Optical Switching

Chapter 1 - Introduction

Introduction

Despite the fact that optical fiber is the prevalent transmission medium and the emergence
of true optical networking has been anticipated since the early 1990s [1],
current networks are far from being termed as optical. The history of optical
communication has mostly been about transmission and about ways to provide
higher bandwidths while simultaneously reducing the cost per bit transmitted [2].

Telecommunication traffic has been growing at a high and steady rate since the
early 1980s. Even though the overly optimistic traffic forecasts of the late 1990s
never materialized and the associated investments caused a downturn in the industry,
one should not lose sight of the fact that the trend toward office automation,
remote access, online transactions, and so on has been steady and will continue to
grow [3]. These types of services are supported by two communications technologies
that are displacing all others: wireless, which can go everywhere, but with
limited capacity, and optical fiber, which, although limited to fixed paths, has
almost unlimited capacity [4].

Until the late 1990s, networks using optical fiber were viewed merely as transmission
pipes that can carry a huge amount of traffic. With advances in optical technologies,
that paradigm is shifting towards optical networks that are capable
of providing network flexibility, new services, and operational efficiencies [5–7].
This is the notion behind the intelligent optical network. In addition to the increase
in data and wireless traffic volumes, new optical services have become possible
due to recent advances in optical technology [3, 8–11].

Widespread deployment of affordable broadband services will depend heavily on
the availability of improved optical networks, which already provide the physical
infrastructure for much of the world’s telecommunications and Internet-related
services. Optical technology is also essential to the future development of mobile
and wireless communications and cable television networks [12]. In the last
couple of years optical backbone equipment development has focused on three
basic lines: enhanced DWDM, long-haul capabilities, and optical switching
[13–20].

UNLIMITED FREE
ACCESS
TO THE WORLD'S BEST IDEAS

SUBMIT
Already a GlobalSpec user? Log in.

This is embarrasing...

An error occurred while processing the form. Please try again in a few minutes.

Customize Your GlobalSpec Experience

Category: Fiber Optic Cables
Finish!
Privacy Policy

This is embarrasing...

An error occurred while processing the form. Please try again in a few minutes.