DWDM

Chapter 4.1 - DWDM Systems

4

DWDM SYSTEMS

 

4.1 INTRODUCTION

To resolve bandwidth exhaustion and enable multiple services over the same network, more than one wavelength has been multiplexed in the same fiber using dense wavelength division multiplexing (DWDM) technology. DWDM potentially allows for an aggregate traffic of many terabits per second per fiber. Since nodes terminate several such fibers, the total pass-through bandwidth can be in the multiterabit range. However, to accomplish this efficiently, DWDM systems require specialized optical functionality such as massive, dynamic, and fast cross-connect fabrics; tunable lasers and filters; low-noise and high-sensitivity receivers; optical pulse compressors; optical equalizers, low-noise and wide-band optical amplifiers; fast and low-noise optical sensors; optical "smart" connectors; and so on.

Current DWDM systems use optical channels the wavelength of which is determined according to ITU-T defined grid. The many wavelengths in the same fiber provide versatility and flexibility of both service and bandwidth. Consider a wavelength as being a colored thread connecting two points, perhaps hundreds of kilometers apart. And many such threads are used to make a string, the equivalent of a fiber. In this scenario, because there are many wavelengths (channels) in a fiber, each channel may transport a different type of traffic, such as SONET/SDH over one channel, ATM over another channel, and perhaps TDM voice or Internet over another channel, and each one potentially at different bit rate, OC-N (OC-3 to OC-768) or Gigabit Ethernet. Currently, no other system or network can accomplish that.

As DWDM systems become more "optical," many traditional limitations are lifted to provide a truly scalable, dynamically reconfigurable, and future-proof system and network with optimum efficiency and bandwidth utilization. Present limitations are imposed only by the current state of the art of optical technology and by embedded traditional technology. Thus, in the next-generation and the next-after-next generation DWDMs, one wavelength (or optical channel) will carry traffic at a well-established bit rate and another at a rate to be defined (by emerging needs and demands); wavelength assignment will be dynamic (this also implies wavelength conversion); and bandwidth will be completely scalable and tradable, enabling both wholesale and bandwidth sharing so that more than one service or end user can share the same wavelength. The latter will enable far better bandwidth utilization, particularly when four end users may request up to 10 G/s each. The driver for this flexibility is the class of service, an entirely different approach to traditional services. Class of service implies that service providers and clients have the flexibility to offer and select, respectively, a service in one of many quality flavors. For example, the best quality service guarantees high reliability and bandwidth availability. The lowest quality service ensures "best effort" in both reliability and bandwidth availability, lowest cost of service, and therefore no guarantees. A service between the two ensures reliability of service and meeting minimum compliance quality levels (minimum bandwidth, jitter, delay, and noise) but no guarantees of meeting maximum levels unless bandwidth is available. Some call these classes "platinum," "gold," and "silver"; some "guaranteed," "differentiated," and "simple"; and some others give different names. Clearly, no matter what they are called, cost escalates from the silver to platinum, and quality of service is very important to all services.

Despite the technological evolution that facilitates the design of DWDM systems, the system designer still has to address many key challenges: How many wavelengths in a single fiber and at what bit rates each? How to engineer and budget the optical (end-to-end) path in a dynamically reconfigurable network? How are wavelengths monitored, managed, and provisioned? How many different types of client payload? How can the system be robust and deliver reliably uninterrupted services at the expected quality? What are the most efficient algorithms and protocols? How long can the fiber span be with or without amplification? What type of optical amplifiers can be used to meet gain and noise requirements? How can the system meet functionality density, cost, and performance objectives for the services it is designed for? And, how do the system interfaces comply with international standards and meet interoperability and internetworking specifications?

This chapter contains device specifications for illustrative and educational purposes. Because specifications are continuously changing, no responsibility is assumed for correctness. The reader is encouraged to consult the most recent versions of standards and most current manufacturers data sheets.

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