Title: Transmission Media
1Transmission Media
2Media
- Basic function of media carry flow of
information in form of bits through a LAN - In a copper based network, bits will be
electrical signals - In a fiber based network, bits will be light
pulses - Media considered to be Layer 1 component of a
LAN - Physical path between transmitter and receiver
- Wired and Wireless
- Communication is in the form of electromagnetic
waves - Characteristics and quality of data transmission
are determined by characteristics of medium and
signal - In wired media, medium characteristics is more
important, whereas in wireless media, signal
characteristics is more important
3Transmission Media
- Physical path between transmitter and receiver
- Wired and Wireless
- Communication is in the form of electromagnetic
waves - Characteristics and quality of data transmission
are determined by characteristics of medium and
signal - In wired media, medium characteristics is more
important, whereas in wireless media, signal
characteristics is more important
4(No Transcript)
5Electromagnetic Spectrum
6Basic limitations
- Attenuation
- Delay Distortion
- Noise
- Thermal/White Noise
- Intermodulation Noise
- Crosstalk
- Echo
- Impulse Noise
7Design Factors for Transmission Media
- Bandwidth All other factors remaining constant,
the greater the band-width of a signal, the
higher the data rate that can be achieved. - Transmission impairments. Limit the distance a
signal can travel. - Interference Competing signals in overlapping
frequency bands can distort or wipe out a signal. - Number of receivers Each attachment introduces
some attenuation and distortion, limiting
distance and/or data rate.
8Classes of Transmission Media
- Conducted or guided media
- use a conductor such as a wire or a fiber optic
cable to move the signal from sender to receiver - Wireless or unguided media
- use radio waves of different frequencies and do
not need a wire or cable conductor to transmit
signals
9Wire Conductors
- Wire types single conductor, twisted pair,
shielded multiconductor bundles. - Large installed base.
- Reasonable cost.
- Relatively low bandwidth, however, recent LAN
speeds in the 100 Mbps range have been achieved. - Susceptible to external interference.
- Shielding can reduce external interference.
- Can transmit both analog and digital signals.
Amplifier required every 5 to 6 km for analog
signals. For digital signals, repeaters required
every 2 to 3 km.
10A metric for copper cables
11Wired - Twisted Pair
- The oldest, least expensive, and most commonly
used media - Pair of insulated wires twisted together to
reduce susceptibility to interference ex)
capacitive coupling, crosstalk - Skin effect at high frequency
- Up to 250 kHz analog and few Mbps digital
signaling ( for long-distance point-to-point
signaling) - Need repeater every 2-3 km (digital), and
amplifier every 5-6 km (analog)
12Twisted Pair
- Consists of two insulated copper wires arranged
in a regular spiral pattern to minimize the
electromagnetic interference between adjacent
pairs - Often used at customer facilities and also over
distances to carry voice as well as data
communications - Low frequency transmission medium
- Telephone (subscriber loop between house and
local exchange) - High-speed (10 - 100 Mbps) LAN
- token ring, fast - Ethernet
13Types of Twisted Pair
- STP (shielded twisted pair)
- the pair is wrapped with metallic foil or braid
to insulate the pair from electromagnetic
interference - UTP (unshielded twisted pair)
- each wire is insulated with plastic wrap, but the
pair is encased in an outer covering
14Ratings of Twisted Pair
- Category 3
- UTP cables and associated connecting hardware
whose transmission characteristics are specified
up to 16 MHZ. - data rates of up to 16mbps are achievable
- Category 4
- UTP cables and associated connecting hardware
whose transmission characteristics are specified
up to 20 MHz. - Category 5
- UTP cables and associated connecting hardware
whose transmission characteristics are specified
up to 100 MHz. - data rates of up to 100mbps are achievable
- more tightly twisted than Category 3 cables
- more expensive, but better performance
- Category 5 enhanced, Cat 6, cat 7
- Fast and giga-ethernet
- STP
- More expensive, harder to work with
15Twisted Pair Advantages
- Advantages
- Inexpensive and readily available
- Flexible and light weight
- Easy to work with and install
- Disvantages
- Susceptibility to interference and noise
- Attenuation problem
- For analog, repeaters needed every 5-6km
- For digital, repeaters needed every 2-3km
- Relatively low bandwidth (MHz)
16Twisted-Pair Cable
17Effect of Noise on Parallel Lines
18Noise on Twisted-Pair Lines
19Unshielded Twisted-Pair Cable
20Shielded Twisted-Pair Cable
21Wired Transmission Media
- Coaxial Cable
- Most versatile medium
- gt LANs, Cable TV, Long-distance
telephones, VCR-to-TV connections - Noise immunity is good
- Very high channel capacity
- gt few 100 MHz / few 100 Mbps
- Need repeater/amplifier every few kilometer or so
(about the same as with twisted pair) - Has an inner conductor surrounded by a braided
mesh - Both conductors share a common center axial,
hence the term co-axial
22Coaxial cable
- Signal and ground wire
- Solid center conductor running coaxially inside a
solid (usually braided) outer circular conductor. - Center conductor is shielded from external
interference signals.
23Properties of coaxial cable
- Better shielding allows for longer cables and
higher transfer rates. - 100 m cables
- 1 to 2 Gbps feasible (modulation used)
- 10 Mbps typical
- Higher bandwidth
- 400 to 600Mhz
- up to 10,800 voice conversations
- Can be tapped easily stations easily added (pros
and cons) - Much less susceptible to interference than
twisted pair - Used for long haul routes by Phone Co.
- Mostly replaced now by optical fiber.
- High attenuation rate makes it expensive over
long distance - Bulky
- Baseband vs. broadband coax.
24Wired Transmission Media
- Optical Fiber
- Flexible, thin (few to few hundred ?m), very pure
glass/plastic fiber capable of conducting optical
rays - Extremely high bandwidth capable of ? 2 Gbps
- Very high noise immunity, resistant to
electromagnetic interference - Does not radiate energy/cause interference
- Very light
- Need repeaters only 10s or 100 km apart
- Very difficult to tap Better security but
multipoint not easy - Require a light source with injection laser diode
(ILD) or light-emitting diodes (LED)
25Wired Transmission Media
- Optical Fiber (Contd)
- Need optical-electrical interface (more expensive
than electrical interface)
26Wired Transmission Media
Optical Fiber
- Principle of optical fiber transmission Based on
the principle of total internal reflection
- If ?gt?, medium B (water) has a higher optical
density than medium A (air) - In case the index of refractionlt1 (?gt?), if ?
is less than a certain critical angle, there is
no refracted light i.e., all the light is
reflected. This is what makes fiber optics work.
27Fiber optics Physics 101
- Refractive indexmaterial (Speed of light in
vacuum)/(Speed of light in material) - Light is bent as it passes through a surface
where the refractive index changes. This bending
depends on the angle and refractive index.
Frequency does not change, but because it slows
down, the wave length gets shorter, causing wave
to bend. - In case of fiber optic media, refractive index of
core gt refractive index of cladding thereby
causing internal reflection.
cladding
core
28Fiber Optic Layers
- consists of three concentric sections
29Modes of fiber
- Fiber consists of two parts the glass core and
glass cladding with a lower refractive index. - Light propagates in 1 of 3 ways depending on the
type and width of the core material. - Multimode stepped index fiber
- Both core and cladding have different but uniform
refractive index. - Relies on total internal reflection Wide pulse
width. - Multimode graded index fiber
- Core has variable refractive index (light bends
as it moves away from core). - Narrow pulse width resulting in higher bit rate.
- Singlemode fiber (gt 100 Mbs)
- Width of core diameter equal to a single
wavelenth. -
30Mode
Multimode
Single mode
Step index
Graded-index
31Fiber Optic Types
- multimode step-index fiber
- the reflective walls of the fiber move the light
pulses to the receiver - multimode graded-index fiber
- acts to refract the light toward the center of
the fiber by variations in the density - single mode fiber
- the light is guided down the center of an
extremely narrow core
32Types of optical fiber
- Modes, bundles of light rays enter the fiber at a
particular angle - Single-mode
- Also known as mono-mode
- Only one mode propagates through fiber
- Higher bandwidth than multi-mode
- Longer cable runs than multi-mode
- Lasers generate light signals
- Used for inter-building connectivity
33Types of optical fiber
- Multi-mode
- Multiple modes propagate through fiber
- Different angles mean different distances to
travel - Transmissions arrive at different times
- Modal dispersion
- LEDs as light source
- Used for intra-building connectivity
34Fiber Optic Signals
fiber optic multimode step-index
fiber optic multimode graded-index
fiber optic single mode
35Optical Fiber Transmission Mode
36Fiber Optic
- Advantages
- greater capacity (bandwidth Gbps)
- smaller size and lighter weight
- lower attenuation
- immunity to environmental interference
- highly secure due to tap difficulty and lack of
signal radiation - Disvantages
- expensive over short distance
- requires highly skilled installers
- adding additional nodes is difficult
37Fiber Channel Requirements
- Full duplex links with 2 fibers/link
- 100 Mbps 800 Mbps
- Distances up to 10 km
- Small connectors
- high-capacity
- Greater connectivity than existing multidrop
channels - Broad availability
- Support for multiple cost/performance levels
- Support for multiple existing interface command
sets
38Components of an optical transmission system
- 3 components
- 1. Light source
- 2. Transmission medium
- 3. The detector
- Light means a 1 bit, no light means a 0 bit.
- Transmitter LED or injection laser diode.
- Detector (photodiode or photo transistor)
generates an electrical pulse when light falls on
it. - Unidirectional data transmission system.
- Electrical signal to light signal and back again.
39Fiber cables
- Multimode diameter of core is 50 microns.
- About the same as a human hair.
- Single mode diameter of core 8-10 microns.
- They can be connnected by connectors, or by
splicing, or by fusion.
40Fiber vs. copper
- Fiber (pros)
- Higher bandwidth,
- Lower attenuation,
- Immune to electromagnetic noise and corrosive
chemicals, - Thin and lightweight,
- Security (does not leak light, difficult to tap).
- Fiber (cons)
- Not many skilled fiber engineers,
- Inherently unidirectional,
- Fiber interfaces are expensive.
41Wireless (Unguided Media) Transmission
- transmission and reception are achieved by means
of an antenna - directional
- transmitting antenna puts out focused beam
- transmitter and receiver must be aligned
- omnidirectional
- signal spreads out in all directions
- can be received by many antennas
42The Radio Spectrum
- Radio wave
- Wavelength l c/f
- Speed of light c3x108 m/s
- Frequency f
VUSEHF VeryUltraSuperExtra High
Frequency
f 900 MHz ? l 33 cm
43Atmospheric Transmission Media
- Infrared Transmission
- Infrared networks use infrared light signals to
transmit data - Direct infrared transmission depends on
transmitter and receiver remaining within line of
sight - In indirect infrared transmission, signals can
bounce off of walls, ceilings, and any other
objects in their path
44Atmospheric Transmission Media
- RF Transmission
- Radio frequency (RF) transmission relies on
signals broadcast over specific frequencies - Narrowband concentrates significant RF energy at
a single frequency - Spread spectrum uses lower-level signals
distributed over several frequencies
simultaneously
45Infrared
Wireless Transmission
- For short-range communication
- Remote controls for TVs, VCRs and stereos
- IRD port
- Indoor wireless LANs
- Do not pass through solid walls
- Better security and no interference (with a
similar system in adjacent rooms) - No government license is needed
- Cannot be used outdoors
46Infrared
- Transceivers must be within line of sight of each
other (directly or via reflection) - Unlike microwaves, infrared does not penetrate
walls - Fairly low bandwidth (4 Mbps).
- Uses wavelengths between microwave and visible
light. - Uses transmitters/receivers (transceivers) that
modulate noncoherent infrared light. - No frequency allocation issue since not
regulated. - Uses include local building connections, wireless
LANs, and new wireless peripherals.
47Infrared Waves
- Short range communication.
- e.g. Remotes on VCRs and TVs.
- Directional.
- Do not pass through walls.
- Behaves more like visible light.
- Can be used for LANs
- indoors only.
- Can just use visible unguided light (lasers).
48Wireless Transmission
Frequencies
- 2GHz to 40GHz
- Microwave
- Highly directional
- Point to point
- Satellite
- 30MHz to 1GHz
- Omnidirectional
- Broadcast radio
- 3 x 1011 to 2 x 1014
- Infrared
49Wireless Transmission
Terrestrial Microwave
- Parabolic dish
- Focused beam
- Line of sight
- Long haul telecommunications
- Higher frequencies give higher data rates
50Terrestrial Microwave
- used for long-distance telephone service
- uses radio frequency spectrum, from 2 to 40 Ghz
- parabolic dish transmitter, mounted high
- used by common carriers as well as private
networks - requires unobstructed line of sight between
source and receiver - curvature of the earth requires stations
(repeaters) 30 miles apart
51Radio Transmission
- Radio waves
- Easy to generate, travel long distances, and
penetrate buildings easily. - Omnidirectional.
- Low frequencies
- Pass through obstacles well,
- Quick power drop off (e.g. 1/r3 in air).
- High frequencies
- Travel in straight lines and bounce off
obstacles. - Absorbed by rain.
- Subject to electrical interference
52Media Broadcast Radio
- Covers 30MHz to 1 GHz
- Omindirectional
- Enables mobile communication computing!
- Broadcast mechanisms cellular radio, radio nets,
low-orbit satellites. - Low bandwidth.
- Lack of security.
- Susceptible to interference (primarily multipath
interference). - Reallocation of limited frequencies may be
required for wireless communication growth.
53Microwave transmission
- Microwave waves
- Travel in straight lines and thus can be narrowly
focused. - Easy to avoid interference with other microwaves.
- Parabolic antenna is used to concentrate the
energy (improves SNR). - More popular before fiber.
- Waves do not pass through buildings.
- Multiple towers used as repeaters.
54Media Terrestrial Microwave
- High bandwidth (45 Mbps).
- No cabling between sites.
- Clear line-of-sight required (30 miles).
- Susceptible to radio interference.
- Attenuation increases with rainfall
- Lack of security.
- Up-front investment in towers repeaters.
- Low power used to minimize effects on people
- line of sight requirement
- expensive towers and repeaters
- subject to interference such as passing airplanes
and rain
55Propagation Types
56Satellite Microwave
Wireless Transmission
- Satellite is relay station
- Satellite receives on one frequency, amplifies or
repeats signal and transmits on another frequency - Requires geo-stationary orbit
- Height of 35,784km
- Optimum transmission in 1 - 10 GHz range
- Bandwidth of 100s MHz
- Significant propagation delay (?270 ms)
- Application Television, long distance telephone,
Private business networks
57Satellite Transmission Process
satellite transponder
dish
dish
22,300 miles
uplink station
downlink station
58Satellite Transmission Applications
- television distribution
- a network provides programming from a central
location - direct broadcast satellite (DBS)
- long-distance telephone transmission
- high-usage international trunks
- private business networks
59Principal Satellite Transmission Bands
- C band 4(downlink) - 6(uplink) GHz
- the first to be designated
- Ku band 12(downlink) -14(uplink) GHz
- rain interference is the major problem
- Ka band 19(downlink) - 29(uplink) GHz
- equipment needed to use the band is still very
expensive
60Physical media and their applications
61Physical Media
- Twisted Pair (TP)
- two insulated copper wires
- Category 3 traditional phone wires, 10 Mbps
ethernet - Category 5 TP 100Mbps ethernet
- physical link transmitted data bit propagates
across link - guided media
- signals propagate in solid media copper, fiber
- unguided media
- signals propagate freely e.g., radio
62Physical Media coax, fiber
- Coaxial cable
- wire (signal carrier) within a wire (shield)
- baseband single channel on cable
- broadband multiple channel on cable
- bidirectional
- common use in 10Mbs Ethernet
- Fiber optic cable
- glass fiber carrying light pulses
- high-speed operation
- 100Mbps Ethernet
- high-speed point-to-point transmission (e.g., 5
Gbps) - low error rate
63Physical media radio
- Radio link types
- microwave
- e.g. up to 45 Mbps channels
- LAN (e.g., waveLAN)
- 2Mbps, 11Mbps, 54 Mbps
- wide-area (e.g., cellular)
- e.g. CDPD, 10s Kbps
- satellite
- up to 50Mbps channel (or multiple smaller
channels) - 270 msec end-end delay
- geosynchronous versus LEOS
- signal carried in electromagnetic spectrum
- no physical wire
- bidirectional
- propagation environment effects
- reflection
- obstruction by objects
- interference
64Cables, at least 16 types described
- Cat 3, 5, 6, 7
- Screened and unscreened
- USB cable
- IEEE 1394 cable
- Plastic Optical Fiber
- 50/125, 62.5/125 and singlemode fibre
- 75 ohm 3-GHz coax
- speaker wire - two grades
65IEEE 1394 Firewire
22 AWG
28 AWG
IEEE 1394b 800, 1600, 3200 Mb/s over POF 3.2 Gb/s
over glass fibre 100 Mb/s over UTP
400 Mb/s over 4.5 m
66Universal Serial Bus
1.5, 12 or 480 Mb/s, up to 5 m, cascade 5 devices
up to 30 m
67Fiber vs Satellite
68Choosing the Right Transmission Media
- Areas of high EMI or RFI
- Corners and small spaces
- Distance
- Security
- Existing infrastructure
- Growth
69Media Selection Criteria
- Cost (Initial, Expansion, Maintenance)
- Speed (Data Rate Response Time)
- Availability
- Expandability
- Error Rates
- Security
- Distance (Geography Number of Sites)
- Environment
- Application-Specific Constraints
- Maintenance
70Media Selection Criteria
71From Signals to Packets
Analog Signal
Digital Signal
0 0 1 0 1 1 1 0 0 0 1
Bit Stream
01000101010111001010101010111011100000011110101011
10101010101101011010111001
Packets
Header/Body
Header/Body
Header/Body
Packet Transmission
Receiver
Sender
72Modulation
- Sender changes the nature of the signal in a way
that the receiver can recognize. - Similar to radio AM or FM
- Digital transmission encodes the values 0 or 1
in the signal. - It is also possible to encode multi-valued
symbols - Amplitude modulation change the strength of the
signal, typically between on and off. - Sender and receiver agree on a rate
- On means 1, Off means 0
- Similar frequency or phase modulation.
- Can also combine method modulation types.
73Amplitude and FrequencyModulation
0 0 1 1 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 1 1 1 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 1 1
1 0
0 1 1 0 1 1 0
0 0 1
74Assumptions
- We use two discrete signals, high and low, to
encode 0 and 1 - The transmission is synchronous, i.e., there is a
clock used to sample the signal - In general, the duration of one bit is equal to
one or more clock ticks
75Encoding
- Goal Send bits from one node to another node on
the same physical media - Problem Specify a robust and efficient encoding
scheme to achieve this goal
76Encoding Schemes
- Non Return to Zero (NRZ)
- Non Return to Zero Inverted (NRZI)
- Manchester Encoding
- 4B/5B Encoding
77Modulation
- Non-Return to Zero (NRZ)
- Used by Synchronous Optical Network (SONET)
- 1high signal, 0low signal
- Long sequence of same bit cause difficulty
- DC bias hard to detect low and high detected by
difference from average voltage - Clock recovery difficult
78Show the NRZ encoding for the following pattern
1
0
0
0
1
0
0
0
1
1
1
1
1
0
0
1
Bits
clock
NRZ
79Modulation
- Non-Return to Zero Inverted (NRZI)
- 1inversion of current value, 0same value
- No problem with string of 1s
- NRZ-like problem with string of 0s
80Show the NRZI encoding for the following pattern
1
0
0
0
1
0
0
0
1
1
1
1
1
0
0
1
Bits
clock
NRZI
81Modulation
- Manchester
- Used by Ethernet
- 1low to high transition, 0high to low
transition - Transition for every bit simplifies clock
recovery - Not very efficient
- Doubles the number of transitions
- Circuitry must run twice as fast
82Modulation
- 4b/5b
- Used by FDDI
- Uses 5bits to encode every 4bits
- Encoding ensures no more than 3 consecutive 0s
- Uses NRZI to encode resulting sequence
- 16 data values, 3 special illegal values, 6
extra values, 7 illegal values
83Chapter Summary
- Information can be transmitted via analog or
digitally - Both signals suffer attenuation
- Throughput is the amount of data a medium can
transmit during a given period of time - Costs depend on many factors
- Three specifications dictating networking media
- Length of a network segment is limited due to
attenuation - Connectors connect wire to the network device
- Coaxial cable consists of central copper core
surrounded by an insulator and a sheath - In baseband transmission, digital signals are
sent through direct current pulse applied to the
wire
84Chapter Summary
- Twisted-pair cable consists of color-coded pairs
of insulated copper wires, twisted around each
other and encased in plastic coating - The more twists per inch in a pair of wires, the
more resistant to noise - STP cable consists of twisted pair wires
individually insulated and surrounded by a
shielding - UTP cabling consists of one or more insulated
wire pairs encased in a plastic sheath - UTP comes in a variety of specifications
- Fiber-optic cable contains one or several glass
fibers in its core - On todays networks, fiber is used primarily as
backbone cable
85Chapter Summary
- Best practice for installing cable is to follow
the TIA/EIA 568 (see structured cabling)
specifications and manufacturers recommendations - Wireless LANs can use radio frequency (RF) or
infrared transmission - Infrared transmission can be indirect or direct
- RF transmission can be narrowband or spread
spectrum - To make correct media transmission choices,
consider, throughput, cabling, noise resistance,
security/flexibility, and plans for growth