Title :
AWG-based metro WDM networking
Author :
Maier, Martin ; Reisslein, Martin
Author_Institution :
Centre Tecnologic de Telecomunicacions de Catalunya, Barcelona, Spain
Abstract :
A plethora of metropolitan area wavelength-division multiplexing networks have been proposed and examined in recent years with the aim to alleviate the bandwidth bottleneck between increasingly higher-speed local/access networks and high-speed backbone networks. Many of the considered metropolitan area networks use the arrayed waveguide grating as an optical building block. As we review in this article, in ring, interconnected ring, and meshed metro WDM networks, the AWG is typically used to realize wavelength multiplexers, demultiplexers, or optical add-drop multiplexers without capitalizing on spatial wavelength reuse. By using the AWG as a wavelength router, highly efficient star metro WDM networks can be realized due to extensive spatial wavelength reuse. We give an overview of star metro WDM networks that are able to meet modular upgradability, transparency, flexibility, efficiency, reliability, and protection requirements of future metro networks. AWG-based star networks also enable an evolution path of ring networks toward highly efficient and fault-tolerant hybrid star-ring metro network solutions.
Keywords :
arrayed waveguide gratings; demultiplexing; metropolitan area networks; optical communication equipment; optical fibre networks; telecommunication network reliability; telecommunication network routing; wavelength division multiplexing; AWG; arrayed waveguide grating; demultiplexer; interconnected ring network; meshed metro WDM network; metropolitan area network wavelength division multiplexing network; modular upgradability; network efficiency; network flexibility; network protection; network reliability; optical add-drop multiplexer; optical network; ring network; star metro WDM network; wavelength router; Arrayed waveguide gratings; High speed optical techniques; Optical add-drop multiplexers; Optical arrays; Optical fiber networks; Optical interconnections; Optical waveguides; Urban areas; WDM networks; Wavelength division multiplexing;
Journal_Title :
Communications Magazine, IEEE
DOI :
10.1109/MCOM.2004.1362546