Optical Switching

Chapter 3.3.4 - All-Optical Buffering

3.3.4   All-Optical Buffering

Optical packet switches require buffers in order to store packets while their headers
are being processed, in order to resolve contentions between packets and to
implement service differentiation schemes. Electronic buffers are naturally not considered
a practical solution for optical packet switches. Optical buffering, however,
is still under investigation [18–20].

Because photons cannot be trapped and stored in the same way as electrons,
research has been looking at ways to delay them for deterministic periods of time.
In the simplest approach, packets are sent to travel over additional pieces of fiber.
This type of buffering is presented in detail in Section 3.6.1, where its numerous
drawbacks are discussed. The general consensus is that compared to electronic
buffers and their role in current packet networks, fiber delay lines (FDLs) can
only offer limited buffering capabilities for OPS networks. Furthermore, in order
for OPS buffering to become competitive with its electronic counterpart, it will be
necessary to invent a cost-effective optical buffering technology that provides
many orders of magnitude reduction in size, that is, many orders of magnitude
increase in storage density [21].

Innovative solutions for all-optical buffering that are being researched include
“slow-light” buffers, which use electromagnetically induced transparency [15] or
microresonators.

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