Title: Alan E' Willner
1SC141
Combating Degrading Effects in Non-Static and
Reconfigurable WDM Systems and Networks
Alan E. Willner
University of Southern California
February 23, 2004
2Outline
1. Introduction to Reconfigurable
Networks 2. Degrading Effects in
Systems 3. Optical Amplifiers 4. Dispersion
Compensation 5. Polarization Mode
Dispersion 6. Modulation Formats 7. Performance
Monitoring 8. Optical Switching
3Skiing Optical Fiber Trails
Beginner
Intermediate
Advanced
Bunny
Extreme
OC-48 2.5 Gb/s
OC-192 10 Gb/s
OC-768 40 Gb/s
OC-3072 160 Gb/s
OC-12 622 Mb/s
Alan Willner James Harris (Stanford)
4Introduction Outline
- Background
- Motivation
- What is a Non-Static or Reconfigurable Network?
- What are the Component Technologies?
- Issues
- Drivers
- Basic Phenomena
- Degrading Effects
- Compensation Techniques
5Quote from Bob Lucky at ATT Bell Labs in 89
Just like the super-highway builders of the
1950s and 1960s, you are putting yourselves out
of business by building so much infrastructure.
Growth of automobile traffic is a few /year, but
growth of internet traffic is ?100 /year.
The Capacity vs. Demand Cycle
Demand
Growth
The capacity-vs.-demand cycle will change much
more rapidly for communications than for roads.
Capacity
Time
6Estimated Network Load
ACTUAL
P.E. White, Bellcore, Jan. 1993 (Courtesy of
T. Li, ATT)
7The Bandwidth of Tomorrows Immersive Reality
The bandwidth of human visual audio perception
Vision
120 samples/degree 60 frames/second 16
bits/sample color, 3D
????? ?
Sound
????? ?
7,200 channels (one every 3 )
30 Gb/s
10.4 Gb/s
Vision
Sound
Reality 40.4 Gb/s
Tom Holman, USC, Multimedia Center, 2001
8You can transmit 8 bandwidth over 0 distance !!
L. Mollenauer, 1990
9Continued Capacity Growth
OC-192 (10 Gb/s)
Fundamental limits
Data rate
Capacity increase
OC-48 (2.5 Gb/s)
1
10
100
1000
Wavelengths per fiber
10Limitations of Optics
11Sustained Growth in Capacity
Capacity Toward 25 Tbit/s
Higher Spectral Efficiency
Wider Optical Bandwidth
Closer Channel Spacing
Higher Data Rate
0.05 Bits/Hz gt1 Bits/Hz
OC-48 OC-768
100 GHz 12.5 GHz
10 nm 300 nm
- Polarization or bidirectional interleaving
- Polarization Mode Dispersion
12Optimized Systems
Dispersion effects
High power
Gain fluctuation
Spectral efficiency
Nonlinearity
COST!!
Wide bandwidth
All the trade-offs should be well balanced to
optimize a system
13Generic Requirements of Optical Networking
- Protocol transparent
- Scalability
- Reliability
- Ease of installation and management
- Network flexibility
- Reduced cost
14Motivation
15Non-static and Reconfigurable Optical Systems
16Advantages of Reconfigurability
The ability to reconfigure light paths allows
dynamic network optimization to accommodate
changing traffic patterns
A reconfigurable
Static Topology
0.1
WDM topology
supports 6 times the
Blocking Probability
Configurable Topology
0.01
traffic of a fixed
WDM topology for
WDM ring, 20 nodes
the same blocking
One transceiver per node
0.001
probability
Call bandwidth 1 wavelength
0.01
0.02
0.03
0.04
0.05
Call Arrival Rate
V.W.S. Chan et al, JLT, 1998
17Impairment- Security-Aware Routing
- Present network very few variables (i.e. of
hops) are used to determine the routing table
although there are several variables on the
physical state - Future networks
- Monitor the channel quality and link security and
update the routing look-up tables continually - In the routing decisions ensure that
- Channels achieve acceptable BER
- Network achieves sufficient transmission and
protection capacity - Highest priority data is transmitted on the
strongest and most secure links
18Window of Operability
- Window of operability is shrinking as systems
become more complex - Ensuring a long-term stable and healthy network
is tricky
bit rate
format
number of channels
power
nonlinearities
polarization effects
dispersion
19Bandwidth Granularity
- WDM granularity does not fit the needs of end
users - - A wavelength is too much
- Must efficiently parcel bandwidth at the network
edge - - Different multiplexing? (OCDMA,
Subcarriers )
???
???
Wavelength
WDM
OCDMA
SCM
20Path Dependency
l
2
4
i
l
k
1
SNR
i
??
3
6
SNR
k
5
- Parameters
- Dispersion
- Gain
- Noise
- Power
- Chirp
- Dependent on
- Network topology
- Routing
- Wavelength assignments
- Traffic Pattern
21Basic WDM Add/Drop
High Capacity Traffic
Through Traffic
?1
?2
?1, ?2, ?n
?1, ?2, ?n
1xN ?-DEMUX
Nx1 ?-MUX
?n
Traditional Single-Channel Add/Drop
Electric Add/Drop MUX/DMUX
High-Speed Traffic
High Speed Electronic Add/Drop
- Custom Provisioning
- Right-Speed Electronics
- Enhanced Reliability
- Lower Cost
...
...
...
...
Local Traffic
Low-Speed Electronic Add/Drop
...
...
Tingye Li, ATT Labs-Research
22Reconfigurable
Space
...
l
l
1
4
WDM
WDM
Switch
Mux
Demux
l
for
1
Space
...
l
l
1
4
WDM
WDM
Switch
Mux
Demux
l
for
2
INPUTS
OUTPUTS
Space
...
l
l
1
4
WDM
WDM
Switch
Mux
Demux
l
for
3
Space
...
l
l
1
4
WDM
WDM
Switch
Mux
Demux
l
for
4
Electronic Control
23Self-Healing Dual-Fiber Ring
Fiber Break
Switching Node
- For present circuit-switched networks,
restoration should be lt 50ms
- Fiber break must be detected using supervision.
- Redirection of signal is achieved by using
simple 2 x 2 optical switches.
Restoration Switch
Dual Fiber Ring
2 x 2 Optical Crossbar Switch
24 Islands of Transparency
- Gateways between small networks can
beall-optical (transparent) or optoelectronic
(opaque).
- Opaque networks enable more
? interoperability
? reliability
? flexibility
Adel Saleh, Corvis, and Evan Goldstein, ATT Labs
25Sensitivities
Many optical network components are inherently
sensitive to changes in polarization, wavelength,
and temperature.
- Polarization - modulators, AWGs, and other
devices with non-circular waveguides or other
anisotropy - induces polarization dependent loss (PDL)
- Wavelength - filters, detectors, AWGs, EDFAs,
etc. - Temperature - lasers, fiber Bragg gratings,
etalons, etc. - induces wavelength drift
26Contention Resolution
Contention resolution is required when multiple
input ports request a communications path with
the same output port
- Solutions include
- Wavelength conversion (WDM)
- Time-slot interchange (TDM)
- Deflection routing
- Optical buffering
l
Network
1
Node
l
1
l
2
Wavelength Converter
l
1
27Required Optical Components
Complex microwave design challenges
- Everything gets harder at 40 Gbit/s.
Driver
Tunable Compensation
Laser
Modulator
Receiver
Raman
LiNbO3
Preamp
Chromatic dispersion
Electro- absorption
Low Noise EDFA
PMD
- Components are extremely difficult to produce in
quantity. - PMD compensators might be viewed as the last
unknown key enabler for 40-Gbit/s systems.
28Bit-Rate Distance Product
?
? WHATS NEXT ?? ? WDM Optical Amplifiers ?
Optical Amplifiers ? Coherent Detection ? 1.5?m
Single-Frequency Laser ? 1.3?m SM Fiber ? 0.8?m
MM Fiber
Bit Rate -Distance ( Gb/s ? km)
?
?
?
?
?
?
?
1970 1975 1980 1985 1990
1995 2000 2005
Year
Source Tingye Li and Herwig Kogelnik