Lecture 3 Network Architectures PDF
Lecture 3 Network Architectures PDF
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Overview of Optical Networks
Distances between
nodes < 1000 km
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Modulation Formats: The Coherent Revolution
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Modulation Formats: Historical Perspective and
Current Deployment
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Network Topologies
The physical network topology that best supports traffic demand generally
varies with the segments (Core, Metro, Access) of the optical networking
structure.
End-to-end optical signal connections (point-to-point or broadcast) are called
lightpaths (or optical channels).
A given connection is associated with Quality of Service (QoS)
requirements (physical or network), which is then related to each individual
lightpath.
Mesh Star
Ring
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Network Topologies
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1st Generation of Optical Networks
Optics for:
Transmission (lower BER than copper links)
Capacity
Switching and Network functions Electronics
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Towards to 2nd Generation: TDM and WDM
High-speed, high-bandwidth
electronic equipment needed
Expensive to build & maintain
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Wavelength Division Multiplexing
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Wavelength Division Multiplexing
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Wavelength Division Multiplexing
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Coarse WDM
+ Large channel spacing allows the use of cheap components (e.g. low cost lasers).
A lot of bandwidth is wasted (a typical optical channel is 1-100 GHz).
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Dense WDM
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Wavelength Division Multiplexing
Based on optical power loss of fibers, spectrum ranges have been characterized for
compatibility purposes with light sources, receivers and optical components, including
the optical fiber.
According to the broad absorption minimum, the third window is best suited for
DWDM technology.
For DWDM transmission systems, three optical bands are defined:
The Short Band (S-Band): 1460 to 1530 nm
The Conventional Band (C-Band): 1530 to 1565 nm
The Long Band (L-Band): 1565 to 1625 nm
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Wavelength Division Multiplexing
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Basic Functional Blocks of a WDM Network (1/2)
The transponder can receive an input optical signal and convert it into the electrical domain, and
vice versa (uses optoelectronic modulators to convert electronic data into optical signals).
The WDM multiplexer/demultiplexer (MUX/DEMUX) combines/separates discrete wavelengths
at the transmitter/receiver sides.
Amplifiers (EDFAs, Raman) are used for pre- (Rx-side), post- (Tx-side), and in-line (in each fiber
span) amplification of the optical signals.
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Basic Functional Blocks of a WDM Network (2/2)
Reconfigurable Optical Add Drop Multiplexers (ROADMs) are key components of all-optical
networks.
They perform optical routing by removing or inserting one or more wavelengths propagating along
the fiber, without converting them into electrical signals.
ROADMs are reconfigurable and dynamic multi-degree nodes, with single-wavelength granularity.
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Access Optical Networks
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Fiber to the x (FTTx)
Last-mile optical networks are referred to as Fiber to the x (FTTx). For example:
Fiber to the Node (FTTN)
Fiber reaches a street cabinet several kilometers from the customers, with the final connections being copper.
Often used in triple-play services (telephony, internet, TV).
Fiber to the Curb (FTTC)
Fiber reaches a street cabinet close to the customer (<300m). Final connections may be high-bandwidth wired
Ethernet or wireless (WiFi).
Fiber to the Premises (FTTP) - also known as Fiber to the Home (FTTH) and Fiber to the Building (FTTB):
Fiber reaches the boundary of the residential or commercial building. Passive optical networks (PONs) and
point-to-point Ethernet are architectures that deliver triple-play services over FTTH networks directly from an
operator's central office.
Two different architectures: Star (Passive Optical Networks) or Point-to-Point (Active Ethernet).
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Star: Passive Optical Networks (PONs)
The Optical Line Terminal (OLT) at the service providers central office (CO) broadcasts data
to several Optical Network Terminals (ONTs) at the customer premises through the passive
fiber network.
All ONTs receive the same broadcast data, selecting the appropriate portion corresponding to the
end-user it is serving.
A
ABCD
ABCD
B
ABCD
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Current Standards: TDM-PONs
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Point-to-Point: Active Ethernet
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Current Standards: Active Ethernet
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PON Vs Active Ethernet
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Future Standards: TDM/WDM-PON
WDM-PON TDM/WDM-PON
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The Future: Flexible Networks (1)
Super-Channel concept
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The Future: Flexible Networks (2)
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The Future: Flexible Networks (3)
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The Future: Flexible Networks (4)
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Layered Hierarchy of a Network (1)
MPLS IP
Ethernet
SONET
SDH
OTN
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Optical Layer in Layered Hierarchy (1)
The optical layer is a server layer that provides services to other client layers.
Client layers residing above a second-generation optical network layer include:
IP
Ethernet
SONET/SDH
OTN
other possible protocols (e.g. Fiber Channel)
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Optical Layer in Layered Hierarchy (2)
The transmission rates standards of the higher layers affected the transmission
standards of the optical layer
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Optical Transport Network (OTN)
The Optical Transport Network (OTN), a.k.a. G.709, was designed to transport
data packet traffic such as IP and Ethernet over fiber optics, as well as legacy traffic
and in particular SONET/SDH.
It is called the digital wrapper technology because it wraps any client signal in
overhead information for operations, administration, and management.
Capabilities of:
FEC
Management
Protocol Transparency
Asynchronous Timing
OTN hierarchy
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