DocumentCode
1698407
Title
Grid Reconfigurable Optical-Wireless Architecture for Large Scale Municipal Mesh Access Network
Author
Wong, S.-W. ; Campelo, D.R. ; Cheng, N. ; Yen, S.-H. ; Kazovsky, L. ; Lee, H. ; Cox, D.C.
Author_Institution
Electr. Eng. Dept., Stanford Univ., Stanford, CA, USA
fYear
2009
Firstpage
1
Lastpage
6
Abstract
This paper presents a novel hierarchical and grid based reconfigurable optical-wireless network (GROW-Net) architecture. GROW-Net supports scalable and flexible integration of a large scale wireless mesh network in a municipal environment. Under the GROW-Net architecture, a joint evolution strategy is proposed to allow graceful upgrades in both optical backbone and wireless mesh network. To alleviate the known throughput bottleneck in mesh networks, a capacity enhancing technique based on flexible cell-splitting is proposed. The technique allocates wavelength resources to unutilized dark fibers using the unique structure of GROW-Net´s reconfigurable and colorless access gateways. To analyze the effectiveness of the approach, throughput performance of the wireless mesh network is analyzed using a high fidelity simulator. The wireless mesh network in the simulation employs a distributed and cooperative medium access control protocol within a time division multiple access and time division duplex framework. Through the high fidelity simulation, results show the degree of throughput enhancement by using cell splitting method. The evolution strategy further enables the backbone to scale its bandwidth and adapt to future high throughput and very high throughput wireless technologies. The performance of the proposed backbone is demonstrated experimentally over the optical testbed.
Keywords
Hi-Fi equipment; access protocols; reconfigurable architectures; wireless mesh networks; GROW-Net architecture; cell splitting method; cooperative medium access control protocol; distributed medium access control protocol; grid reconfigurable optical wireless architecture; high fidelity simulator; joint evolution strategy; mesh access network; throughput performance; time division duplex framework; time division multiple access; wireless mesh network; Analytical models; Large scale integration; Large-scale systems; Mesh networks; Optical fiber networks; Performance analysis; Resource management; Spine; Throughput; Wireless mesh networks;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Global Telecommunications Conference, 2009. GLOBECOM 2009. IEEE
Conference_Location
Honolulu, HI
ISSN
1930-529X
Print_ISBN
978-1-4244-4148-8
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/GLOCOM.2009.5426037
Filename
5426037
Link To Document