolution Universal Cabling Two media: copper twisted pair and optical fiber Voice, data, video, control signals Patching Facilities Universal (Generic): application independent Nexans Cabling Solutions, Jan 2004 8 Influence of applications on system performance requirements I want to communicate with you No problem, I am conform with the OSI model Nexans Cabling Solutions, Jan 2004 9 TCP/IP = OSI-like Model Layer 5-7: Higher OSI Layers TCP header IP Header Ethernet Header Layer 4: Transport Layer Layer 3: Network Layer Data Data Layer 2: Data Link Layer Layer 1: physical layer Layer 2: Data Link Layer Ethernet Header Layer 3: Network Layer Layer 4: Transport Layer Layer 5-7: Higher OSI Layers Data IP Header Data TCP header Nexans Cabling Solutions, Jan 2004 10 Network Layer Layer 5-7: Higher OSI Layers TCP header IP Header Layer 4: Transport Layer Layer 3: Network Layer Data The Network Layer 3 addresses the interconnection of networks by routing packets from one network to another. To route packets across different networks we need a router Layer 3: Network Layer Layer 4: Transport Layer Layer 5-7: Higher OSI Layers IP Header Data TCP header Nexans Cabling Solutions, Jan 2004 11 Network Layer IP address (32 bits) 4 Bytes 129 . 60 . 10 . 70 IP address Primary function of IP : to provide an reliable, best effort, connectionless datagram delivery. Nexans Cabling Solutions, Jan 2004 12 Data Link Layer Layer 5-7: Higher OSI Layers TCP header Layer 3: Network Layer Data IP Header Ethernet Header Layer 4: Transport Layer Data Layer 2: Data Link Layer This layer contains the MAC address (Medium access control) - Bridging or switching The data link layer must contain Length of the frames a means of addressing access control to the medium error detection (and correction) Layer 2: Data Link Layer Ethernet Header Layer 3: Network Layer Layer 4: Transport Layer Data IP Header Data TCP header Layer 5-7: Higher OSI Layers Nexans Cabling Solutions, Jan 2004 13 Influence of applications on system performance requirements MAC address (48 bits) 3 Bytes 3 Bytes 0 0 AA 00 32 2A 6B MAC address Supplier identification Nexans Cabling Solutions, Jan 2004 14 Layer 5-7: Higher OSI Layers Layer 1 TCP header IP Header Ethernet Header Layer 4: Transport Layer Data Data Layer 3: Network Layer Layer 2: Data Link Layer Layer 1: physical layer, the Cabling System Layer 2: Data Link Layer Layer 3: Network Layer Layer 4: Transport Layer Layer 5-7: Higher OSI Layers Ethernet Header Data IP Header Data TCP header Nexans Cabling Solutions, Jan 2004 15 OSI Model Layer 1: physical layer, the Cabling system This Layer addresses the physical characteristics of the network Types of cables used Types of connectorsLayer used1: physical layer Required Performance levels of the links and channels Max. length of the cables Defines the representation of bits (zero’s and ones) on the cable frequency, voltage, encoding techniques The higher layers give a meaning to these bit values Nexans Cabling Solutions, Jan 2004 16 OSI Model: From bits to frequencies Layer 1: physical layer Ethernet Technique 10 Mbps 10 MHz Manchester Encoding The Network Interface Cards (NIC) translate the bits into voltage levels (Frequencies). The encoding technique compresses the bit stream so that high bit rate application can be transported over lower bandwidth links. Because of the fact that the transmission speed is depending on the encoding technique, we do not use the term Mbps to compare cables to each other, but we use MHz which is the parameter expressing the bandwidth of the cable. The physical Layer 1 is thus completely determined by the upper laying layers Nexans Cabling Solutions, Jan 2004 17 Influence of applications on system performance requirements Ethernet: The physical layer IEEE802.3 10BASE-T Twisted pair RJ45 100 m Manchester encoding 3V Class C link/channel performance required Nexans Cabling Solutions, Jan 2004 18 Influence of applications on system performance requirements Gigabit Ethernet: The physical layer IEEE802.z 1000BASE-T Twisted pair RJ45 100 m PAM 5 encoding 3V Class D’99 link/channel performance required Class D’01 preferred Nexans Cabling Solutions, Jan 2004 19 Standardisation : Universal Cabling Class F / Category 7 Class E / Category 6 Class DCategory / Category 5 /5Class (+amendment) D (Category Category 4) 4 Class C / Cat 3 16 MHz 20 MHz 100 MHz 200 MHz 600 MHz Nexans Cabling Solutions, Jan 2004 20 Agenda Facts about Nexans Technics Cabling evolution Parameters Cat 6 versus Cat 5 Standardization – What is Deembedding? Nexans Solutions Class D/E/F, Essential Installation Issues/Installation practice FO theory/FO practice Tendencies in Structured Cabling / FTTW Nexans Cabling Solutions, Jan 2004 21 Technical Knowledge Megabits or MegaHertz ? ? ? Attenuation Near-End Crosstalk Attenuation to Crosstalk Ratio PowerSum Next, PowerSum ACR ELFEXT, PowerSum ELFEXT Delay Skew Return Loss Coupling Attenuation Electromagnetic Interference Nexans Cabling Solutions, Jan 2004 22 Megabits or MegaHertz ? Which one is faster ? 2000 rpm = ? km/h 2000 rpm = ? km/h Nexans Cabling Solutions, Jan 2004 23 OSI Model: From bits to frequencies: Encoding Techniques 100 Mbps x conversion factor = ??? MHz CODING IS AN APPLICATION DEPENDENT NECESSITY !!! APPLICATION Mbps Bandwidth Encoding Technique Ethernet 10 Mbps 10 MHz (Manchester) Token Ring 4 & 16 Mbps 16 MHz (Manchester) Fast Ethernet 100 Mbps TP-PMD 62,5 MHz (NRZI + 4B5B) 31,25 MHz (MLT-3 + 4B5B) 78 MHz (NRZ) ATM 155 Mbps 1000BASE-T 1000 Mbps 125 MHz 1000BASE –TX 1000 Mbps 250 MHz ATM 1000 1000Mbps 250 Mhz (PAM-5) (PAM-5) Nexans Cabling Solutions, Jan 2004 24 Cabling Evolution AN EFFICIENT CABLING SYSTEM HAS TO ANTICIPATE Capability of Cabling Infrastructure Request of Bandwidth Ethernet 10 Mb/s ‘ 80 Token Ring 16 Mb/s Fast FDDI Ethernet 100 Mb/s100Mb/s ATM 155 Mb/s ‘85 ‘93 ‘94 Gigabit Ethernet 1000 Mb/s ‘95 ‘98 Digital Signal Encoding 0 1 0 0 1 1 0 1 0 0 Man NRZ-I Nexans Cabling Solutions, Jan 2004 26 Influence of Noise Signal/Noise Ratio (SNR) is more important with higher levels of coding Nexans Cabling Solutions, Jan 2004 27 Megabits or MegaHertz ? We use km/h to express the speed of a car Use MegaHertz to express transmission speed !!! Nexans Cabling Solutions, Jan 2004 28 Technical Knowledge Megabits or MegaHertz ? ? ? Attenuation Near-End Crosstalk Attenuation to Crosstalk Ratio PowerSum Next, PowerSum ACR ELFEXT, PowerSum ELFEXT Delay Skew Return Loss Coupling Attenuation Electromagnetic Interference Nexans Cabling Solutions, Jan 2004 29 Attenuation Attenuation (Insertion loss) I am talkingt oyou ! Can you he ar me ? Nexans Cabling Solutions, Jan 2004 30 Attenuation Attenuation The amount of signal loss in the transmission link (expressed in dB) Signal Source Signal Receiver dB Loss Nexans Cabling Solutions, Jan 2004 31 Technical Knowledge Megabits or MegaHertz ? ? ? Attenuation Near-End Crosstalk Attenuation to Crosstalk Ratio PowerSum Next, PowerSum ACR ELFEXT, PowerSum ELFEXT Delay Skew Return Loss Coupling Attenuation Electromagnetic Interference Nexans Cabling Solutions, Jan 2004 32 Near End Crosstalk Near End Crosstalk (NEXT) Eric Bob Chris Dave = NEXT is a measure of signal coupling from one pair to another pair. Nexans Cabling Solutions, Jan 2004 33 Technical Knowledge Megabits or MegaHertz ? ? ? Attenuation Near-End Crosstalk Attenuation to Crosstalk Ratio PowerSum Next, PowerSum ACR ELFEXT, PowerSum ELFEXT Delay Skew Return Loss Coupling Attenuation Electromagnetic Interference Nexans Cabling Solutions, Jan 2004 34 Attenuation to Crosstalk Ratio Attenuation to crosstalk ratio (ACR) ACR (dB) = NEXT (worst case) - attenuation (worst case) 70 dB Minimal LANmark5/ Cat.5e350 link performance 60 dB ISO/IEC IS 11801 specification 50 dB 40 dB 16 dB 30 dB Nexans Cabling Solutions 20 dB ISO/IEC 8.7 dB ACR 10 dB 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 100 Frequency (MHz) Nexans Cabling Solutions, Jan 2004 35 Attenuation to Crosstalk Ratio Gigabit Ethernet 1000 Mbps Fast Ethernet 100 Mbps ATM 155 Mbps Rule : For high speed applications ACR of a link should be better than 13 dB at 100 MHz Nexans Cabling Solutions, Jan 2004 36 Technical Knowledge Megabits or MegaHertz ? ? ? Attenuation Near-End Crosstalk Attenuation to Crosstalk Ratio PowerSum Next, PowerSum ACR ELFEXT, PowerSum ELFEXT Delay Skew Return Loss Coupling Attenuation Electromagnetic Interference Nexans Cabling Solutions, Jan 2004 37 Technical Knowledge Focus on phenomena that will occur : during a simultaneous parallel transmission of data in both directions on all four pairs in the cable Full duplex bi-directional transmission on 4 pairs Simplex bi-directional transmission Nexans Cabling Solutions, Jan 2004 38 Technical Knowledge Simplex bi-directional transmission (over 2 pairs) e.g. Ethernet, Token Ring attenuation NEXT ACR Full duplex bi-directional transmission (over 4 pairs) e.g. Gigabit Ethernet: PowerSum specs (PSNEXT, PSACR) ELFEXT, PSELFEXT Delay skew Return loss Coupling attenuation Nexans Cabling Solutions, Jan 2004 39 Technical Knowledge 1000 Mbps Full Duplex over 4 pairs ? 250 Mbps on each pair in both directions 1000 Mbps simultaneously in both directions Nexans Cabling Solutions, Jan 2004 40 Near End Crosstalk Near End Crosstalk (NEXT) = NEXT is a measure of signal coupling from one pair to another pair. Nexans Cabling Solutions, Jan 2004 41 PowerSum NEXT PowerSum NEXT Bob Alan Chris PowerSum NEXT Dave Eric Andres Geoff Franco = NEXT coupling from 3 adjacent pairs transmitting simultaneously Nexans Cabling Solutions, Jan 2004 42 PowerSum NEXT In Gigabit Ethernet : PowerSum NEXT will be cancelled out ! Need 4 of these RX + - TX Powersum NEXT Nexans Cabling Solutions, Jan 2004 44 PowerSum ACR Attenuation to Crosstalk Ratio Attenuation to Crosstalk Ratio ACR = NEXT - attenuation Attenuation to crosstalk ratio (ACR) ACR (dB) = NEXT Loss (worst case) - a (worst case) 70 dB Minimal Cat.5e350 link performance 60 dB ISO/IEC IS 11801 specification 50 dB 40 dB 16 dB 30 dB Alcatel Cabling Solutions 20 dB ISO/IEC 8.7 dB ACR 10 dB PowerSum ACR 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 100 Frequency (MHz) Cabling Solutions Europe,May 2000 - 43 PSACR = PSNEXT - attenuation ACR/PSACR is the signal to noise ratio considering NEXT/PSNEXT as the only noise sources. Nexans Cabling Solutions, Jan 2004 45 Attenuation to Crosstalk Ratio PS ACR LANmark 6 channel - 2 connectors 70 dB LANmark 6 channel - 4 connectors 60 dB ISO/IEC JTC 1/SC 25/WG 3 N568 specification 50 dB 40 dB 0.1 dB 7.4 dB 30 dB 11.5 dB 20 dB 10 dB 20 40 60 80 100 120 140 160 180 200 Frequency (MHz) Nexans Cabling Solutions, Jan 2004 46 The 4 Connector Channel Model Defined in the ISO and TIA standards Worst Case configuration Allows patching between patch panels High flexibility for modern office environments (zone wiring) Nexans offers 4x RJ45 connections Nexans’ Class E channel outperformes the standards Nexans Cabling Solutions, Jan 2004 47 4 connector channel ACR ACR 120 100 80 ACR [dB] 60 40 20 0 -20 -40 0 100 200 300 400 500 600 Frequency [MHz] N1-2D1 N1-2D2 N1-3D1 N1-3D3 N1-4D1 N1-4D4 N2-3D3 N2-4D2 N2-4D4 N3-4D3 N3-4D4 ACR Grenzkurve N2-3D2 Nexans Cabling Solutions, Jan 2004 48 Technical Knowledge Megabits or MegaHertz ? ? ? Attenuation Near-End Crosstalk Attenuation to Crosstalk Ratio PowerSum Next, PowerSum ACR ELFEXT, PowerSum ELFEXT Delay Skew Return Loss Coupling Attenuation Electromagnetic Interference Nexans Cabling Solutions, Jan 2004 49 Far End Crosstalk Far End Crosstalk (FEXT) Eric Dave FEXT Andres Geoff = is signal coupling from one pair to another pair, measured at the far end Nexans Cabling Solutions, Jan 2004 50 PowerSum FEXT PowerSum FEXT Alan Chris Bob PowerSum FEXT Dave Eric Andres Geoff Franco = FEXT coupling from 3 adjacent pairs transmitting simultaneously Nexans Cabling Solutions, Jan 2004 51 PowerSum ELFEXT PowerSum ELFEXT Nexans Cabling Solutions, Jan 2004 53 PowerSum ELFEXT Equal Level FEXT ELFEXT = FEXT - attenuation PowerSum ELFEXT PS ELFEXT = PSFEXT - attenuation = similar to ACR/PSACR, which is the signal to noise ratio considering NEXT/PSNEXT as the only noise, while ELFEXT/PSELFEXT expresses the signal to noise ratio considering FEXT/PSFEXT only. Nexans Cabling Solutions, Jan 2004 54 Technical Knowledge Megabits or MegaHertz ? ? ? Attenuation Near-End Crosstalk Attenuation to Crosstalk Ratio PowerSum Next, PowerSum ACR ELFEXT, PowerSum ELFEXT Delay Skew Return Loss Coupling Attenuation Electromagnetic Interference Nexans Cabling Solutions, Jan 2004 55 Delay Skew Delay Skew I am talking to you I am to you talking Nexans Cabling Solutions, Jan 2004 56 Delay Skew Delay Skew = is the difference in travel time on the 4 pairs (expressed in nsec) Nexans Cabling Solutions, Jan 2004 57 Delay Skew 1000 Mbit Message = A B C D 250 Mbps 250 Mbps 250 Mbps Delay Skew too high! 250 Mbps B D A C ???? = ???? Nexans Cabling Solutions, Jan 2004 58 Delay Skew Delay Skew : example < 50 nsec Channel with a delay Skew of more than 50 nsec cannot successfully support Gigabit Ethernet Nexans Cabling Solutions, Jan 2004 59 Technical Knowledge Megabits or MegaHertz ? ? ? Attenuation Near-End Crosstalk Attenuation to Crosstalk Ratio PowerSum Next, PowerSum ACR ELFEXT, PowerSum ELFEXT Delay Skew Return Loss Coupling Attenuation Electromagnetic Interference Nexans Cabling Solutions, Jan 2004 60 Return loss Return Loss = Return Loss (or Transmit Echo) is expressing the reflection of a signal on the same wire pair Nexans Cabling Solutions, Jan 2004 61 Return loss Return Loss A measure of the strength of reflected signal echoes Caused by impedance mismatches along a cable run Signal echo is an additional noise source Nexans Cabling Solutions, Jan 2004 62 Return loss In Gigabit Ethernet : Return Loss will be cancelled out ! RX + - TX Return Loss Nexans Cabling Solutions, Jan 2004 63 Technical Knowledge Megabits or MegaHertz ? ? ? Attenuation Near-End Crosstalk Attenuation to Crosstalk Ratio PowerSum Next, PowerSum ACR ELFEXT, PowerSum ELFEXT Delay Skew Return Loss Coupling Attenuation Electromagnetic Interference Nexans Cabling Solutions, Jan 2004 64 Technical Knowledge Noise sources Ambient noise Return Loss Powersum NEXT Delay Skew Powersum ELFEXT Nexans Cabling Solutions, Jan 2004 65 Ambient Noise Ambient noise Background noise such as noise generated by power lines, telephone voltages, airco’s or engines, … Due to its random nature, ambient noise can not be cancelled out in the NIC and it will contribute to the BER of a system Nexans Cabling Solutions, Jan 2004 66 Coupling Attenuation Coupling attenuation New parameter studied in European Standardisation (CENELEC) Included in last edition of ISO 11801 and EN 50173 Nexans is one of the pioneers in the work on coupling attenuation Measures the electromagnetic isolation between a disturbing source (ambient noise) and the cabling expresses the overall EMC performance of cabling Nexans Cabling Solutions, Jan 2004 67 EMI Sources of Electromagnetic Interference Engines Elevators GSM / Walkie Talkies 230 V cabling high voltage cables Air conditioners TL lighting (HF) Heating sources/ Micro waves/ radars Refrigerators Photocopiers Pencil sharpeners Light Dimmers Nexans Cabling Solutions, Jan 2004 68 Coupling Attenuation Protection against ambient noise determined by Balance Screening Now specified by parameter COUPLING ATTENUATION Nexans Cabling Solutions, Jan 2004 69 Influence of Noise Signal/Noise Ratio (SNR) is more important with higher levels of coding Nexans Cabling Solutions, Jan 2004 70 EMI Electromagnetic Interference (EMI) uncontrollable influence from the outside Nexans Cabling Solutions, Jan 2004 71 EMI Solution : Close the window, use a screen !!! Nexans Cabling Solutions, Jan 2004 72 EMI 1) How does a radio pick up signals ? antenna Nexans Cabling Solutions, Jan 2004 73 EMI 2) Why is a mobile phone not allowed in hospitals, airplanes and in gasoline stations ? radiation Nexans Cabling Solutions, Jan 2004 74 EMI 3) Why is the housing of a desktop in metal ? Faraday cage Nexans Cabling Solutions, Jan 2004 75 EMI IMMUNITY OF TWISTED PAIR AT LOW FREQUENCIES Nexans Cabling Solutions, Jan 2004 76 EMI IMMUNITY OF INSTALLED TWISTED PAIR AT LOW FREQUENCIES Bending Nexans Cabling Solutions, Jan 2004 77 EMI IMMUNITY OF INSTALLED TWISTED PAIR AT HIGH FREQUENCIES Nexans Cabling Solutions, Jan 2004 78 EMI IMMUNITY OF INSTALLED TWISTED PAIR AT HIGH FREQUENCIES Bending Nexans Cabling Solutions, Jan 2004 79 EMI Single foil FTP cables EMI 40 m Nexans’ EMI dual foil cables 2 x 25 m 10 dB x better EMC performance ! Nexans Cabling Solutions, Jan 2004 80 OVERALL SHIELD MADE OF TWO FOILS HIGHER EMC PERFORMANCES ! ! better Coupling Attenuation, better shield effectiveness Dual Foil 2x 25 µm ! GAIN ON INSTALLATION No risk to cut the foil off when stripping Only one foil to connect More flexible foils easier to manipulate Quick and reliable installation 40 µm FTP ! EFFECTIVE SOLUTION Easy connection of one overall foil provides EMC performances comparable to S-FTP. Nexans Cabling Solutions, Jan 2004 81 EMI EFFICIENCY OF THE FOIL Current flow in the foil “Skin effect” Internally induced currents Externally induced currents Thickness of the foil Nexans Cabling Solutions, Jan 2004 82 EMI SCREENED CABLING TECHNOLOGY Nexans is the inventor and first developer of FTP, combining advantages of UTP and STP Nexans Cabling Solutions is the world leader in screened cabling solutions Full range of screened cables and connectivity, offering a full EMC cabling system Grounding and Earthing considered during design Nexans Cabling Solutions, Jan 2004 83