979 resultados para Wavelength-division-multiplexing passive optical network
Resumo:
Wavelength division multiplexing (WDM) networks have been adopted as a near-future solution for the broadband Internet. In previous work we proposed a new architecture, named enhanced grooming (G+), that extends the capabilities of traditional optical routes (lightpaths). In this paper, we compare the operational expenditures incurred by routing a set of demands using lightpaths with that of lighttours. The comparison is done by solving an integer linear programming (ILP) problem based on a path formulation. Results show that, under the assumption of single-hop routing, almost 15% of the operational cost can be reduced with our architecture. In multi-hop routing the operation cost is reduced in 7.1% and at the same time the ratio of operational cost to number of optical-electro-optical conversions is reduced for our architecture. This means that ISPs could provide the same satisfaction in terms of delay to the end-user with a lower investment in the network architecture
Resumo:
In this article, a new technique for grooming low-speed traffic demands into high-speed optical routes is proposed. This enhancement allows a transparent wavelength-routing switch (WRS) to aggregate traffic en route over existing optical routes without incurring expensive optical-electrical-optical (OEO) conversions. This implies that: a) an optical route may be considered as having more than one ingress node (all inline) and, b) traffic demands can partially use optical routes to reach their destination. The proposed optical routes are named "lighttours" since the traffic originating from different sources can be forwarded together in a single optical route, i.e., as taking a "tour" over different sources towards the same destination. The possibility of creating lighttours is the consequence of a novel WRS architecture proposed in this article, named "enhanced grooming" (G+). The ability to groom more traffic in the middle of a lighttour is achieved with the support of a simple optical device named lambda-monitor (previously introduced in the RingO project). In this article, we present the new WRS architecture and its advantages. To compare the advantages of lighttours with respect to classical lightpaths, an integer linear programming (ILP) model is proposed for the well-known multilayer problem: traffic grooming, routing and wavelength assignment The ILP model may be used for several objectives. However, this article focuses on two objectives: maximizing the network throughput, and minimizing the number of optical-electro-optical conversions used. Experiments show that G+ can route all the traffic using only half of the total OEO conversions needed by classical grooming. An heuristic is also proposed, aiming at achieving near optimal results in polynomial time
Resumo:
Avec les nouvelles technologies des réseaux optiques, une quantité de données de plus en plus grande peut être transportée par une seule longueur d'onde. Cette quantité peut atteindre jusqu’à 40 gigabits par seconde (Gbps). Les flots de données individuels quant à eux demandent beaucoup moins de bande passante. Le groupage de trafic est une technique qui permet l'utilisation efficace de la bande passante offerte par une longueur d'onde. Elle consiste à assembler plusieurs flots de données de bas débit en une seule entité de données qui peut être transporté sur une longueur d'onde. La technique demultiplexage en longueurs d'onde (Wavelength Division Multiplexing WDM) permet de transporter plusieurs longueurs d'onde sur une même fibre. L'utilisation des deux techniques : WDM et groupage de trafic, permet de transporter une quantité de données de l'ordre de terabits par seconde (Tbps) sur une même fibre optique. La protection du trafic dans les réseaux optiques devient alors une opération très vitale pour ces réseaux, puisqu'une seule panne peut perturber des milliers d'utilisateurs et engendre des pertes importantes jusqu'à plusieurs millions de dollars à l'opérateur et aux utilisateurs du réseau. La technique de protection consiste à réserver une capacité supplémentaire pour acheminer le trafic en cas de panne dans le réseau. Cette thèse porte sur l'étude des techniques de groupage et de protection du trafic en utilisant les p-cycles dans les réseaux optiques dans un contexte de trafic dynamique. La majorité des travaux existants considère un trafic statique où l'état du réseau ainsi que le trafic sont donnés au début et ne changent pas. En plus, la majorité de ces travaux utilise des heuristiques ou des méthodes ayant de la difficulté à résoudre des instances de grande taille. Dans le contexte de trafic dynamique, deux difficultés majeures s'ajoutent aux problèmes étudiés, à cause du changement continuel du trafic dans le réseau. La première est due au fait que la solution proposée à la période précédente, même si elle est optimisée, n'est plus nécessairement optimisée ou optimale pour la période courante, une nouvelle optimisation de la solution au problème est alors nécessaire. La deuxième difficulté est due au fait que la résolution du problème pour une période donnée est différente de sa résolution pour la période initiale à cause des connexions en cours dans le réseau qui ne doivent pas être trop dérangées à chaque période de temps. L'étude faite sur la technique de groupage de trafic dans un contexte de trafic dynamique consiste à proposer différents scénarios pour composer avec ce type de trafic, avec comme objectif la maximisation de la bande passante des connexions acceptées à chaque période de temps. Des formulations mathématiques des différents scénarios considérés pour le problème de groupage sont proposées. Les travaux que nous avons réalisés sur le problème de la protection considèrent deux types de p-cycles, ceux protégeant les liens (p-cycles de base) et les FIPP p-cycles (p-cycles protégeant les chemins). Ces travaux ont consisté d’abord en la proposition de différents scénarios pour gérer les p-cycles de protection dans un contexte de trafic dynamique. Ensuite, une étude sur la stabilité des p-cycles dans un contexte de trafic dynamique a été faite. Des formulations de différents scénarios ont été proposées et les méthodes de résolution utilisées permettent d’aborder des problèmes de plus grande taille que ceux présentés dans la littérature. Nous nous appuyons sur la méthode de génération de colonnes pour énumérer implicitement les cycles les plus prometteurs. Dans l'étude des p-cycles protégeant les chemins ou FIPP p-cycles, nous avons proposé des formulations pour le problème maître et le problème auxiliaire. Nous avons utilisé une méthode de décomposition hiérarchique du problème qui nous permet d'obtenir de meilleurs résultats dans un temps raisonnable. Comme pour les p-cycles de base, nous avons étudié la stabilité des FIPP p-cycles dans un contexte de trafic dynamique. Les travaux montrent que dépendamment du critère d'optimisation, les p-cycles de base (protégeant les liens) et les FIPP p-cycles (protégeant les chemins) peuvent être très stables.
Resumo:
The rapid growth of the optical communication branches and the enormous demand for more bandwidth require novel networks such as dense wavelength division multiplexing (DWDM). These networks enable higher bitrate transmission using the existing optical fibers. Micromechanically tunable optical microcavity devices like VCSELs, Fabry-Pérot filters and photodetectors are core components of these novel DWDM systems. Several air-gap based tunable devices were successfully implemented in the last years. Even though these concepts are very promising, two main disadvantages are still remaining. On the one hand, the high fabrication and integration cost and on the other hand the undesired adverse buckling of the suspended membranes. This thesis addresses these two problems and consists of two main parts: • PECVD dielectric material investigation and stress control resulting in membranes shape engineering. • Implementation and characterization of novel tunable optical devices with tailored shapes of the suspended membranes. For this purposes, low-cost PECVD technology is investigated and developed in detail. The macro- and microstress of silicon nitride and silicon dioxide are controlled over a wide range. Furthermore, the effect of stress on the optical and mechanical properties of the suspended membranes and on the microcavities is evaluated. Various membrane shapes (concave, convex and planar) with several radii of curvature are fabricated. Using this resonator shape engineering, microcavity devices such as non tunable and tunable Fabry-Pérot filters, VCSELs and PIN photodetectors are succesfully implemented. The fabricated Fabry-Pérot filters cover a spectral range of over 200nm and show resonance linewidths down to 1.5nm. By varying the stress distribution across the vertical direction within a DBR, the shape and the radius of curvature of the top membrane are explicitely tailored. By adjusting the incoming light beam waist to the curvature, the fundamental resonant mode is supported and the higher order ones are suppressed. For instance, a tunable VCSEL with 26 nm tuning range, 400µW maximal output power, 47nm free spectral range and over 57dB side mode suppresion ratio (SMSR) is demonstrated. Other technologies, such as introducing light emitting organic materials in microcavities are also investigated.
Resumo:
Recent developments in optical communications have allowed simpler optical devices to improve network resource utilization. As such, we propose adding a lambda-monitoring device to a wavelength-routing switch (WRS) allowing better performance when traffic is routed and groomed. This device may allow a WRS to aggregate traffic over optical routes without incurring in optical-electrical-optical conversion for the existing traffic. In other words, optical routes can be taken partially to route demands creating a sort of "lighttours". In this paper, we compare the number of OEO conversions needed to route a complete given traffic matrix using either lighttours or lightpaths
Resumo:
Wavelength division multiplexing (WDM) networks have been adopted as a near-future solution for the broadband Internet. In previous work we proposed a new architecture, named enhanced grooming (G+), that extends the capabilities of traditional optical routes (lightpaths). In this paper, we compare the operational expenditures incurred by routing a set of demands using lightpaths with that of lighttours. The comparison is done by solving an integer linear programming (ILP) problem based on a path formulation. Results show that, under the assumption of single-hop routing, almost 15% of the operational cost can be reduced with our architecture. In multi-hop routing the operation cost is reduced in 7.1% and at the same time the ratio of operational cost to number of optical-electro-optical conversions is reduced for our architecture. This means that ISPs could provide the same satisfaction in terms of delay to the end-user with a lower investment in the network architecture
Resumo:
In this article, a new technique for grooming low-speed traffic demands into high-speed optical routes is proposed. This enhancement allows a transparent wavelength-routing switch (WRS) to aggregate traffic en route over existing optical routes without incurring expensive optical-electrical-optical (OEO) conversions. This implies that: a) an optical route may be considered as having more than one ingress node (all inline) and, b) traffic demands can partially use optical routes to reach their destination. The proposed optical routes are named "lighttours" since the traffic originating from different sources can be forwarded together in a single optical route, i.e., as taking a "tour" over different sources towards the same destination. The possibility of creating lighttours is the consequence of a novel WRS architecture proposed in this article, named "enhanced grooming" (G+). The ability to groom more traffic in the middle of a lighttour is achieved with the support of a simple optical device named lambda-monitor (previously introduced in the RingO project). In this article, we present the new WRS architecture and its advantages. To compare the advantages of lighttours with respect to classical lightpaths, an integer linear programming (ILP) model is proposed for the well-known multilayer problem: traffic grooming, routing and wavelength assignment The ILP model may be used for several objectives. However, this article focuses on two objectives: maximizing the network throughput, and minimizing the number of optical-electro-optical conversions used. Experiments show that G+ can route all the traffic using only half of the total OEO conversions needed by classical grooming. An heuristic is also proposed, aiming at achieving near optimal results in polynomial time
Resumo:
Neste trabalho estudamos alguns algoritmos de alocação de comprimento de onda em redes ópticas WDM (Wavelength Division Multiplexing). O objetivo para estudar os algoritmos de alocação first-fit, least-used e most-used está baseado na estratégia adotada para estudar o Problema RWA. A estratégia toma como base a visão geral do problema que envolve os algoritmos de roteamento e os algoritmos de alocação de comprimento de onda, e tendo como métrica principal para seus resultados a probabilidade de bloqueio. Este trabalho apresenta uma visão diferenciada para o problema e considera-se que a alocação de comprimentos de onda se sobrepõe, em importância, à ação de roteamento em redes ópticas. Essa percepção ocorre quando se analisa o problema RWA a partir do critério clássico usado no estabelecimento de uma rota: a escolha do caminho mais curto entre a origem e o destino. Apesar da identificação de um caminho mais curto, isso não garante, em redes ópticas, que ele será o utilizado, pois é necessário que haja para aquele caminho, um comprimento de onda adequado. Foi utilizada uma ferramenta de simulação para redes WDM denominada OWNS para realizar uma análise do problema RWA. Os resultados obtidos são apresentados graficamente e em uma das simulações observou-se uma forte tendência de queda na probabilidade de bloqueio e uma boa vazão no trafego da rede com isso possibilitando um aumento na capacidade de transmissão da rede. Por fim, este texto apresenta uma discussão sobre os diferenciais e limitações deste trabalho, e apresenta direcionamentos para investigações futuras neste campo de estudo.
Resumo:
O sistema WDM (Wavelength Division Multiplexing) é considerado como uma tecnologia madura para ser usada no backbone de redes ópticas. Entretanto, encontrar uma solução ótima para o algoritmo de atribuição de comprimento de onda no projeto e operação destas redes, ainda é uma questão em aberto. A pesquisa realizada nesta tese aborda os principais aspectos relacionados ao processo de atribuição de comprimento de onda em sistemas WDM, e como resultado foi proposta uma metodologia que minimiza a degradação do sinal óptico gerada pela modulação de fase cruzada (XPM – Cross-Phase Modulation). Esta proposta é composta por uma metodologia híbrida baseada em Coloração de Grafo e Algoritmo Genético (AG), sendo que o primeiro tem a função de reduzir o número de comprimentos de onda necessários para atender a matriz de tráfego (que é fornecida a priori) e o último tem a função de encontrar a ordem de ativação de canais na grade de comprimentos de onda, com o objetivo de reduzir o efeito XPM. A proposta foi comparada com o algoritmo First-Fit em diferentes cenários e topologias de redes, e demonstrou uma considerável redução na probabilidade de bloqueio.
Resumo:
O objetivo deste trabalho é comparar aspectos relacionados ao uso de Multiplexação por Subportadora (SCM) em um sistema de transmissão de Rádio Digital sobre Fibra (DRoF) aplicado à Arquitetura de Acesso a Rádio Centralizado (C-RAN). Para isso, foram criados dois cenários que fazem uso da tecnologia DRoF, onde no primeiro, três subportadoras são transmitidas em um comprimento de onda e, para o segundo cenário, três comprimentos de onda são transmitidos, onde cada um possui uma única subportadora. Para ambas configurações é visado alimentar unidades de rádio remoto (RRH) localizadas na torre de transmissão. São analisados aspectos de desempenho da recepção, alcance das redes e complexidade do sistema para cada um dos cenários propostos. Além disso, são mostrados passo a passo como os sistemas foram construídos utilizando o software de simulação VPITransmissionMaker. Foram considerados para cada subportadora uma taxa de 250 Mbps, modulação 16-QAM, centrados na frequência de 5GHz. Os resultados obtidos demonstram que, para SCM-DRoF, uma Taxa de Erro de Bit (BER) de 10-6 é mantida constante para enlaces de até 20 km. No segundo modelo, sem uso de SCM, um desempenho similar foi verificado, contudo com alcance de até 40 km. Dado o contexto da aplicação, os fatores desempenho e distância levam a crer que ambos cenários de transmissão podem ser utilizadas para C-RAN. Contudo, levando em consideração o custo e a complexidade no domínio óptico, o sistema utilizando SCM, comparativamente, possui mais vantagens. Conclui-se então que o uso de SCM apresenta-se como uma forte opção para aplicações no contexto das novas tecnologias de redes de acesso móvel.
Resumo:
A natureza rígida de redes de multiplexação por divisão de comprimentos de onda (WDM) provoca exploração ineficiente de capacidade espectral. Dessa forma, redes flexíveis são um possível avanço para a tecnologia óptica por viabilizarem melhor aproveitamento dos recursos espectrais disponíveis. Com o intuito de aferir a possível aplicabilidade de redes flexíveis, este trabalho propõe uma estratégia de avaliação de desempenho baseada em simulações e comparações entre resultados obtidos. Para tanto, várias simulações a tempo discreto foram implementadas em dois simuladores desenvolvidos em Matlab a fim de analisar diferentes políticas de alocação de espectro (First-Fit, Smallest-Fit, Exact-Fit e Random-Fit) em três algoritmos de roteamento por caminhos ópticos não híbridos: o roteamento por fragmentação externa (FA), por caminhos mais curtos com máxima eficiência de reuso espectral (SPSR) e por balanceamento de cargas (BLSA). Duas topologias de rede foram utilizadas: um pequeno subconjunto de 6 nós da Cost239 e uma topologia aleatória de 7 nós. Admitindo-se que efeitos de camada física não foram configurados como restrições, foram realizadas comparações entre as diversas técnicas estudadas, objetivando-se apontar, baseado nas especificidades dos cenários propostos, qual o método mais adequado de alocação espectral em termos de frequência de bloqueio entre as quatro políticas de alocação de espectro consideradas.
Resumo:
This paper addresses the problem of survivable lightpath provisioning in wavelength-division-multiplexing (WDM) mesh networks, taking into consideration optical-layer protection and some realistic optical signal quality constraints. The investigated networks use sparsely placed optical–electrical–optical (O/E/O) modules for regeneration and wavelength conversion. Given a fixed network topology with a number of sparsely placed O/E/O modules and a set of connection requests, a pair of link-disjoint lightpaths is established for each connection. Due to physical impairments and wavelength continuity, both the working and protection lightpaths need to be regenerated at some intermediate nodes to overcome signal quality degradation and wavelength contention. In the present paper, resource-efficient provisioning solutions are achieved with the objective of maximizing resource sharing. The authors propose a resource-sharing scheme that supports three kinds of resource-sharing scenarios, including a conventional wavelength-link sharing scenario, which shares wavelength links between protection lightpaths, and two new scenarios, which share O/E/O modules between protection lightpaths and between working and protection lightpaths. An integer linear programming (ILP)-based solution approach is used to find optimal solutions. The authors also propose a local optimization heuristic approach and a tabu search heuristic approach to solve this problem for real-world, large mesh networks. Numerical results show that our solution approaches work well under a variety of network settings and achieves a high level of resource-sharing rates (over 60% for O/E/O modules and over 30% for wavelength links), which translate into great savings in network costs.
Resumo:
Recently, there has been growing interest in developing optical fiber networks to support the increasing bandwidth demands of multimedia applications, such as video conferencing and World Wide Web browsing. One technique for accessing the huge bandwidth available in an optical fiber is wavelength-division multiplexing (WDM). Under WDM, the optical fiber bandwidth is divided into a number of nonoverlapping wavelength bands, each of which may be accessed at peak electronic rates by an end user. By utilizing WDM in optical networks, we can achieve link capacities on the order of 50 THz. The success of WDM networks depends heavily on the available optical device technology. This paper is intended as a tutorial on some of the optical device issues in WDM networks. It discusses the basic principles of optical transmission in fiber and reviews the current state of the art in optical device technology. It introduces some of the basic components in WDM networks, discusses various implementations of these components, and provides insights into their capabilities and limitations. Then, this paper demonstrates how various optical components can be incorporated into WDM optical networks for both local and wide-area applications. Last, the paper provides a brief review of experimental WDM networks that have been implemented.
Resumo:
The emergence of wavelength-division multiplexing (WDM) technology provides the capability for increasing the bandwidth of synchronous optical network (SONET) rings by grooming low-speed traffic streams onto different high-speed wavelength channels. Since the cost of SONET add–drop multiplexers (SADM) at each node dominates the total cost of these networks, how to assign the wavelength, groom the traffic, and bypass the traffic through the intermediate nodes has received a lot of attention from researchers recently. Moreover, the traffic pattern of the optical network changes from time to time. How to develop dynamic reconfiguration algorithms for traffic grooming is an important issue. In this paper, two cases (best fit and full fit) for handling reconfigurable SONET over WDM networks are proposed. For each approach, an integer linear programming model and heuristic algorithms (TS-1 and TS-2, based on the tabu search method) are given. The results demonstrate that the TS-1 algorithm can yield better solutions but has a greater running time than the greedy algorithm for the best fit case. For the full fit case, the tabu search heuristic yields competitive results compared with an earlier simulated annealing based method and it is more stable for the dynamic case.
Resumo:
Routing and wavelength assignment (RWA) is an important problem that arises in wavelength division multiplexed (WDM) optical networks. Previous studies have solved many variations of this problem under the assumption of perfect conditions regarding the power of a signal. In this paper, we investigate this problem while allowing for degradation of routed signals by components such as taps, multiplexers, and fiber links. We assume that optical amplifiers are preplaced. We investigate the problem of routing the maximum number of connections while maintaining proper power levels. The problem is formulated as a mixed-integer nonlinear program and two-phase hybrid solution approaches employing two different heuristics are developed