Optical Switching

Chapter 3.3.2 - All-Optical Packet Delineation and Synchronization

3.3.2   All-Optical Packet Delineation and Synchronization

Packets originating from separate source nodes arrive at an OPS node after traversing
different paths, through various fiber links and on different wavelengths. It is
natural that they experience various propagation delays due to temperature variations,
chromatic dispersion, and path differences. Variations due to path length
differences are particularly important because they can be large and they cause
packets to arrive asynchronously (unaligned) at the OPS node. Another cause of
timing problems is jitter, which occurs in switch fabrics. The accumulated jitter
through previous nodes has to be dealt with at the input of an OPS node. Because
of all these timing uncertainties, the packet format should allow for guard
band(s), and each node should be equipped with packet delineation and synchronization
circuits [14].

Packet delineation is required for both synchronous and asynchronous networks,
and its purpose is to determine the beginning and end of an arriving packet. Current
approaches perform delineation electronically as follows. A splitter first taps a
small amount of power from incoming packets and passes it to a bit-level synchronization
circuit, which locks the incoming bits in phase with the local clock in order
to read the header information. Because this operation must be performed for each
incoming packet, the circuit must be able to synchronize the header with its clock
within a few bit times [15].

In addition to bit-level synchronization for header and payload separation, OPS
nodes in slotted networks must also synchronize incoming packets to the local
switching timeslots. This slot-level synchronization is accomplished by passing
each incoming packet through a cascade of fiber delay lines and optical switches
(such as the one depicted in Fig. 3.1), in order to delay the packet by a sufficient
amount of time for it to be aligned with the beginning of a timeslot. This scheme
introduces losses and crosstalk, resulting in a significant power penalty over long
paths. A different strategy is to use a highly dispersive fiber in which the propagation
delay varies significantly according to the input wavelength. Packet alignment is
performed by converting it to a wavelength corresponding to the desired delay
that will enable the packet to exit at the beginning of a timeslot.

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