Author :
Gerstel, Ornan ; Ramaswami, Rajiv ; Sasaki, Galen H.
Abstract :
We provide network designs for optical add-drop wavelength-division-multiplexed (OADM) rings that minimize overall network cost, rather than just the number of wavelengths needed. The network cost includes the cost of the transceivers required at the nodes as well as the number of wavelengths. The transceiver cost includes the cost of terminating equipment as well as higher-layer electronic processing equipment, which in practice can dominate over the cost of the number of wavelengths in the network. The networks support dynamic (i.e., time-varying) traffic streams that are at lower rates (e.g., OC-3, 155 Mb/s) than the lightpath capacities (e.g., OC-48, 2.5 Gb/s). A simple OADM ring is the point-to-point ring, where traffic is transported on WDM links optically, but switched through nodes electronically. Although the network is efficient in using link bandwidth, it has high electronic and opto-electronic processing costs. Two OADM ring networks are given that have similar performance but are less expensive. Two other OADM ring networks are considered that are nonblocking, where one has a wide-sense nonblocking property and the other has a rearrangeably nonblocking property. All the networks are compared using the cost criteria of number of wavelengths and number of transceivers
Keywords :
optical fibre networks; telecommunication traffic; wavelength division multiplexing; 155 Mbit/s; 2.5 Gbit/s; OADM rings; WDM links; WDM rings; cost-effective traffic grooming; dynamic traffic streams; higher-layer electronic processing equipment; lightpath capacities; link bandwidth; network cost; network designs; optical add-drop wavelength-division-multiplexed rings; performance; point-to-point ring; terminating equipment; time-varying traffic streams; transceivers; wavelengths; wide-sense nonblocking property; Costs; Distributed control; Optical add-drop multiplexers; Optical fiber networks; Optical interconnections; SONET; Telecommunication network topology; Telecommunication traffic; Transceivers; Wavelength division multiplexing;