DocumentCode
942070
Title
Fiber to the Home/Fiber to the Premises: What, Where, and When?
Author
Koonen, Ton
Author_Institution
COBRA Inst., Eindhoven Univ. of Technol.
Volume
94
Issue
5
fYear
2006
fDate
5/1/2006 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage
911
Lastpage
934
Abstract
After conquering the core and metropolitan networks, fiber is now penetrating into the access domain. Its low loss and huge bandwidth enable the delivery of any current and foreseeable set of broadband services, and also make it a nice match to the wireless link to the end user. Cost effectiveness is a key issue, and will be decisive for the network topology choices. Point-to-point may be the most cost-effective for short-reach access, whereas point-to-multipoint may be the most interesting at medium- to long-reach access, or when line terminations in the local exchange become a key issue. A number of optical techniques being deployed for shared-fiber multiple access are discussed, based on time slot multiplexing, frequency slot multiplexing, code division multiplexing, and wavelength multiplexing, including their application in fiber to the home/fiber to the premises (FTTH/FTTP) networks for fast data transfer (asynchronous transfer mode (ATM) or Ethernet based) and for broadband service distribution (such as CATV). In the research laboratories, techniques aiming at next-generation optical access are being studied, such as wavelength routing for flexible capacity allocation and easily adaptable hosting of services and service providers, and radio-over-fiber techniques creating a powerful symbiosis of the fiber world and the wireless world by enabling centralized radio signal processing
Keywords
broadband networks; code division multiplexing; multi-access systems; optical fibre subscriber loops; radio access networks; radio-over-fibre; wavelength division multiplexing; Ethernet; FTTH/FTTP networks; access domain; asynchronous transfer mode; broadband service distribution; capacity allocation; code division multiplexing; fiber to the home; fiber to the premises; frequency slot multiplexing; line terminations; local exchange; metropolitan networks; network topology; optical access; passive optical networks; point-to-multipoint access; point-to-point access; radio signal processing; radio-over-fiber; shared-fiber multiple access; time slot multiplexing; wavelength multiplexing; wavelength routing; wireless link; Asynchronous transfer mode; Bandwidth; Code division multiplexing; Costs; Network topology; Optical fiber networks; Optical fiber subscriber loops; Optical frequency conversion; Optical signal processing; WDM networks; Broadband access; fiber to the home; multiple access; passive optical networks; radio over fiber; wavelength multiplexing;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Proceedings of the IEEE
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0018-9219
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/JPROC.2006.873435
Filename
1634534
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