DocumentCode
1758881
Title
Adaptive Spectrum Control and Management in Elastic Optical Networks
Author
Wen, Ke ; Cai, Xinran ; Yin, Yawei ; Geisler, David J. ; Proietti, Roberto ; Scott, Ryan P. ; Fontaine, Nicolas K. ; Yoo, S.J.B.
Author_Institution
Dept. of Electr. & Comput. Eng., Univ. of California, Davis, Davis, CA, USA
Volume
31
Issue
1
fYear
2013
fDate
41275
Firstpage
39
Lastpage
48
Abstract
Elastic optical networking (EON) has emerged in recent years as a promising solution for implementing flexible bandwidth channels (flexpaths) that efficiently match the allocated bandwidth with the traffic demand using agile granularities of spectrum allocation. However, the additional flexibility in such networks raises challenges in terms of efficient control and management of spectrum resources. Among them, three important issues are (1) mitigation of spectral fragmentation, (2) implementation of impairment awareness and enhancement of robustness against impairments for potentially large-bandwidth flexpaths, and (3) design of an efficient restoration scheme to combat network failures. This paper presents an adaptive spectrum control and management scheme, which includes: dynamic on-demand spectral defragmentation, adaptive combinational quality of transmission (QoT) restoration (ACQR) and supervisory channel-assisted active restoration, to account for the three issues above. We present scalable networking algorithms and experimental demonstrations that address these issues in an EON testbed. Simulation results show that the defragmentation technique is capable of reducing the provisioning blocking probability by half with only one defragmentation module on each link. Then, we also show that the ACQR can efficiently restore many degraded flexpaths on the same impaired link while reducing the restoration blocking probability by a factor of 10 compared with the conventional rerouting method. At last, we show via simulation the advantages of using supervisory channels to determine restoration path quality and selection in EON restorations. This paper also presents experimental demonstrations to corroborate the effectiveness and feasibility of implementing these capabilities in next generation optical networks.
Keywords
adaptive control; bandwidth allocation; channel allocation; computer network management; next generation networks; probability; quality of service; radio spectrum management; telecommunication traffic; wavelength division multiplexing; ACQR; EON; adaptive combinational QoT restoration; adaptive spectrum control; adaptive spectrum management; agile granularity; bandwidth allocation; blocking probability; combat network failure; dynamic on-demand spectral defragmentation; elastic optical network; flexible bandwidth channel; impairment awareness; next generation optical network; quality of transmission; restoration path quality; scalable networking algorithm; spectral fragmentation mitigation; spectrum allocation; supervisory channel assisted active restoration; traffic demand; Adaptive systems; Bandwidth; Bit error rate; Modulation; Monitoring; Optical fiber networks; Optical wavelength conversion; Elastic optical networks; Flexible bandwidth; Impairment awareness; Modulation format switching; Network control and management; Next generation networking; Optical fiber networks; Optical performance monitoring; Quality of transmission; Restoration; Spectral defragmentation; Supervisory channel; Wavelength conversion;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Selected Areas in Communications, IEEE Journal on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0733-8716
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/JSAC.2013.130105
Filename
6381742
Link To Document