Title: ONE'06 Optical Network Europe
1ONE'06 Optical Network Europe
- Flexible optical networks the end of dumb pipes?
ONE06 Cannes 2006
2Agenda
- The story so far
- How long?
- How flexible?
- How integrated?
- How smart?
- Conclusions
3Where we are now
- At one time, operators regarded their optical
networks as plumbing - fat pipes to join
switching nodes - Then, as well as steadily increasing capacity,
the optical equipment gained - Network resilience, with SDH and OTN (optical
transport network) - Packet-friendly (Ethernet) features - with Next
Generation SDH - Ethernet and MPLS switching - with Ethernet
Transport products - Wavelength switching - with ROADMs (remotely
reconfigurable optical add-drop multiplexers) - And sometimes several of these in the same box
- Now operators have a richer range of choices
- Select the right feature mix, not a swiss army
knife - Network designers have to optimise the whole
network, not just each layer by layer
Increased value lies in best practice network
design
4Context - public network technology layers
Services
Layers 4-7
Video
Voice
Data
Layer Role
3 Routing
IP
2 Protocol-specific data switching
Frame Relay
ATM
RPR
Ethernet
Packets
5Growth of deployed transport capability per
bearer - a 150 year trend will continue?
Equivalent bits per second
Fibre optics
1 Tbit/s
- Historical growth 30 per year
100 Mbit/s
10 kbit/s
10 bit/s
1850
1900
1950
2000
6Agenda
- The story so far
- How long?
- How flexible?
- How integrated?
- How smart?
- Conclusions
7WDM line systems - a range of solutions
- Max distances without regeneration at 2.5 / 10G
- CWDM systems - typically 40-100km
- DWDM systems - typically 80 - 3000km
- Metro DWDM - typically to 300km
- (Ultra) long haul - to around 3000km, advanced
pulse modulation techniques and precision
amplifiers
3000km Ericsson-Marconi system
- Amplifiers
- Typically every 80km on land, 30-40km undersea
- Festoon systems for coastal hopping systems
offer typically 300-400 km without intermediate
amplifiers - Some of the technology can be common across metro
and long haul systems - supervision,
multiplex/demultiplex, chassis, etc
Multi-haul concept, a common platform adapted
for specific applications by changing plug-in
cards
8Raman amplification
- Transmission fibre itself acts as a distributed
amplifier - Interactions1 between high energy pumped light
and low energy signal light - span up to 400km
if pumped from both fibre ends - Extends the distance before an amplifier is
needed, compared with erbium amplifiers -
typically 80km - Use alone or combined with conventional (erbium)
amplifiers - Bad news
- High pump power levels needed can burn connectors
if not clinically clean, then needs a
time-consuming re-termination - Safety interlocks even more essential, for eye
protection - Cost - many applications dont justify the
features - Good news
- Ideal for island hopping or festoon systems
around a coastline - Create ultra-wideband optical amplifiers, at
30-40nm per pump
9Electronic dispersion compensation
- Fibre transport systems poor tolerance to changes
in fibre length - Operators rearrange fibre routes (e.g. road
building), dont want to re-commission a working
system - Automatic all optical compensation is ideal but
expensive receiver electronic compensation is
nearly as good, and better for PMD1 - Also makes initial commissioning less critical,
reduces cost
Why
10Agenda
- The story so far
- How long?
- How flexible?
- Wavelength switching
- Fibre switching
- How integrated?
- How smart?
- Conclusions
11All-optical switching
- The promise at least an order of magnitude
smaller in size and power consumption, compared
to electronics - The reality complements, not displaces,
electronics - Simplifies provisioning and restoration of high
capacity pipes - Good news - excellent transparency gt almost any
signal protocol
- Bad news - excellent transparency gt no
visibility of data errors
- Bad news - optical technology is still mostly
analogue, so complex networks may be harder to
design and maintain
- Electronics development continues to compete with
all-optical - Electronic near-Terabit/s (640 Gbit/s) total node
switching capacity available in compact form for
core telecomms networks - Comparable in total capacity with mid-sized
all-optical switch, e.g. 64 port x 10 Gbit/s
For the highest capacity, electronic and
all-optical both have roles
12Application areas for photonic or all-optical
switching - in the traffic path
- Generic applications
- Disaster recovery (1) and flexible signal routing
(2), for a wide range of communication protocols - Early emphasis was from 1998 on (2), but (1) is
now as significant - Types of business
- Privately owned commercial
- Switching centres for broadcast and for internet
exchanges - In-house data networks and production test
facilities - Government funded
- Defence (notably avionics), research networks
- Public networks
- Municipal optical networks - growing in US,
Europe, Asia - Public network operators - e.g. BT, Swisscom,
Cable Wireless
13All-optical switching technology options
- Many technologies demonstrated, very few
commercialised - Free space and planar waveguide, holograms,
bubbles, acoustic waves, tuned lasers,
semiconductor optical amplifiers (SOA), etc - Two main architectures, with two main
technologies in each - A. ROADM (reconfigurable optical add-drop
multiplexer) - Wavelength blocker - usually liquid crystal
Mostly for rings - WSS (wavelength selective switch) - matrix of
moving mirrors - MEMS (micro-electro mechanical
switches), e.g. 1 x 5 each - B. OXC (optical / photonic cross-connect) -
switches fibres - Matrix of moving mirror MEMs, each one gives e.g.
32 x 32 - usually electrostatic field actuation - Matrix of moving fibre ends, each one gives e.g.
32 x 32 - usually piezo-electric actuation
ROADMs solution adopted by most public network
operators
14ROADM - wavelength / lambda switching options
2
1
Split
east
west
Broadcast select or Blocker - 3 degree
Electro/optical conversion
LCD or moving mirror array
3
add drop
- One direction shown repeated for other direction
- E/O conversion or direct optical access for
alien lambdas via policing unit
15Trends in ROADMs
- Commercial factors
- Business case justified typically at gt 6
wavelengths lit per fibre - The ROADM market is the fastest growing segment
of the resurgent optical networking market
(Infonetics Research, Mar 06) - 40 Gbit/s per wavelength available from some
vendors - ROADM pioneers from 1998 - 2002 were Marconi (now
Ericsson) in Europe, then Fujitsu in north America
- Sequence of architectures
- 1 - thermo-electric optical switches based on
polymer PLCs - 2 - LCD wavelength blockers1 plus broadcast
select for drop channels most deployed products
use this - 3 - wavelength selective switches (WSS) first
products emerging - 4 - possible future return to LCDs for
holographic switching at high capacity
ROADMs reduce transponder capex and provisioning
opex
16Options for all-optical fibre switching - OXC
- Photonic / optical switch / cross-connect (OXC)
3 key suppliers - Calient, Glimmerglass, Polatis .
- Typically 16 - 64 ports (up to 256), each with
one wavelength - i.e. effective capacity similar to that of a ROADM
- Disaster recovery uses the smaller versions
- Pioneers of large switches (256 ports and above)
were Calient, Lucent, during 2000 - 2003 many
vendors came and went - Challenge of monitoring traffic quality remotely
is not fully resolved - Very few large switches deployed most business
is for small ones
The solution adopted by most non-public-network
operators
17Commercially successful all-optical matrix
switches move the mirror or the fibre
Mirror arrays
Fibre arrays
- MEMs mirror OXC had 38 suppliers in 2002, now
just 21 - Typically 64-256 ports
Used in data / video switching centres, not much
in public networks
18Agenda
- The story so far
- How long?
- How flexible?
- How integrated?
- How smart?
- Conclusions
19Convergence trend Packet and circuit functions
in shared platforms
Services
Video
Voice
Data
- Layer 2 cards / blades also appearing in Next
Generation SDH optical switches for the core
MSPP multi-service provisioning platform,
network or customer sites
20Micro MSPPs spot the difference
- Micro MSPPs sit at the customer site, provide
multiple service interfaces - Both shown offer multiple ports of Ethernet and
of E1 - Which is based on packets, which on TDM?
- Which looks more expensive?
- Upper is Ericsson (ex-Marconi) OMS840, based on
Eth/GFP/TDM - Ericsson (ex Axxessitt) AXX 9200 is another in
this family - Lower is from another vendor, based on packets
- Both images slightly edited to conceal identity
SDH-based Ethernet has low cost
21Agenda
- The story so far
- How long?
- How flexible?
- How integrated?
- How smart?
- Conclusions
22OTN - Optical Transport Network
- OTN defined by ITU-T, new hierarchical frame
structure, etc - Primarily for optical transport mesh in the core,
beyond SDH - Standardised transport and monitoring of high
capacity payloads, to carry both packets and
circuits - Converges platforms and management / control
planes, with SDH and WDM typically combined with
SDH / WDM platform - Misnamed as all-optical because of its relative
transparency to payload format - Global activity
- Support for frame structure G.709 as an interface
is wide (routers, optical switches) support
emerging for G.709 switching - Interest started in Europe, growing in US
- Key roles in carriers carrier, also bypassing
routers - Reduces router typically high levels (60-70) of
transit traffic - improves resilience, latency,
etc, reduces network capex
23Smart optical networks
- ITU-T defined G.8080 - ASON (network) and G.807 -
ASTN (control) for automatically switched optical
transport networks - GMPLS emerged as preferred control technology
with SDH/OTN - From convergence of proprietary optical
restoration and work on MPLS control plane
(briefly called MP-lambda-S) - Optical mesh reduces bandwidth for restoration by
typically 30 compared to rings gt major capex
savings - ASTN control plane can be linked to data services
control plane for faster and automated
provisioning - Preferred network model is hybrid of overlay
peer, in which control planes share a limited
view of network resources - ASTN provides industry-standard approach to fast
restoration - Typical time lt 0.5 secs ok for most applications
- Simpler configuration of network resilience gt
lower opex
GMPLS-based control reduces both capex and opex
24Future trends
- Hardware / components
- 100 Gbit/s Ethernet - 3-5 years away
- Photonic band gap devices - smaller cheaper
- New fibres - photonic crystal fibre for extreme
features - Optics on silicon - mostly for embedded systems,
rather than for extended infrastructure - Software / systems
- Linkage between control plane for optical
transport and control plane(s) for data switching
gt faster provisioning - Alternative control planes - Web 2.0 protocols /
XML
- New systems
- Optical packet burst switching gt super-core
networks1 - Application to GRID networking gt high capacity
processing - WDM PONs gt 1Gbit/s services to the home
25Conclusions
- WDM systems scale from city to continent, while
sharing features - All-optical circuit switching has become
established in many networks, notably as
multi-wavelength optical add-drop multiplexers - Convergence of packet and optical circuit
technologies has created the largest optical
market area, in multi-service provisioning
platforms - Intelligence in optical networks is starting to
impact on other layers - Reductions in opex and capex, resulting from the
use of optical systems, have been enormous - and
continue
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