DataCenter Design Guide
DataCenter Design Guide
Table of Contents
Introduction
to Data Centers
SECTION
SECTION
Corning Cable Systems shall not be responsible for the performance of third-party products
or for any incorrect installation or installation in violation of Corning Cable Systems specifications and procedures.
General Standards . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
PoP Zone . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2
Server Zone . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2
Storage Zone . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
Zone Distribution. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20
Logical Topologies. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21
SECTION
OM3/OM4 EMBc. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
SECTION
Performance Metrics
and Administration
Preterminated Solutions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26
Documentation. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 61
Solutions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 39-44
4U Housing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 46
Chapter Nine: Procuring the Data Center Products . . . . . . 47
Channels . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 47
Chapter Ten: Installation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 48
SECTION
1U Housing. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 45
Generic Specifications for Pretium EDGE
Notes
SECTION
Chapter One:
Overview
A data center, as defined in TIA/EIA-942, Telecommunications Infrastructure Standard for Data Centers, is a
building or portion of a building whose primary function
is to house a computer room and its support areas.
The main functions of a data center are to centralize
and consolidate information technology (IT) resources,
house network operations, facilitate e-business and to
provide uninterrupted service to mission-critical data
processing operations.
Storage
Server Zone
This area of the data center provides the front-end
connection to the database servers. This area contains
many switches and servers. The protocols used to communicate in this area are 1 Gigabit and 10 Gigabit Ethernet.
Switching
PoP
Server Area
Server Area
Server Area
SAN
PoP
Server Area
PoP
Figure 1.1
Functional Areas of the Data Center | Drawing ZA-3580
SAN
PoP Zone
Storage Zone
Network Efficiency
Data centers have seen significant growth in size and numbers in the past few years and should continue to see significant growth in the future as networks continue to evolve
and move toward 100 Gigabit Ethernet. Due to the considerable growth in data centers, there is a need to have simple,
efficient cabling solutions that maximize space and facilitate
reduced installation time and costs. Preterminated solutions
are often the preferred solution as they provide higher fiber
density, reduced installation time and the ability to easily
facilitate moves, adds and changes (MACs).
Manageability
End users are looking for a higher performance, lowprofile solution for a more effective overall operation
of the network. Manageability is essential; without it, the
cabling infrastructure takes over the data center in a short
amount of time. To increase control over the data center
infrastructure, structured cabling should be implemented.
The key benefit of structured cabling is that the user
regains control of the infrastructure rather than living
with an unmanageable buildup of patch cords and an
abundance of unidentifiable cables.
LAN
Core Switch
LAN Protocols
SAN
Switch
Ethernet
Ethernet
Edge
Switch
FC
Ethernet
7 OCTETS
SOURCE
ADDRESS
6 OCTETS
1 OCTET
Copper Cable
Figure 2.1
Typical Data Center Architecture Today | Drawing ZA-3468
TYPE
SOF
DESTINATION
ADDRESS
OM3
DATA
2 OCTETS
6 OCTETS
FCS
4 OCTETS
46-1500 OCTETS
Figure 2.2
Ethernet Frame Format | Drawing ZA-3675
PREAMBLE
Server
FC
Storage
Chapter Two:
Optical Receiver
Optical Transmitter
MTP Connector
MTP Connector
12
Future industry bandwidth drivers such as video applications, virtualization and I/O convergence are driving the
need for network data rates beyond 10G. In response to that
need, the IEEE 802.3ba task force was formed to develop
guidance for 40G and 100G Ethernet data rates. OM3 and
OM4 fibers are the only multimode fibers included in the
standard. 40/100G distances for OM3 and OM4 are 100 m
and 150 m, respectively. The 40/100G standard does not
include guidance for UTP/STP copper media.
1
Tx
Tx
Tx
Tx
Tx
Tx
Tx
Tx
Tx
Tx
Tx
Tx
Tx
Tx
Tx
Tx
Tx
Tx
Tx
Tx
Tx
Tx
Tx
Tx
Rx
Rx
Rx
Rx
Rx
Rx
Rx
Rx
Rx
Rx
Rx
Rx
1
Fiber Position
Rx
Rx
Rx
Rx
Rx
Rx
Rx
Rx
Rx
Rx
Rx
Rx
Fiber Position
12
Figure 2.3
Parallel Optics for 100G Ethernet | Drawing ZA-3300
Optical Receiver
Optical Transmitter
MTP Connector
MTP Connector
12
Fiber Position
Tx
Tx
Tx
Tx
Tx
Tx
Tx
Tx
Rx
Rx
Rx
Rx
1
Fiber Position
12
Optical Receiver
MTP Connector
Fibre Channel
Rx
Rx
Rx
Rx
Optical Transmitter
SAN Protocols
MTP Connector
Figure 2.4
Parallel Optics for 40G Ethernet | Drawing ZA-3299
TABLE 2.1
1G: Multimode
1G: Single-mode
10G: Multimode
10G: Single-mode
Throughput (MBps)
Market
Availability (Year)
1GFC
200
1.0625
1996
1997
2GFC
400
2.125
2000
2001
4GFC
800
4.25
2003
2005
8GFC
1600
8.5
2006
2008
16GFC
3200
14.025
2009
2011
32GFC
6400
28.05
2012
2014
64GFC
12800
57
2016
Market Demand
128GFC
25600
114
2020
Market Demand
FCS
EOF
Fibre
Channel
Header
FCoE
Header
Ethernet
Header
Figure 2.5
Fibre Channel Payload | Drawing ZA-3673
Data centers utilize multiple networks that present operational and maintenance issues as each network requires dedicated electronics and cabling infrastructure. As previously
discussed, Ethernet (LAN) and Fibre Channel (SAN) are
the typical networks in a data center. Fibre Channels T11
technical committee and the Institute of Electrical and
CRC
Product Naming
Throughput (MBps)
Equivalent Line
Rate (GBaud)
Market
Availability (Year)
10GFCoE
2400
10.3125
2008
2009
40GFCoE
9600
41.225
TBD
Market Demand
100GFCoE
24000
103.125
TBD
Market Demand
LAN
Core Switch
SAN
Switch
Ethernet
FCoE
Edge Switch
FC
FC
FCoE
Storage
Server
OM3
SFP+ Twinax
Figure 2.6
First Generation FCoE Architecture | Drawing ZA-3469
SAN
Switch
FCoE
Core Switch
FCoE
FCoE
FCoE
Edge Switch
FC
FCoE
SFP+ Twinax
Figure 2.7
Second Generation FCoE Architecture | Drawing ZA-3470
FCoE
Core Switch
FCoE
Storage
FCoE
FCoE
Edge Switch
FCoE
Server
OM3
SFP+ Twinax
Figure 2.8
Third Generation FCoE Architecture | Drawing ZA-3471
Server
OM3
Storage
the edge switch to the core switch over the same optical
fiber previously used as the uplink to the server. At the
core switch, the FCoE frame is forwarded to the SAN
director where the Ethernet frame is removed and the
Fibre Channel frame is then transmitted to the storage
devices. This architecture solution reduces the server
interconnect cabling and adapter card number by
at least 50 percent and eliminates the Fibre Channel
HBA to SAN optical fiber trunk cable. See Figure 2.7.
Chapter Three:
OM3/OM4 Laser-Optimized
50/125 m Multimode Fiber
Data center LAN and SAN networks should be designed
to support legacy applications as well as emerging highdata-rate applications. The emergence of high-data-rate
systems such as 10, 40 and 100 Gigabit Ethernet and 8 and
16 Gigabit Fibre Channel has resulted in OM3 and OM4
multimode fibers being the dominant optical fiber types
deployed in the data center.
The TIA-492AAAC OM3 detailed fiber standard was
released in March 2002, and the TIA-492AAAD OM4
detailed fiber standard was released in August 2009. The
fibers are optimized for laser-based 850 nm operation and
include a minimum 2000 MHzkm effective modal bandwidth (EMB) for OM3 and 4700 MHzkm EMB for OM4.
The OM multimode fiber nomenclature originated in the
ISO/IEC-11801, second edition standard and has been
adopted into TIA standards such as TIA-568, Rev C.3.
In addition to OM3 and OM4, OM1 and OM2 designations
are included for standard 62.5 m and 50 m multimode
fibers, respectively. See Table 3.1.
Data center high data rates in conjunction with the desired
application distances support OM3 and OM4 as the default
choice fiber types. The small core size of 50/125 m fiber
yields an inherent higher bandwidth capability than other
multimode fibers such as OM1 fiber. Tables 3.2 and 3.3
provide OM3 and OM4 fibers distance capabilities for
Ethernet and Fibre Channel data rates.
Corning Cable Systems strongly recommends OM3 and
OM4 fibers for the data center. When compared to OM1
and OM2 multimode fibers, OM3/OM4 fibers have
the highest 850 nm bandwidth to accommodate longer
distances, provide more system budget margin and support
migration to higher data rates such as 16/40/100G.
TABLE 3.1
Optical Fiber
Cable Type
Fiber Reference
Wavelength
Overfilled Modal
Bandwidth-Length
Product (MHzkm)
Effective Modal
Bandwidth-Length
Product (MHzkm)
62.5/125 m
multimode (OM1)
TIA-492AAAA-A
IEC 60793-2-10
Type A1b
850
1300
200
500
Not Required
Not Required
50/125 m
multimode (OM2)
TIA-492AAAB
IEC 60793-2-10
Type A1a.1
850
1300
500
500
Not Required
Not Required
850 m
laser-optimized
50/125 m (OM3)
TIA-492AAAC-A
IEC 60793-2-10
Type A1a.2
850
1300
1500
500
2000
Not Required
850 m
laser-optimized
50/125 m (OM4)
TIA-492AAAD
IEC 60792-2-10
Type A1a.3
850
1300
3500
500
4700
Not Required
1G
10G
40G
100G
OM3
1000
300
100
100
OM4
1000
550
150
150
4G
8G
16G
OM3
380
150
100
OM4
480
190
125
85%
80%
75%
Figure 3.2
Optical Cable (left) vs. Equivalent Copper Cabling | Photo LAN874
288
240
192
144
96
48
70%
Figure 3.1
Electronics and Cooling Savings
Figure 3.3
Copper Cable Management
Transceivers
Relative Cost
3.0
850 nm optics
1300 nm optics
2.5
2.0
1.5
1.0
0.5
0.0
Figure 3.4
Relative Cost of Single-Mode vs. Multimode 10G Transceiver
3.5
Figure 3.5
SFP/SFP+ Transceiver | Drawing ZA-3674
OM3/OM4 EMBc
For systems operating at data rates greater than 1 Gb/s,
TIA/EIA-455-220 and IEC 60793-1-49 bandwidth test
methods are used to measure the fiber effective modal
bandwidth (EMB) that include a series of small spot size
launches (approximately 5 m) indexed across the fiber core.
Measurements are made of the output pulse time delay and
mode coupling power of the fiber as a function of radial
position. These measurements are referred to as differential
mode delay (DMD) measurements. Data from these measurements can be analyzed by two methods to determine
whether the fiber meets the EMB requirement of a specific
application. The first method for translating DMD measurements into an EMB prediction is commonly referred to
as the DMD mask approach, where the leading and trailing
edges of each pulse are recorded and normalized in power
relative to each other. This normalization approach reduces
the raw DMD data to focus exclusively on time delay, where
the overall fiber delay is calculated as the difference between
the times for the slowest trailing edge and the fastest leading
edge in units of ps/m. In order for a fiber to be determined
as meeting the required minimum value of 2000 MHzkm
EMB for OM3 at 850 nm, the DMD data must conform to
one of six templates or masks and must not show a DMD
measurement greater than 0.25 ps/m for any of four specified radial offset intervals. In order for a fiber to be determined as meeting the required minimum value of 4700
MHzkm EMB for OM4 at 850 nm, the DMD data must
conform to one of three templates or masks and must not
show a DMD measurement greater than 0.11 ps/m for any
of four specified radial offset intervals. It should be noted
that this method provides only a pass/fail estimation against
the 2000 MHzkm and 4700 MHzkm requirements.
Standards
SECTION
Chapter Four:
General Standards
TIA-942
Access
Providers
Horizontal
Cabling
Access
Providers
Backbone
Cabling
Entrance Room
Telecom Room
Computer
Room
(LAN/SAN/KVM
Switches)
(LAN/SAN/KVM
Switches)
(LAN/SAN/KVM
Switches)
(LAN/SAN/KVM
Switches)
(Rack/Cabinet)
(Rack/Cabinet)
(Rack/Cabinet)
(Rack/Cabinet)
Figure 4.1
TIA-942 | Drawing ZA-3301
Horizontal
Cabling
Horizontal
Cabling
(Rack/Cabinet)
90 m (Horizontal Dist.)
100 m (Channel Dist.)
Horizontal
Cabling
90 m (Horizontal Dist.)
100 m (Channel Dist.)
(Rack/Cabinet)
Figure 4.2
Horizontal Distribution Area Topology | Drawing ZA-3581
Access Providers
Computer
Room
Horizontal
Cabling
300 m optical
or 90 m copper
(Rack/Cabinet)
(Rack/Cabinet)
Figure 4.3
Reduced Data Center Topology | Drawing ZA-3427
TIER 1
TIER
3
2
TIER
Offices,
Operations Center,
Support Rooms
TIER
TIER
COMPUTER
ROOM
TIER 4
TIER 4
TIER 3
DATA CENTER
Tier I No Redundancy
99.671% available
Tier II Redundant component, but 1 path
99.741% available
Secondary Customer
Maintenance Hole
TIER 1
Primary Customer
Maintenance Hole
(LAN/SAN/KVM
Switches)
(LAN/SAN/KVM
Switches)
Cabling
Optional
Cabling
(Rack/Cabinet)
(Rack/Cabinet)
(Rack/Cabinet)
Figure 4.4
Tier Ratings for Data Centers | Drawing ZA-3582
Chapter Five:
Figure 5.1
Data Center Example | Drawing ZA-3583
Structured Cabling
EDA
Server
Cabinet
EDA
SAN
MDA
EDGE Switch
SAN Switch
Distribution
Switch
Storage
LAN
Servers
SAN
Router
LAN
Figure 5.2
Data Center Topology | Drawing ZA-3584
Entrance Room
Access
Providers
Horizontal
Cabling
Access
Providers
Backbone
Cabling
Computer
Room
Telecom Room
(LAN/SAN/KVM
Switches)
(LAN/SAN/KVM
Switches)
(LAN/SAN/KVM
Switches)
(LAN/SAN/KVM
Switches)
(Rack/Cabinet)
(Rack/Cabinet)
(Rack/Cabinet)
(Rack/Cabinet)
Server Cabinets
Main Distribution
Frame
Server Cabinets
Server Cabinets
Cabinets
grouped
into zones
ZDA
MDF
Server Cabinets
Server Cabinets
ZDA
Main Distribution
Area (MDA)
Figure 5.4
Identify Zones or ZDAs | Drawing ZA-3585
ZA-3585
ZDA
Cabinets
grouped
into zones
MDF
ZDA
ZDA
Additional
Cabinet
Zones
Main Distribution
Area (MDA)
Figure 5.5
Install High-Fiber-Count Cabling | Drawing ZA-3586
ZA-3586
ZDA
Cabinets
grouped
into zones
MDF
ZDA
Zone distribution is not only a design topology recommended in TIA-942, but also one incorporated into many
data centers operating today. Consider these steps when
considering a zoned architecture:
1. Identify zones or zone distribution areas (ZDAs)
throughout the data center.
2. Install high-fiber-count cabling from the MDA to the
localized zones or ZDAs.
3. Distribute lower-fiber-count cabling from the ZDAs
to the cabinets or components within the zone.
Additional
Cabinet
Zones
ZDA
Figure 5.3
TIA-942 | Drawing ZA-3301
ZDA
Main Distribution
Area (MDA)
Figure 5.6
Distribute Lower-Fiber-Count Cabling | Drawing ZA-3587
ZA 3587
Additional
Cabinet
Zones
Chapter Six:
Core
Aggregation
Access
Storage
Core
The core layer provides the high-speed connectivity
between the data center and the campus network.
This is typically the area where multiple ISPs provide
connections to the internet.
TABLE 6.1
Layer
Logical Architecture
Core
Aggregation
Access
Storage
Aggregation
The aggregation layer provides a point where all server
area devices can share common applications such as firewalls, cache engines, load balancers and other value-added
services. The aggregation layer must be able to support
multiple 10G and 1 Gig connections to support a
high-speed switching fabric.
Access
The access layer provides the connectivity between the
aggregation layer shared services and the server farm.
Since additional segmentation may be required in the
access area three different segments are needed:
1. Front-end segment This area contains web servers,
DNS servers, FTP and other business application
servers.
2. Application segment Provides the connection
between the front-end servers and the back-end servers.
3. Back-end segment Provides connectivity to the
database servers. This segment also provides access
to the storage area network (SAN).
Storage
The storage layer contains the Fibre Channel switches and
other storage devices such as magnetic disc media or tape.
Maps to
Maps to
Aggregation
Maps to
Aggregation
Layer
Access
Layer
Front-End
Layer
App
Layer
Back-End
Layer
Storage
Layer
Storage
Layer
Figure 6.1
Logical Architecture | Drawing ZA-3656
Core Layer
Figure 6.2
Data Center Rack Layout | Drawing ZA-3540
Front-End
Layer Zone
EDA
EDA
EDA
ZDA
EDA
EDA
EDA
EDA
EDA
ZDA
EDA
EDA
EDA
EDA
EDA
ZDA
EDA
EDA
EDA
EDA
EDA
ZDA
EDA
EDA
EDA
EDA
Server Cabinets
Application
Layer Zone
EDA
EDA
EDA
Core Switching
Aggregation Switching
SAN Switching
Server Cabinets
MC
Back-End
Layer Zone
EDA
EDA
EDA
Server Cabinets
Storage
Zone
EDA
EDA
EDA
Storage Cabinets
Figure 6.3
Data Center Cabled Architecture | Drawing ZA-3541
EDA
32x 10GE
2x Blade Server Chassis
With 16 Pass-Through
10GE Connections
16x 10GE
Figure 6.4
Switch Configuration | Drawing ZA-3657
Oversubscription Ratio
Per Switch
8:1
24
4:1
16
48
1.6:1
20
40
96
EDA
Application
Layer Zone
EDA
EDA
EDA
EDA
ZDA
EDA
EDA
EDA
EDA
Back-End
Layer Zone
EDA
EDA
EDA
EDA
ZDA
EDA
EDA
EDA
EDA
ZDA
EDA
EDA
EDA
ZDA
EDA
EDA
EDA
EDA
Core A
96F
Storage
Zone
EDA
96F
EDA
EDA
96F
EDA
96F
96F
EDA
96F
EDA
96F
EDA
Core B
96F
EDA
3 x 144F
3 x 144F
Core B
Figure 6.6
Switch Configuration | Drawing ZA-3588
FigureFront-End
6.5
EDA EDA EDA EDA ZDA EDA EDA EDA EDA
Zone
Fiber Layer
Count
Configuration | Drawing ZA-3658
8:1
48
72
4:1
96
144
1.6:1
20
240
288
EDA
Application
Layer Zone
EDA
EDA
EDA
EDA
ZDA
EDA
EDA
EDA
EDA
Back-End
Layer Zone
EDA
EDA
EDA
EDA
ZDA
EDA
EDA
EDA
EDA
ZDA
EDA
EDA
EDA
ZDA
EDA
EDA
EDA
EDA
Core A
288F
Storage
Zone
EDA
288F
EDA
288F
EDA
288F
288F
EDA
EDA
288F
EDA
288F
EDA
Core B
288F
EDA
9 x 144F
Figure 6.7
FiberFront-End
Count
Configuration | Drawing ZA-3658
EDA EDA EDA EDA ZDA EDA EDA EDA EDA
9 x 144F
Front-End
Layer Zone
EDA
Application
Layer Zone
EDA
EDA
EDA
EDA
ZDA
EDA
EDA
EDA
EDA
Back-End
Layer Zone
EDA
EDA
EDA
EDA
ZDA
EDA
EDA
EDA
EDA
ZDA
EDA
EDA
EDA
ZDA
EDA
EDA
EDA
EDA
Core A
576F
Storage
Zone
EDA
576F
EDA
EDA
576F
576F
576F
EDA
EDA
576F
EDA
576F
EDA
Core B
576F
EDA
18 x 144F
18 x 144F
Figure 6.8
Fiber Count Configuration | Drawing ZA-3658
8:1
96
144
4:1
192
288
1.6:1
20
480
576
SECTION
Chapter Seven:
An optical fiber link component can be completely assembled and tested prior to leaving the factory. Most of the
problems associated with the traditional field installation
occur with the field connectorization and correct loading
of the connectors into the hardware. These problems are
greatly reduced with factory-terminated connectors.
Preterminated Solutions
Standard-Density Solutions
CONEC
Pull
TO REMOVE
PUSH
Figure 7.1
MTP Multi-fiber Connector | Drawing ZA-1572
Pulling Grips
The factory-terminated connectors on the Plug & Play
Universal Systems trunk cables are protected with a
protective pulling grip (Figure 7.2). This grip is designed
to be installed by being hand-pulled through a duct, under a
raised floor and through a riser shaft or through a dropped
ceiling. The pulling grip is rated to a 100 lb tensile load.
Extender Trunks
Figure 7.3
Plug & Play Hybrid Trunk, 144 fiber | Photo LAN801
Figure 7.2
Plug & Play Universal Systems Pulling Grip with
Integrated Mounting Hardware | Photo LAN654
Modules
Plug & Play Universal Systems modules transition from the
MTP Connector on the trunk cable to the discrete connectors used in electronics. For example, if an LC duplex connector is used on the edge switches, an MTP-to-LC duplex
module requires only one panel space in the hardware for up
to 24 fibers, utilizing that valuable real estate wisely by using
LC duplex connectors to double the capacity of the box
instantly (Figure 7.4).
Note: Polarity is discussed in detail in Chapter Eleven. Corning Cable Systems
Application Engineering Note 69, Plug & Play Universal Systems also
addresses polarity.
Figure 7.4
Plug & Play Universal Systems Module | Photo LAN1797
Harnesses
Like modules, harnesses allow the user to maintain
modularity with a system solution implemented by
providing a transition from the MTP Connectors used on
the trunk or extender trunk cables to single- or dual-fiber
connectors. A harness is a cable assembly with a multi-fiber
pinned MTP Connector on one end and simplex or duplex
connectors at the ends of up-jacketed legs.
Figure 7.5
Integrated Trunk Module | Photo LAN1680
Figure 7.6
Harness | Photo LAN1371
Figure 7.7
PCH-M3-01U | Photo LAN994
Hardware
Figure 7.8
PCH-02U | Photo LAN1008
Figure 7.10
1U 96-Fiber Shelf | Photo LAN1248
Figure 7.9
PCH-04U | Photo LAN1399
Patch Cords
Figure 7.12
RBC-02P with Module | Photo LAN1208
Figure 7.13
CPP-01U-PNL Low-Profile Bracket | Photo LAN1361
Figure 7.16B
144-Fiber Trunk Cable | Photo LAN1568
Figure 7.17
Trunk Furcation Comparison | Photo LAN1551
High-Density Solutions
Figure 7.16A
Trunk Pulling Grip | Photo LAN1569
Figure 7.14
Pretium EDGE Solutions | Photo LAN1740
Figure 7.15
Pretium OM3 Jumper | Photo LAN1528
Figure 7.18A
Pretium EDGE Solution Trunk, 12-Fiber | Photo LAN1548
Figure 7.18B
Pretium EDGE Solutions Trunk Reel | Photo LAN1567
Extender Trunks
Figure 7.19
Pretium EDGE Solutions Module | Photo LAN1542
Figure 7.20
Trunk Installation into Pretium EDGE Solutions Modules
| Photo LAN1751
Modules
Figure 7.21
VFL-Compatible Shutter | Photo LAN1545
Figure 7.22
Module in Easy-Open Plastic Packaging | Photo LAN1543
Figure 7.24
Pretium EDGE Solutions Harnesses Installed in Electronics
Figure 7.23
Pretium EDGE Solutions Harnesses | Photo LAN1554
Harnesses
| Photo LAN1536
Figure 7.25
Pretium EDGE Solutions MTP Connector Panels, 24-Fiber
| Photo LAN1546
| Photo LAN1795
Figure 7.26
Pretium EDGE Solutions MTP Connector Panels, 48-Fiber
Figure 7.27
Pretium EDGE Solutions 4U Housing | Photo LAN1564
Housings
Pretium EDGE Solutions housings are available in both
1U and 4U sizes and mount in 19-in racks or cabinets.
Combined with Pretium EDGE Solutions trunks, modules
and jumpers, they provide industry-leading high-density
connectivity, with a port density of 576 fibers within a single
4U housing (Figure 7.27). The housings are highly configurable to meet the dynamic connectivity environments of
both the main distribution area (MDA) and equipment
distribution area (EDA) locations in the data center.
In the MDA, the Pretium EDGE Solutions housing provides
a cross-connect for first level backbone cables, entrance
cables and equipment cables. In the EDA, the housing is an
interconnect to system equipment (such as SAN switches,
servers and IP switches). This allows for the effortless addition of groups of switches, storage devices or servers with its
modular design. The housing also accommodates the mixing
and matching of multiple Pretium EDGE Solutions modules
and panels within one chassis.
Figure 7.28
Pretium EDGE Solutions Housing, Rear View | Photo LAN1746
Figure 7.29
Cable Entry into Pretium EDGE Solutions Housing | Photo LAN1747
Figure 7.31
Pretium EDGE Solutions External Jumpers | Photo LAN1732
Figure 7.30
Pretium EDGE Solutions External Jumpers | Photo LAN1783
Jumpers
Figure 7.32
Pretium EDGE Solutions Jumper | Photo LAN1547
Chapter Eight:
MTP-terminated
Trunk Cable
Optional
MTP-terminated
Extender Trunk
LC Duplex
Patch Cord
Rx/Tx
Transceiver
MTP to LC Duplex
Harness
Tx/Rx
Figure 8.1
Modular Pretium EDGE Solutions Connected to Transceiver
Ports with Jumpers and Harnesses | Drawing ZA-3667
Chapter Eight: Writing a Data Center Request for Proposal | LAN-1160-EN | Page 39
TABLE 8.2: Available Fiber Types, Optical Specifications, Jacket Colors for Trunks
Priority
Multimode
Single-Mode
3.0/1.0
3.0/1.0
0.4/0.3
1500/500
3500/500
-/-
2000/-
4700/-
-/-
Jacket Color
Aqua
Aqua
Yellow
Notes:
1) As predicted by RML BW, per TIA/EIA 455-204 and IEC 60793-1-41, for intermediate performance laser-based systems (up to 1 Gb/s).
2) As predicted by minEMBc, per TIA/EIA 455-220 and IEC 60793-1-49 for high-performance laser-based systems (up to 10 Gb/s).
Chapter Eight: Writing a Data Center Request for Proposal | LAN-1160-EN | Page 40
Fiber Attenuation,
max (dB/km)
Minimum Over Filled Launch
(OFL) Bandwidth (MHzkm)
Minimum Effective Modal
Bandwidth (EMB) (MHzkm)
Recommended Minimum
Duct Size/Minimum Bend-Radius
12-36 Fibers
1.6
48-144 Fibers
2.15
Reel A
5-999
5-999
Reel B
Reel C
36
5-999
48
5-800
801-999
72
5-450
451-999
96
5-400
401-999
144
5-300
301-800
801-999
Reel B
Reel C
Flange Diameter
23.5
23.5
23.5
Drum Diameter
15.68
15.68
15.68
Traverse Width
12
18
Chapter Eight: Writing a Data Center Request for Proposal | LAN-1160-EN | Page 41
Harness Connectivity
Harnesses shall be terminated with a pinned MTP
Connector and legs shall be terminated with duplex
LC uniboot style connectors.
Jumper Specification
Multimode
Single-Mode
Priority
Fiber Attenuation,
max (dB/km)
Minimum Over Filled Launch
(OFL) Bandwidth (MHzkm)
Minimum Effective Modal
Bandwidth (EMB) (MHzkm)
3.0/1.0
3.0/1.0
0.4/0.3
1500/500
3500/500
-/-
2000/-
4700/-
-/-
Jacket Color
Aqua
Aqua
Yellow
Same as Jacket
Notes:
1) As predicted by RML BW, per TIA/EIA 455-204 and IEC 60793-1-41, for intermediate performance laser-based systems (up to 1 Gb/s).
2) As predicted by minEMBc, per TIA/EIA 455-220 and IEC 60793-1-49 for high performance laser-based systems (up to 10 Gb/s).
Chapter Eight: Writing a Data Center Request for Proposal | LAN-1160-EN | Page 42
TABLE 8.6: Modules - Available Fiber Types, Optical Specifications, Adapter Colors
Priority
Multimode
Single-Mode
Fiber Attenuation,
max (dB/km)
Minimum Over Filled Launch
(OFL) Bandwidth (MHzkm)
Minimum Effective Modal
Bandwidth (EMB) (MHzkm)
Adapter Color
LC
MTP
3.0/1.0
3.0/1.0
0.4/0.3
1500/500
3500/500
-/-
2000/-
4700/-
-/-
Aqua
Aqua
Aqua
Aqua
Blue
Black
Notes:
1) As predicted by RML BW, per TIA/EIA 455-204 and IEC 60793-1-41, for intermediate performance laser-based systems (up to 1 Gb/s).
2) As predicted by minEMBc, per TIA/EIA 455-220 and IEC 60793-1-49 for high-performance laser-based systems (up to 10 Gb/s).
Priority
Multimode
Single-Mode
0.35
0.35
0.75
0.15
0.15
0.5
Module Loss
0.5
0.5
1.3
*Insertion loss specifications when mated to other system components of a like performance specification.
Chapter Eight: Writing a Data Center Request for Proposal | LAN-1160-EN | Page 43
MTP
Key-down
Guide
Pin
Identical
Universal
Modules
Simplex/Duplex Fiber
Figure 8.2
Universal Wiring Scheme Modules on Both Ends
| Drawing ZA-3591
Furcation
Plug
Figure 8.3
Universal Wiring Scheme Harness on One End
| Drawing ZA-3592
Notes:
1) All MTP Connectors shall be installed in standard ribbon position
except as noted.
2) Extender trunk shown in upper right corner is optional.
Chapter Eight: Writing a Data Center Request for Proposal | LAN-1160-EN | Page 44
Module packaging
The modules shall be packaged in blister packs.
The blister packs overall dimensions shall be
4 3/4 in x 3/4 in x 7 3/16 in.
The blister packs shall have the ability to be stored
in a box or be hung when using hook merchandising
storage device.
The plastic reel shall be constructed with 100 percent
recyclable polyethylene terephthalate (PET) material.
MTP Key-up
with Reverse
Ribbon
Positioning
Module Connectivity
Cable assemblies within modules shall be terminated with
MTP Pinned Connector at the back and LC connector
at the front.
Each module shall contain 12 fiber terminations.
All connectors shall be inside the module but shall be
accessible for mating through adapter sleeves mounted
through the wall of the module.
Module shall have a self-retracting shutter adapter
mechanism that allows a single hand operation.
The shutter adapter shall eliminate the need to remove
and re-install dust caps. The shutter adapter shall be VFL
compatible. The adapter sleeves shall be color coded as
indicated in Table 8.6.
Chapter Eight: Writing a Data Center Request for Proposal | LAN-1160-EN | Page 45
Chapter Eight: Writing a Data Center Request for Proposal | LAN-1160-EN | Page 46
Tray
The 4U Pretium EDGE Solutions housing shall have
12 sliding trays with each having a four modules capacity.
Each tray shall provide connectivity through 48 LC
connectors when fully loaded.
Each individual tray shall have patch cord routing guides
that allow a transition and jumper management point.
The jumpers shall be able to exit through the right and
left sides of the housing. This jumper management
scheme shall provide access to individual trays to ease
administration in high-density applications.
The trays shall be manufactured using 18-gauge cold
rolled steel or equivalent for structural integrity and
shall be finished with reflective silver powder coat for
durability.
Standards
Housings shall be mountable in an EIA-310 compatible
465 mm (18.3 in) rack. One EIA rack space or panel
height (denoted as 1U) is defined as being 44.45 mm
(1.75 in) in height.
4U Housing
Housings shall be available in a 4U size.
The housing shall be modular, allowing the installation
of 12 fiber Pretium EDGE Solutions modules in
order to provide scalability in increments of 12 fibers.
The maximum housing density shall be 576 fibers when
fully loaded with modules.
The unit shall be mounted with a 5.33-in frontal
projection.
The unit shall not exceed a depth requirement of 18.35-in.
The unit shall meet the design requirements of
ANSI/TIA/EIA-568 and the plastics flammability
requirements of UL 94 V-0.
Housings shall be manufactured using 0.063-in
aluminum or equivalent for structural integrity
and shall be finished with a reflective silver powder
coat for durability. Installation fasteners shall be
included and shall be black in color.
The housing shall include two field-installable slack
management brackets at the front of the housing.
The brackets shall provide jumper slack management
at the front of the housing and shall allow easy tray
deployment when the tray is fully loaded with Pretium
EDGE Solutions jumpers.
Chapter Nine:
Installation
A good contractor should also be able to assist with the
installation process. The contractor should be able to
help the customer:
1. Purchase, receive, inspect and bring components
to the work site
2. Choose components that they have been trained
to install
Installation
Chapter Ten:
Network Design
Notes
Polarity
Orange Fiber (B)
Key
Duplex Clip
Key
(top of the ferrule)
MT-RJ Ferrule
Fiber
Figure 11.1
Simplex and Duplex Connector Polarity | Drawing ZA-2418
SC Connectors
SECTION
Chapter Eleven:
an optical fiber link and installing fibers using reversepair numbering (i.e., 2, 1, 4, 3 ) on the other end of the
optical fiber link.
Optical fiber patch cords, as specified in TIA/EIA-568-C.3,
must be used when completing circuits using reverse-pair
positioning.
MC
Rx Tx
HC
WA
Back
IC
Legend:
Front
Rx Tx
Figure 11.2
Reverse-Pair Positioning | Drawing ZA-2419
Color
Fiber Number
Color
Blue
Red
Orange
Black
Green
Yellow
Brown
10
Violet
Slate
11
Rose
White
12
Aqua
Figure 11.4
Method B | Drawing ZA-3027
Method C
Method B
Figure 11.5
Method C | Drawing ZA-3028
Figure 11.3
Method A | Drawing ZA-3026
Method A
R L R L R L R L R L R L
R L R L R L R L R L R L
Module with
MTP Connector
Module with
MTP Connector
Key-Up to Key-Down
Key-Up to Key-Down
Trunk with Standard MTP and
Ribbon Twist MTP Connectors
Figure 11.6
Universal Polarity Management Method | Drawing ZA-3486
Optical Receiver
Optical Transmitter
MTP Connector
MTP Connector
12
1
Tx
Tx
Tx
Tx
Tx
Tx
Tx
Tx
Rx
Rx
Rx
Rx
1
Optical Transmitter
MTP Connector
Figure 11.7
Parallel Optics for 100G Ethernet | Drawing ZA-3300
Fiber Position
Rx
Rx
Rx
Rx
Fiber Position
12
Optical Receiver
MTP Connector
Figure 11.8
Parallel Optics for 40G Ethernet | Drawing ZA-3299
End-to-end attenuation and OTDR tests provide quantitative measures of the installed performance of the cable
system and its components. This section outlines the basic
concepts, test methods, test equipment and specific application guidelines for each type of testing. A summary of
recommendations for cable system testing by segment
concludes the section.
This chapter addresses testing, documentation and maintenance of optical fiber cabling systems for new installations,
system upgrades and individual components in the data center. With more than 25 years of field experience, Corning
Cable Systems offers straightforward test procedures and
practical guidelines for system testing. This information
is in accordance with TIA/EIA-568-C. Since the standard
addresses only the end-to-end attenuation test, we have
combined this with additional information on other test
methods and common field test practice applicable in the
data center.
Chapter Twelve:
Background
The attenuation of installed cable systems is measured
by the insertion loss method. This method uses an optical
source and optical power meter to compare the difference
between two optical power levels first measuring how
much light is put into the cable at the near end, and then
measuring how much light exits the far end after the cable
system is inserted in between.
Procedure
End-to-end attenuation testing is performed by a simple
three-step procedure in accordance with TIA/EIA
specifications:
Multimode fiber: OFSTP-14A
Mandrel Wrapping
In accordance with TIA/EIA-568-C.1, mandrel wrapping
should be used when performing power through testing
on multimode fiber. Optical fibers are designed to attenuate the cladding modes almost immediately. Along with
the light in the core, there may be some high-order modes
in the cladding due to the fully flooded launch condition.
These high-order modes normally have a much higher
attenuation than lower-order modes, and often will not
appear at the far end of a fiber link of sufficient length.
Due to these high-order modes, issues arise during the
referencing step of a typical attenuation test.
Test Jumper #1
OTS-600
-20.0 dBm
1
4
7
OTS-600
8
0
1
4
7
8
0
Figure 12.1
End-to-End Attenuation Test | Drawing ZA-3593
F
Figure 12.2
OTS-600 Series Optical Source and Meter | Photo LAN1199
Step 2: Check
Five Turns Around a Mandrel
Test Jumper #1
Adapter
(System Connector Type)
Test Jumper #2
OTS-600
OTS-600
0.4 dB
Mandrel Diameter
For 3 mm (0.12 in) cable
Mandrel Diameter
For 2 mm (0.08 in) cable
22 mm (0.87 in)
N/A
N/A
4 mm (0.16 in)
N/A
22 mm (0.87 in)
62.5 m
17 mm (0.67 in)
N/A
Note: Mandrel part numbers currently available in NAFTA and ready for shipment.
OTS-MANDREL-50
OTS-MANDREL-62
OTS-MANDREL-4
OTS-COMBOMAN (This part number comes with the Standard 50 m and 62.5 m.
Step 3: Test
Leave the two test jumpers attached to the optical source
and optical meter. Disconnect the two jumpers at the
adapter. Attach the optical source/test jumper no. 1 to
one end of the system fiber to be tested and the power
meter/test jumper no. 2 to the other end of the same
fiber. Record the losses for each fiber to be tested
(see Figure 12.4 and 12.5).
Test
Jumper
#1
System
Patch
Panel
Patch
Panel
OTS-600
Test
Jumper
#2
OTS-600
7.7 dB
Figure 12.4
End-to-End Attenuation Test | Drawing ZA-3593
4
7
ZA-3593
OTS-600
850nm
-7.7 dB
Figure 12.5
OTS Display | Drawing ZA-3594
4
5
3
6
SC Jumper No. 1
Source
Meter
-18.0 dBm
SC Jumper No. 2
SC Jumper No. 1
SC Jumper No. 2
Connector pair
Source
Meter
-18.5 dBm
SC Jumper No 3
Connector Pair
SC Jumper No. 3
Source
SC Jumper No. 2
Meter
-19.0 dBm
Connector Pair
| Drawing ZA-3596
M
MTP Pinned Connector
SC Connectors
Blue Leg
OTS-600
Aqua Leg
1
4
7
8
0
Source
Figure 12.9
Aqua Leg
2
Meter
1.5 dBm
MTP Pinned Connector
SC
Connectors
Setup
and Verification MTP
of Test
PinlessJumpers
Connector
Bl L
SC Connectors
| Drawing ZA-3596
Bl
SC Connectors
Blue Leg
SC Jumper No. 1
SC Jumper No. 1
Figure 12.6
Determining the Output Power of the Source Using One
Jumper | Drawing ZA-3596Connector pair
SC Connectors
Blue Leg
OTS-600
OTS-600
Aqua Leg
1
4
7
Aqua Leg
Link Under Test
1
4
7
8
0
Meter
1.5 dBm
Source
Figure 12.10
Testing the MTP Connector Link Starting with the Blue Fiber
| Drawing ZA-3596
Step 3: Test
Without disconnecting from the units, take source and meter
to the distant ends of the system (Figure 12.10). Each test
value represents the system loss along one run of fiber.
Reconnect the first SC connector of each MTP Connector
to SC cable assembly to the source and meter SC jumpers.
Connect the MTP Pinned Connectors of each SC to MTP
Connector jumper to the system MTP Pinless Connectors.
Record the measurement for fiber one. Disconnect the first
SC connectors of each MTP Connector to SC cable assembly and reconnect with the second SC connectors. Record
the measurement for fiber two, then repeat for all 12 fibers.
For additional information, please refer to Corning Cable Systems Applications
Engineering Note AEN 78 Field Test Procedure for Measuring Optical Power
Loss of MTP (Pinless) Connector Links.
Application Guidelines
Testing the attenuation of each segment from patch panel
to patch panel allows the loss of virtually any path to be
determined by adding the loss of the segments involved.
This testing will ensure predicted system performance,
document the system as built and allow routine maintenance checks.
The current TIA/EIA 568 Rev. C standard recommends
end-to-end attenuation tests on both specified wavelengths
for every connectorized fiber in the backbone and tests at
one wavelength in horizontal segments. Based on current
multimode deployments where the vast majority of applications use 850 nm transceivers, Corning Cable Systems
recommends determining if 1300 nm testing is necessary
in the backbone by reviewing potential future protocols
OTDR Testing
End-to-end attenuation testing measures the total amount
of loss between two end points. To find out what causes
this loss and where it occurs in the cable system, an
Optical Time Domain Reflectometer (OTDR) is needed.
An OTDR can locate fiber events and measure the losses
attributable to cable, connectors, splices and/or other
components. The graphical display of loss over a cables
entire length provides the most revealing analysis and
documentation available on a cable link, commonly
referred to as its signature trace.
Figure 12.11
OV-1000 OTDR | Photo LAN731
The OTDR plots distance in meters or feet on the horizontal scale and relative loss in dB on the vertical scale.
The overall trace declines from left to right, indicating
that the light is being attenuated by the fiber, connectors
and splices as it travels down the length of the cable.
Linear sections represent continuous spans of cable.
Spikes or humps indicate reflective events such as connectors or mechanical splices where the continuity of
the glass is interrupted. The final spike on the trace
indicates the end of the fiber.
Test fiber boxes are required to mitigate the effects of
OTDR high-powered launches which may saturate the
OTDR receiver. This generates an inaccurate trace for
the first several meters of the tested system. A minimum
length of 100 m for multimode systems and 300 m for
single-mode systems is required. Test fiber boxes are
the same fiber core diameter as the system length
being tested.
To allow measurement of the connector loss at the optical
patch panel, a test fiber box is used to connect between the
OTDR output and the interconnect hardware.
Figure 12.12
Sample OTDR Signature Trace | Drawing ZA-3659
Figure 12.13
Sample OTDR Table | Drawing ZA-2892
User Tip: Use of a test fiber box also allows simultaneous OTDR testing of a links
signature trace and near-end connector loss. These test results can be documented
together on OTDRs that have event tables.
Test Results
End-to-end attenuation data
Cable Records
Cable specifications
Horizontal
Cabling (Multimode)
Equipment
Required
End-to-End
Attenuation
(Required)
850 or 1300 nm
(multimode)
Optical Meter
Optical Source(s)
Mandrel
Two Test Jumpers
One Adapter
Troubleshooting
as required for links
exceeding the
budgets dB limit
OTDR
Test Fiber Box
OTDR Test
(Optional Only
for Inside Plant)
Test Method
Documentation
Labeling
Labeling Racks and Cabinets
With todays data centers, finding the right patch panel
and port starts with quickly finding the rack or cabinet that
houses the patch panel. Some data center administrators have
created their own system for identifying cabinets or racks in
a data center, but TIA-606-A-1 is meant to help streamline
the process, promote a consistent and reliable methodology
and make it easier on the data center administrator. Creating
rack/cabinet identifiers in the data center is accomplished
by using X and Y coordinates that relate to floor tiles in a
raised-floor system or to the number or rows and cabinets
in a data center floor plan. The X coordinate is an alpha
character and the Y numeric, resulting in a unique identifier for each rack and cabinet. TIA-606-A-1 specifies that the
rack/cabinet identifier label shall be placed at the top and
bottom on both the front and rear of each rack or cabinet.
AA
01
AB
AC
AD
AE
AF
AG
AH
AI
AJ
AK
AL
AM
AN
AO
AP
AR
AS
AT
X-axis
(MDA)
02
Front - End
Layer Zone
EDA
EDA
EDA
EDA
ZDA
EDA
EDA
EDA
EDA
Core A
04
Core B
05Application
Layer Zone
EDA
EDA
EDA
EDA
ZDA
EDA
EDA
EDA
EDA
EDA
EDA
EDA
EDA
ZDA
EDA
EDA
EDA
EDA
EDA
ZDA
EDA
06
07
Back - End
08 Layer Zone
09
10
24F
Storage
Zone
EDA
24F
EDA
24F
24F
24F
EDA
24F
EDA
24F
EDA
11
24F
EDA
3 x 36F
3 x 36F
12
Figure 13.1
Grid Coordinate System for Data Center Equipment | Drawing ZA-3660
Y-axis
03
AQ
Chapter Thirteen:
Labeling Fiber
Fiber termination identification is equally important in mapping the data center network. Individual fibers (such as
jumpers) must be clearly labeled to identify local and remote
location. Typically a single jumper will contain two labels on
each end of the fiber near the termination point identifying
the specific local ID and the remote ID the jumper is patching to. It is important to follow suit with previous defined
code indicating rack or cabinet ID, patch panel ID and more
specifically the individual port or fiber termination location.
This allows users to easily trace jumpers from one location
within the network to the next. Most common identification
methods for individual fiber ID employ the use of flag or
wraparound preprinted labels. Documentation should clearly
identify individual fiber strands of the cable or jumper.
Numeric identifiers for cables and cable strands can be used
solely to differentiate them from other cables sharing their
same characteristics.
Hardware Labeling
Hardware components come pre-labeled for
identification and promote a consistent labeling scheme.
User must provide their own label maker and media for
the frame or cabinet and hardware.
Labeling is best supported with use of adhesive-backed
label makers with media up to one-half inch in height.
Front door of the chassis has a locating crop mark
suggesting a consistent location for the printed ID label
that identifies the location of the chassis within the frame
or cabinet.
Chassis trays are pre-labeled 01 to 12 from the bottom
of the chassis to the top.
Module positions within each chassis tray are identified
by alpha characters A through D from left to right.
Modules or MTP panels come assembled with adapters
and silk screened with fiber and/or port ID.
Chassis comes equipped with a label card that is easily
removable from the inside of the front door and requires
no additional fastening to remain in place. This label
may be written on but use of a label maker is best.
Label card supports adhesive-backed label media and
printed labels may be easily adhered or removed for
moves, adds and changes.
Cable/Jumper Labeling
Labeling of cable and jumpers is equally important
and can be completed following same suggested
coding system shown on page 65 and cross reference to
recommended guidelines of EIA/TIA-606. A preprinted
code on flag/wraparound labels is suggested and may be
purchased from many media suppliers.
Example
The code shown on page 65 provides an analogous solution
in accordance with TIA-606-A-1 for mapping to be
employed with Corning Cable Systems Pretium EDGE
Solutions hardware.
CODE
f1
s1
x1
y1
z1a1
REMOTE ID
T-t1
m1pn1
TO
f2
s2
x2
y2
z2a2
T-t2
m2pn2
STEP 5 -
STEP 4 -
STEP 2 -
STEP 1 -
12
AJ 04
28
T-06
A1-12
TO
12
BK 09
Tray location
T-t1
t1 = Tray location within chassis
Chassis location
z1 = "Optional" identifies Front or Back of the Frame or Cabinet
Use "F" for Front or "B" for Back
a1 = Location of top / left corner of chassis within Frame or Cabinet
Specified in Rack Units
40
T-08
A1-12
Ex:
Figure 13.2
Suggested Code For Labeling | Drawing ZA-3661
STEP 1:
STEP 2:
STEP 3:
STEP 4:
STEP 5:
STEP 3 -
Documentation
Printed Label records Remote
termination of Trunk Cable
LOCAL ID
Figure 13.3
Step 1: Frame or Cabinet Location | Drawing ZA-3662
MODULE LOCATION
WITHIN A TRAY
LC MODULE
FIBER ID
PORT ID
Figure 13.4
Step 2: Chassis Location | Drawing ZA-3663
Figure 13.6
Step 4: Module Location | Drawing ZA-3665
06
12N
4
- AJ0
12N-AJ
04-28
TO 12N-
BK09
-40 T-08
:A1-1
12N-AJ04-28
TO 12N-BK09-40 T-08:A1-12
12N
4
- AJ0
Figure 13.5
Step 3: Tray Location | Drawing ZA-3664
Figure 13.7
Step 5: Documentation | Drawing ZA-3666
SECTION
Glossary
The following are terms used within this guide. These terms are defined within the context of the optical fiber industry.
Anaerobic-Cure Connector
Analog
A communications format that uses continuous physical
variables such as voltage amplitude or frequency variations
to transmit information.
Acceptance Cone
ANSI
Access Jumper
Aramid Yarn
Arbitrated Loop
Fibre Channel topology in which devices are connected
in a loop; a token is used to control access.
Armor
Adapter
AHJ
As-Built Test
ALTOS Cable
Corning Cable Systems stranded loose-tube cable in which
buffer tubes contain two or more fibers and which uses
innovative waterblocking technology for craft-friendliness.
Attenuation
Amplitude modulation. An analog signal with a constant
frequency and varying amplitude.
AM
ABF
Attenuation Coefficient
Bend-Radius (Fiber)
Broadband
Denotes transmission facilities capable of handling a
wide range of frequencies simultaneously, thus permitting
multiple channels in communications systems. It is
normally associated with CATV systems.
Buffering
(1) A protective material extruded directly or around
the coated fiber to protect it from the environment
(also known as tight-buffered); (2) extruding a tube around
colored fiber to allow isolation of the fiber from stresses
in the cable (also known as buffer tubes).
Buffer Tubes
Extruded cylindrical tubes covering optical fiber(s) used for
protection and isolation. See Loose Tube.
Bulkhead
See Adapter.
Bundle
Backscatter
The portion of light that is scattered by the structure of
the glass and travels back toward the source. The OTDR
uses this scattered light to make measurements.
BW
Bandwidth
Bandwidth
Byte
A sequence of 8 bits.
Note: This term is often used to specify the normalized modal bandwidth of a
multimode fiber.
Cabinet
Cable Assembly
Chromatic Dispersion
CJP
Closet jumper-management panel
Class of Service
Cascade
The four classes include connection oriented, connectionless, datagram and fractional bandwidth services.
Coating
A material applied to a fiber during the manufacturing
process to protect it from the environment and handling.
CATV
Coaxial Cable
CCH
Closet connector housing
CCS
Collision
The result when two users attempt to send data simultaneously on a shared media network. Data is corrupted and
both devices must retransmit their information.
CDF
Closet distribution frame
Composite Cable
Central Member
Computer Room
An architectural space to accommodate data
processing equipment.
Centralized Cabling
Conduit
A cabling topology used with centralized electronics connecting the optical horizontal cabling with intrabuilding
backbone cabling passively in the telecommunications
closet or main cross-connect.
Channel
Connecting Hardware
Cable Bend-Radius
Connector
Cut-Off Wavelength
Connector Module
Data Center
CWDM
Coarse wavelength division multiplexing
dB
Connector Panel
See Decibel.
Dead Zone
Coupling
Decibel
See Adapter.
Core
Cross-Connect
Incoming and outgoing fibers terminated in adapter sleeves
or the backplane of the patch panel. Single-fiber jumpers,
which are installed on the front plane, complete the circuits.
Cross-Connect Switch
A fabric switch that connects only to other switches (I/O).
CSH
Closet splice housing
Demarcation Point
A point where the operational control or ownership
changes.
Dielectric
Non-metallic electrically non-conductive. Glass fibers
are considered dielectric. A dielectric cable contains no
metallic components.
Digital
A data format that uses discrete physical levels to
transmit information.
Dispersion
The broadening of light pulses along a length of the fiber.
Two major types are (1) modal dispersion caused by different optical path lengths in a multimode fiber; (2) chromatic dispersion which is the sum of material dispersion and
waveguide dispersion in single-mode fiber. Material dispersion is pulse spread caused by different index of refraction for light of various wavelengths in a waveguide material. Waveguide dispersion is caused by light traveling at
different speeds in the core and cladding of single-mode
fibers with the spreading of a light pulse as it travels down
a fiber. The higher the dispersion, the lower the maximum
transmission frequency.
End-to-End Test
Documentation
Entrance Facility
DMD
DTE
Duplex Connector
Two connectors mechanically joined side by side;
terminating two separate strands of fiber.
Equipment Room
A centralized space for telecommunications equipment
that serves the occupants of a building. An equipment
room is considered distinct from a telecommunications
closet because of the nature or complexity of the
equipment.
EDA
Equipment distribution area. The computer room space
occupied by equipment racks or cabinets.
EDC
Environmental Distribution Center
Event
Effective Modal Bandwidth (EMB)
The system modal bandwidth observed in a link for a
specific fiber with a specific source.
Event Search
Effective Modal Bandwidth, Calculated (EMBc)
It predicts source fiber performance by integrating the
fundamental properties of light sources with the multimode fibers modal structure ensuring that the effective
modal bandwidth (EMB) of a fiber will meet the 10 Gb/s
requirement of 2000 MHzkm with any conforming laser.
Fabric
EDGE
Ethernet
Dispersion-Shifted Fiber
Fan-Out
FM
Frequency modulation
FOTP
Fiber optic test procedures; defined in TIA/EIA
Publication Series 455.
Fast Ethernet
Ethernet at 100 Mb/s transmission rate. This is defined by
the IEEE 802.3 standard.
FP
FCC
Frame
FCoE
Ferrule
A mechanical component, generally a rigid ceramic tube,
used to protect and align a fiber in a connector.
FTTx
Fiber Bend-Radius
Full-Duplex
Fiber
Functional Levels
Fiber Identifier
Fusing
The actual operation of joining fibers together by fusion
or by melting.
Fiber Optics
Light transmission through optical fibers for communication or signaling.
Fibre Channel
Connecting protocol commonly used in data centers to
link servers to storage arrays. Fibre Channel mandates
reliable delivery of data. Common data rates are 1 Gb/s,
2 Gb/s, 4 Gb/s, 8Gb/s and 10 Gb/s.
Fusion Splice
A permanent joint produced by the application of localized
heat sufficient to fuse the ends of two optical fibers,
forming a continuous single-light path.
FZB
Fiber zone box
Field-Installable Connector
An optical connector that can be assembled in the field
(at the job site) and installed by hand.
GbE
See Gigabit Ethernet.
Housing
An echo caused by highly reflective components (connectors) in which light is reflected back from the connection,
strikes another connection, which reflects it back out into
the fiber, only to be reflected back to the OTDR again.
Hybrid Cable
A fiber optic cable containing two or more different types
of fiber, such as 62.5 m multimode and single-mode.
ICH
Gigabit Ethernet
IEC
International Electrotechnical Commission
Gigahertz (GHz)
IEEE
Graded-Index
Index-Matching Gel
Index of Refraction
Half-Duplex
Insertion Loss
See Loss
Heat-Cure Connector
Horizontal Cabling
Interbuilding Backbone
The portion of the backbone cabling between buildings.
See Backbone Cabling.
Interconnect Sleeve
See Adapter.
Ghost
Gainer
Laser
Latency
Intrabuilding Backbone
The portion of the backbone cabling within a building.
See Backbone Cabling.
I/O Switch
A fabric switch that connects to both devices
(input and output) and cross-connect switches.
ITU
International Telecommunications Union
JPEG
Joint picture expert group
Jumper
Jumper Management
A means of providing an orderly administration of fibers.
This is essential in areas of high density and should provide
a means of routing single-mode and multimode fibers horizontally, vertically, and front to back in rack installations.
Link
Kilometer (km)
One thousand meters, or approximately 3,281 ft.
The kilometer is a standard unit of length measurement
in fiber optics. Conversion is 1 ft = 0.3048 m.
kpsi
A unit of force per area expressed in thousands of pounds
per square inch; usually used as the specification for fiber
proof test, e.g., 100 kpsi.
LANscape Solutions
The complete tip-to-tip approach to fiber cabling solutions
for private networks that consists of a comprehensive set
of integrated products, services and support to ensure
a successful and efficient fiber network that will serve as
a stable communications infrastructure for years to come.
A telecommunications circuit between any two telecommunications devices, not including the equipment connector.
Mesh Network
Meter
Device to measure optical power level (dBm).
Meter/Foot Marks
MACs
Micrometer (m)
Mode
A term used to describe an independent stable light path
in a fiber, as in multimode or single-mode.
Mode Conditioner
Main Distribution Area (MDA)
The space in a computer room where the main
cross-connect is located.
Mass Splicing
Joining two to 12 fibers simultaneously by fusing the
fibers together.
Material Dispersion
Modulation
MDPE
Mechanical Splicing
MTP Connector
Media (Telecommunications)
Multi-fiber Cable
Megahertz (MHz)
Multimode Fiber
Loss
LOMMF
Multiplex
Optical Skew
Multipoint
Optical Waveguide
See Fiber.
Multi-Trunking
OSE
NIC
PBX
OFL
Over filled launch, typical of LED source systems.
PCH
Pretium Connector housing
On-the-Reel Test
Test of a new reel of cable prior to installation to verify
length and condition of the fiber.
Physical Mesh
Each switch is connected directly to each of the other
switches on the network.
Optical Fiber
See Fiber.
Physical Ring
Optical Hardware
A cable layout in which each node is connected to two adjacent nodes. There is not a central point of cable termination.
Physical Star
Pigtail
Optical fiber cable that has connectors installed on one
end. See Cable Assembly.
Preconnectorized Assembly
Plenum
An air-handling space such as that found above drop-ceiling
tiles or in raised floors; also, a fire code rating for indoor
cable suitable for use in plenum spaces.
Prefusing
A low-current electric arc used to clean the fiber end prior
to fusion splicing.
PMD
Pretium EDGE
A high-density preterminated optical cabling solution
that simplifies installation and improves performance
in the data center environment.
Pretium Solutions
A subset of Corning Cable Systems LANscape Solutions,
the Pretium product solutions offers enhanced performance or handling characteristics.
PSTN
Public switched telephone network
Pulse Width
Polarity
Fiber positioning convention that maintains the transmit
and receive signals over the entire link.
Polyethylene (PE)
A type of plastic material used for outside plant cable jackets.
Rack Space
A unit of measure of 1.75-in for equipment space in a rack.
Many housings are measured in rack space.
PoE
Receiver
Port
Reference
Point-to-Point (P2P)
PIN Diode
Reflectance
Router
Reflection
Scattering
SCF
Repeater
Sequence
One or more subsets of an exchange.
Resilience
Serial Optic Transmission
Signature Trace
A test method for measuring the laser bandwidth of multimode fibers; detailed in TIA/EIA-455-204 (FOTP-204).
Method is used to simulate launch characteristics of 1 GbE
systems.
Simplex Connector
Return Loss
See Reflectance.
RH
Relative humidity
SNMP
Simple network management protocol
RIO
Ruggedized information outlet
SONET
Synchronous optical network
Riser
Pathway for indoor cables that passes between floors,
normally a vertical shaft or space; also, a fire-code rating
for indoor cable suitable for use in riser spaces.
Source
Stabilized light-emitting device (LED or Laser) used with
a meter to measure attenuation.
Route Diagram
A schematic diagram showing the physical location/layout
of the fiber run and the location of splices and termination
points.
SPH
Splice Closure
A container used to house cable splice points and organize
and protect splice trays; typically used in outside plant
environments.
Termination
A method of preparing a fiber end for quick connection
to another fiber or device; involves use of a fiber optic
connector.
Splice Trays
Test Jumper
A short, 2-3 m jumper used with meter/source for both
referencing as well as conveniently connecting to each
connector in a patch panel.
Through Splice
Splicing
Joining of bare fiber ends to one another. See Fusion
Splice and Mechanical Splicing.
Star Toplogy
TIA
Tight-Buffered Cable
Step Index
Topology
STP
Shielded twisted-pair
Trace
The OTDRs graphical representation of a fiber which
displays relative power on the vertical and distance on
the horizontal scales.
Transition Splice
Single-panel housing
VoIP
Voice over Internet protocol
Waveguide Dispersion
Transmitter
An electronic device used to convert an electrical information signal to a corresponding optical signal for transmission
by fiber. Transmitters are typically light emitting diodes
(LEDs), VCSELs or laser diodes.
The distance between two successive points of an electromagnetic waveform, usually measured in nanometers (nm).
UDP
WCH
WCH-SSH
Wavelength
WDM
UniCam Connector
Corning Cable Systems field-installable connector that
requires no epoxy and no polishing.
Uplink Port
WIC
WMO
UTP
Unshielded twisted-pair
WSH
Wall-mountable splice housing
Corning Cable Systems reserves the right to improve, enhance and modify the features and specifications of Corning Cable Systems products without prior notification. ALTOS, LANscape,
Pretium and UniCam are registered trademarks of Corning Cable Systems Brands, Inc. CamSplice, LID-SYSTEM, Plug & Play and Pretium EDGE are trademarks of Corning Cable
Systems Brands, Inc. ClearCurve and Corning are registered trademarks of Corning Incorporated. MTP is a registered trademark of USConec, Ltd. All other trademarks are the properties
of their respective owners. Corning Cable Systems is ISO 9001 certified. 2010 Corning Cable Systems. All rights reserved. Published in the USA. LAN-1160-EN / November 2010