Title: National Communications System NCS Fiber Optic Networks
1National Communications System (NCS)Fiber Optic
Networks
- Dave Hotz
- Director of Systems Installation and Transmission
Support - Jim Chaney
- Director of Field Operations Central and West
- Global Crossing
2Fiber Cable
3Fiber Has More Capacity
- This single fiber can carry more communications
than the giant copper cable!
4Fiber Optic Cable
- Protects the fibers wherever they are installed
- May have 1 to over 1000 fibers
5Fiber Optic Connectors
- Terminates the fibers
- Connects to other fibers or transmission
equipment
6Fiber Optic Communications
- Applications include
- Telephones
- Internet
- LANs - local area networks
- CATV - for video, voice and Internet connections
- Utilities - management of power grid
- Security - closed-circuit TV and intrusion
sensors - Military - everywhere!
7What Is Fiber Optics ?
- Transmitting communications signals over hair
thin strands of glass or plastic - Not a "new" technology
- Concept a century old
- Used commercially for last 25 years
8Why Use Fiber Optics?
- Economics
- Speed
- Distance
- Weight/size
- Freedom from interference
- Electrical isolation
- Security
9Fiber Optic Applications
- Fiber is already used in
- gt 90 of all long distance telephony
- gt 50 of all local telephony
- Most CATV networks
- Most LAN (computer network) backbones
- Many video surveillance links
10Fiber Optic Applications
- Fiber is the least expensive, most reliable
method for high speed and/or long distance
communications - While we already transmit signals at Gigabits per
second speeds, we have only started to utilize
the potential bandwidth of fiber
11Fiber Technology
12Fiber Technology
13Fiber Optic Data Links
14Light Used In Fiber Optics
- Fiber optic systems transmit using infrared
light, invisible to the human eye, because it
goes further in the optical fiber at those
wavelengths
15Wavelength-Division Multiplexing
16Fiber Optic Applications
- Outside Plant vs. Premises Installations
17Fiber Optic Installation - Outside Plant
18Fiber Optic Installation -Premises
19SONET
20 21What is SONET?
- Synchronous Optical Network standard
- Defines a digital hierarchy of synchronous
signals - Maps asynchronous signals (DS1, DS3) to
synchronous format - Defines electrical and optical connections
between equipment - Allows for interconnection of different vendors
equipment - Provides overhead channels for interoffice OAMP
22Digital Signal HierarchiesMost Common Rates
23SONET Rates
Optical Designation
Bit Rate (Mb/s)
Level
STS-1 OC-1 51.840 STS-3 OC-3 155.520 STS-12 OC-1
2 622.080 STS-48 OC-48 2,488.320 STS-192
OC-192 9,953.280
STS SYNCHRONOUS TRANSPORT SIGNAL OC OPTICAL
CARRIER (..result of a direct
optical conversions of the STS after
synchronous scrambling - ANSI)
24SONET Network Layers
Services DS3, DS1, etc
Path
Line
Line
Section
Section
Section
Section
Physical (Photonic)
- E/O Conversion
- Line Code
- Physical Signal
- No additional overhead
DS3 etc
MUX
LTE
Regen
MUX
LTE
LTE
Regen
SONET ADM
25Functional Description of SONET Layers
26SONET Configurations
27Generic SONET Network Elements
28Key SONET Configurations
29Key SONET ConfigurationsLinear Office Sequences
30Key SONET Configurations
31Explanation of Wavelength Division Multiplexing
(WDM)
WDM System Multiple Signal Wavelengths
Conventional System Only 1 signal Wavelength
Transmission capacity per fiber is multiplied by
the number of Signal Wavelengths Technological
Difficulties - Signal multiplex/demultiplex -
Optical amplifier bandwidth limitation -
Inter-channel interaction due to optical fiber
non-linearity (four wave mixing and cross-phase
modulation)
32To get more information on a single fiber Use
more wavelengths (DWDM)
33(No Transcript)
34SONET Network Management
35Definition of a Ring
- A Ring is a collection of nodes (NE1, NE2, .)
- forming a closed loop.
- Each node is connected to two adjacent nodes
- via
- a duplex communications facility.
- A SONET Ring will provide
- Redundant Bandwidth
- Redundant Network Equipment
- or both
36SONET Ring APS(Automatic Protection Switching)
- Uni-directional Vs. Bi-directional Rings
- Two-Fiber Vs. Four Fiber Rings
- Ring Switching Vs. Span Switching
- Applications of
- Bi-directional Line Switched Ring (BLSR)
- Uni-directional Path Switched Ring (UPSR)
37Ring Classification
- A Unidirectional Line Switched Ring (ULSR)
- A Bidirectional Line Switched Ring (BLSR)
- A Unidirectional Path Switched Ring (UPSR)
- A Bidirectional Path Switched Ring (BPSR)
Any of the above type can be a two-fiber or a
four fiber ring. Therefore, for all practical
applications, SONET/SDH standards provide eight
types of ring for network node interconnections
382 FiberUnidirectional Vs. Bidirectional Rings
39Two-Fiber Vs. Four-Fiber Rings
40Ring Switching 2-Fiber Ring
41Ring Switching 4-Fiber Ring
B Ring Switching Four-fiber ring
42Span Switching - 4-fiber Rings Only
Route before PS
Route before PS
A
B
A
B
Route after PS
C
D
B Ring Switching Four-fiber ring
43Bi-directional Line Switched RingNo Failures
w
C
B
A
A
W
P
w
P
P
A
D
B
B
P
P
w
w
P
F
E
C
C
w
Bidirectional Traffic
Unidirectional Traffic
44Bi-directional Line Switched RingSpan Switch
45Bi-directional Line Switched RingRing Switch
X
46Bi-directional Line Switched RingRing Switch -
Node Failure
47Bi-directional Line Switched RingNo Failures
W
C
B
W
P
W
P
P
A
D
P
P
W
W
P
F
E
W
Original Circuits (Both Slot 2)
48Bi-directional Line Switched RingNeed For
Squelching
49Bi-directional Line Switched RingDouble Ring
Failure (No Recovery)
50SONET Rings will fail -- The question is When?
- Initial estimates of DWDM hardware show that it
is 8 times more reliable than WDM equipment - POEs not included
- Ring reliability is dependent upon ring mileage
- Ring sizes vary from 200 miles to 2800 miles
- Ring Failures
- Given 100, 1000-mile perimeter rings
- Current optimistic estimation is 1 network ring
failure every 5 yrs - PCIs not included
- Most probable cause of a complete ring failure is
an equipment failure and a fiber cut - Physical diversity violations in some rings
(single-pt-of-failure)
51Ring InterworkingInterconnect Problem (No
Recovery)
52Dual Ring Interworking(Unidirectional A gt Z
Circuit)No Failure
53Dual Ring Interworking(Unidirectional A gt Z
Circuit)ADM Failure
54Dual Ring Interworking(Unidirectional A gt Z
Circuit)Office Or Double ADM Failure
55Other Types Of SONET Self-Healing Rings(2-Fiber
Unidirectional Line-Switched Ring)
56Other Types Of SONET Self-Healing Rings(2-Fiber
Unidirectional Line-Switched Ring)
57Other Types Of SONET Self-Healing Rings(2-Fiber
Bi-directional Line-Switched Ring)
58BITS
59(No Transcript)
60Clock Accuracy Levels
61Sync Status Message
62SS Messages
63(No Transcript)