• DocumentCode
    1448323
  • Title

    A Power Consumption Analysis for IP-Over-WDM Core Network Architectures

  • Author

    Musumeci, Francesco ; Tornatore, Massimo ; Pattavina, Achille

  • Author_Institution
    Dept. of Electron. & Inf., Politec. di Milano, Milan, Italy
  • Volume
    4
  • Issue
    2
  • fYear
    2012
  • fDate
    2/1/2012 12:00:00 AM
  • Firstpage
    108
  • Lastpage
    117
  • Abstract
    As Internet traffic is estimated to substantially grow in the near future, one of the most challenging issues will concern the reduction of its power requirement. For the core/transport section of the Internet, various network architectures can be considered, typically multi-layer architectures composed of an optical wavelength division multiplexing (WDM) transport layer under the classical electronic IP layer. Thus, we consider in this paper four architectures: basic IP over WDM with no optical switching, IP over synchronous digital hierarchy (SDH) over WDM, and IP over WDM with transparent or translucent switching. Energy efficiency in these architectures is expected to be enabled by optical switching technologies, mainly due to the significant reduction in the number of required optical/electronic/optical conversions. However, since optical signals are subject to relevant physical layer impairments when traversing core network devices, signal regeneration is often required, which has to be accomplished either at the electronic layer by routers/digital cross connects (DXCs) or directly at the optical layer through 3R-regenerators. Therefore, it is important to know which network architecture may provide the highest energy efficiency. In this paper we perform a comprehensive comparison between the four above-mentioned optical core network architectures, by performing energy assessment of the devices used at the transport layer of a telecom network and by developing an integer linear programming formulation for an energy-minimized and impairment-aware design of each of the considered architectures. We find that optical technology can enable power savings up to 60% with respect to classical IP-over-WDM architectures with no optical switching, but the best “optical” architecture is not univocal, and it is influenced by some crucial network parameters (connectivity, geographical extension, etc.).
  • Keywords
    IP networks; Internet; energy conservation; energy consumption; integer programming; linear programming; optical multilayers; synchronous digital hierarchy; telecommunication network routing; telecommunication switching; telecommunication traffic; wavelength division multiplexing; 3R-regenerators; IP over synchronous digital hierarchy; IP-over-WDM core network architectures; Internet traffic; SDH; core network devices; digital cross connects; energy assessment; energy efficiency; energy-minimized design; impairment-aware design; integer linear programming; multilayer architectures; optical core network architectures; optical signals; optical switching technology; optical wavelength division multiplexing transport layer; optical-electronic-optical conversions; power consumption analysis; power reduction; routers; telecom network; translucent switching; transparent switching; transport layer; IP networks; Optical devices; Optical fiber networks; Optical switches; Power demand; Transponders; Wavelength division multiplexing; IP-over-WDM Networks; Optical Networks; Power Consumption; Transparent and Translucent Architectures;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Journal_Title
    Optical Communications and Networking, IEEE/OSA Journal of
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • ISSN
    1943-0620
  • Type

    jour

  • DOI
    10.1364/JOCN.4.000108
  • Filename
    6151970