WDM and DWDM Multiplexing
WDM and DWDM Multiplexing
WDM and DWDM Multiplexing
Multiplexing
Multiplexing
a process where multiple analog message signals or digital data streams are combined into one signal over a shared medium
Types
Time division multiplexing Frequency division multiplexing
Optically
Time division multiplexing Wavelength division multiplexing
Timeline
1975
1980
1985
1990
1995
2000
2005 2008
Dense WDM
WDM Overview
Wavelength Division Multiplexer Wavelength Division Demultiplexer
A B
1 2
Fibre
1 + 2
1 2
X Y
Multiple channels of information carried over the same fibre, each using an individual wavelength A communicates with X and B with Y as if a dedicated fibre is used for each signal Typically one channel utilises 1320 nm and the other 1550 nm Broad channel spacing, several hundred nm Recently WDM has become known as Coarse WDM or CWDM to distinguish it from DWDM
WDM Overview
Wavelength Division Multiplexer Wavelength Division Demultiplexer
A B C
1 2 3
Fibre
1 + 2 + 3
1 2 3
X Y Z
Multiple channels of information carried over the same fibre, each using an individual wavelength Attractive multiplexing technique
High aggregate bit rate without high speed electronics or modulation Low dispersion penalty for aggregate bit rate Very useful for upgrades to installed fibres Realisable using commercial components, unlike OTDM
Types of WDM
WDM Multiplexers/Demultiplexers
Wavelength multiplexer types include:
1 + 2
Fibres
Tunable Sources
WDM systems require sources at different wavelengths Irish researchers at U.C.D. under the ACTS program are developing precision tunable laser sources Objective is to develop a complete module incorporating:
Multisection segmented grating Distributed Bragg Reflector Laser diode Thermal and current drivers Control microprocessor Interface to allow remote optical power and wavelength setting ACTS BLISS AC069 Project
Optical Transmitters
A B C
1 2 3
Fibre
1 + 2 + 3
1 2 3
X Y Z
Multiple channels of information carried over the same fibre, each using an individual wavelength Dense WDM is WDM utilising closely spaced channels Channel spacing reduced to 1.6 nm and less Cost effective way of increasing capacity without replacing fibre Commercial systems available with capacities of 32 channels and upwards; > 80 Gb/s per fibre
T1 T2
1 2 N
Fibre
1 + 2 ... N
1 2 N
R1 R2
TN
RN
Multiple channels of information carried over the same fibre, each using an individual wavelength Unlike CWDM channels are much closer together Transmitter T1 communicates with Receiver R1 as if connected by a dedicated fibre as does T2 and R2 and so on
Source: Master 7_4
Multiplexer Optical Output Spectrum for an 8 DWDM channel system, showing individual channels
Dense WDM is WDM utilising closely spaced channels Channel spacing reduced to 1.6 nm and less Cost effective way of increasing capacity without replacing fibre Commercial systems available with capacities of 32 channels and upwards; > 80 Gb/s per fibre Allows new optical network topologies, for example high speed metropolitian rings Optical amplifiers are also a key component
Expansion Options
New fibre is expensive to install (Euro 100k + per km) Fibre routes require a right-of-way Additional regenerators and/or amplifiers may be required
Additional regenerators and/or amplifiers may be required More space needed in buildings
Capacity Expansion Options (II) Install higher speed SDH network elements
Speeds above STM-16 not yet trivial to deploy STM-64 price points have not yet fallen sufficiently No visible expansion options beyond 10 Gbit/s May require network redesign
Install DWDM
Incremental capacity expansion to 80 Gbits/s and beyond Allows reuse of the installed equipment base
DWDM Advantages
Greater fibre capacity Easier network expansion
No new fibre needed Just add a new wavelength Incremental cost for a new channel is low No need to replace many components such as optical amplifiers
TDM approach using STM-64 is more costly and more susceptible to chromatic and polarization mode dispersion
DWDM Disadvantages
Introduces another element, the frequency domain, to network design and management SONET/SDH network management systems not well equipped to handle DWDM topologies DWDM performance monitoring and protection methodologies developing
larger proportion of longer >1000km links Earlier onset of "fibre exhaust" (saturation of capacity) in 1995-96
Need a scaleable infrastructure to cope with demand as it grows DWDM allows incremental capacity increases DWDM is viewed as an integral part of a market entry strategy
DWDM Standards
DWDM Standards
ITU Recommendation is G.692 "Optical interfaces for multichannel systems with optical amplifiers" G.692 includes a number of DWDM channel plans Channel separation set at:
50, 100 and 200 GHz equivalent to approximate wavelength spacings of 0.4, 0.8 and 1.6 nm
Channels lie in the range 1530.3 nm to 1567.1 nm (so-called C-Band) Newer "L-Band" exists from about 1570 nm to 1620 nm Supervisory channel also specified at 1510 nm to handle alarms and monitoring
1200
1300
1400
1500
1600
1700
Wavelength in nm
Channel Spacing
Trend is toward smaller channel spacings, to incease the channel count ITU channel spacings are 0.4 nm, 0.8 nm and 1.6 nm (50, 100 and 200 GHz) Proposed spacings of 0.2 nm (25 GHz) and even 0.1 nm (12.5 GHz) Requires laser sources with excellent long term wavelength stability, better than 10 pm One target is to allow more channels in the C-band without other upgrades
0.8 nm
1550
1551
1553
1554
So called ITU C-Band 81 channels defined Another band called the L-band exists above 1565 nm
1529.94 1530.33 1530.72 1531.12 1531.51 1531.90 1532.29 1532.68 1533.07 1533.47 1533.86 1534.25
DWDM Components
DWDM System
Receivers
Line Amp
Line Amp
200 km
Each wavelength behaves as if it has it own "virtual fibre" Optical amplifiers needed to overcome losses in mux/demux and long fibre spans
Receivers
Line Amp
Line Amp
Gain equalisation filter for fibre amplifiers Bragg gratings based demultiplexer Array Waveguide multiplexers/demultiplexers Add/Drop Coupler
Active Components/Subsystems:
Transceivers and Transponders DFB lasers at ITU specified wavelengths DWDM flat Erbium Fibre amplifiers
Mux/Demuxes
Constructive Interference
A+B
n + n
Source
Travelling on two different paths, both waves recombine (at the summer, ) Because of the path length difference the waves are in-phase Complete reinforcement occurs, so-called constructive interference
Destructive Interference
n + 0.5 n
A+B
Source
Travelling on two different paths, both waves recombine (at the summer, ) Because of the 0.5 path length difference the waves are out of phase Complete cancellation occurs, so-called destructive interference
n +
Source
Two different wavelengths, both travelling on two different paths Because of the path length difference the "Red" wavelength undergoes constructive interference while the "Green" suffers destructive interference Only the Red wavelength is selected, Green is rejected
1 .... 5
Input fibre
Waveguides
All of the wavelengths 1 .... 5 travel along all of the waveguides. But because of the constant path difference between the waveguides a given wavelength emerges in phase only at the input to ONE output fibre. At all other output fibres destructive interference cancels out that wavelength.
5 1
Output fibres
1st star coupler, Arrayed waveguide grating with the constant path length difference 2nd star coupler.
The input light radiates in the 1st star coupler and then propagates through the arrayed waveguides which act as the discrete phase shifter. In the 2nd star coupler, light beams converges into various focal positions according to the wavelength. Low loss, typically 6 dB
DWDM Systems
DWDM System
Receivers
Line Amp
Line Amp
200 km
Each wavelength behaves as if it has it own "virtual fibre" Optical amplifiers needed to overcome losses in mux/demux and long fibre spans
DWDM Multiplexer
Add/Drop Mux/Demux
Receivers
Optical fibre
Each wavelength still behaves as if it has it own "virtual fibre" Wavelengths can be added and dropped as required at some intermediate location
160 40
0.4 nm
Different systems suit national and metropolitian networks Typical high-end systems currently provide:
40/80/160 channels Bit rates to 10 Gb/s with some 40 Gb/s Interfaces for SDH, PDH, ATM etc. Total capacity to 10 Tb/s + C + L and some S band operation
Systems available from NEC, Lucent, Marconi, Nortel, Alcatel, Siemens etc.
P 160-200 km
Optical Amplifiers
P R L
Line Amp
L up to 600-700 km
3R Regen
700 + km
Animation
DWDM Standards
ITU Recommendation is G.692 "Optical interfaces for multichannel systems with optical amplifiers" G.692 includes a number of DWDM channel plans Channel separation set at:
50, 100 and 200 GHz equivalent to approximate wavelength spacings of 0.4, 0.8 and 1.6 nm
Channels lie in the range 1530.3 nm to 1567.1 nm (so-called C-Band) Newer "L-Band" exists from about 1570 nm to 1620 nm Supervisory channel also specified at 1510 nm to handle alarms and monitoring
Nortel DWDM
Aggregate span capacities up to 320 Gbits/sec (160 Gbits/sec per direction) possible Red band = 1547.5 to 1561 nm, blue band = 1527.5 to 1542.5 nm
32 Channel Multiplexing
32 wavelengths used (16 in each direction). 100 Ghz ITU frequency spacing Per band dispersion compensation
DWDM Transceivers
DWDM Multiplexer Transceiver DWDM DeMultiplexer Receivers Transmitters
Line Amp
Receive Preamp
Line Amp
Power Amp
Transmission in both directions needed. In practice each end has transmitters and receivers Combination of transmitter and receiver for a particular wavelength is a "transceiver"
1550 nm SDH
1550 nm SDH
In a "classic" system inputs/outputs to/from transceivers are electrical In practice inputs/outputs are SDH, so they are optical, wavelength around 1550 nm In effect we need wavelength convertors not transceivers Such convertors are called transponders
SDH R/X
Electrical levels
C band T/X
C Band R/X
SDH T/X
Electrical levels
Transponders are frequently formed by two transceivers back-to-back So called Optical-Electrical-Optical (OEO) transponders Expensive solution at present True all-optical transponders without OEO in development
Most common approach is "one fibre / one direction" This is called "simplex" transmission Linking two locations will involve two fibres and two transceivers
Transmitter
Receiver
Receiver
Transmitter
Local Transceiver
Fibres x2
Distant Transceiver
Transmitter Receiver
WDM Mux/Demux A
WDM Mux/Demux B
Transmitter Receiver
Local Transceiver
Fibre
Distant Transceiver
Bi-directional DWDM
Different wavelength bands are used for transmission in each direction Typcially the bands are called:
The "Red Band", upper half of the C-band to 1560 nm The "Blue Band", lower half of the C-band from 1528 nm
Transmitter Transmitter
1R 2R DWDM Mux/Demux
1B
Transmitter Transmitter
Red Band
DWDM Mux/Demux
2B
Transmitter
nR
nB
Transmitter
Blue Band
Fibre
TRANSMITTER A
Frequency Fa
RECEIVER A
Fibre Coupler
Fibre Coupler
TRANSMITTER B
RECEIVER B
Frequency Fb
Transmitter A communicates with Receiver A using a signal on frequency Fa Transmitter B communicates with Receiver B using a signal on frequency Fb Each receiver ignores signals at other frequencies, so for example Receiver A ignores the signal on frequency Fb
TRANSMITTER A
RECEIVER A
1330 nm
WDM Mux/Demux
1550 nm
TRANSMITTER B
Transmitter A communicates with Receiver A using a signal on 1330 nm Transmitter B communicates with Receiver B using a signal on 1550 nm WDM Mux/Demux filters out the wanted wavelength so that for example Receiver A only receives a 1330 nm signal
Unequal transmitter output powers Multiplexers Lack of spectral flatness in amplifiers, filters Variations in fibre attenuation
30
Gain (dB)
20
10
1520
1530
1540
1550
1560
Input spectrum
Output spectrum
When the optical power level reaches a point where the fibre is non-linear spurious extra components are generated, causing interference, called "crosstalk" Common non-linear effects:
Non-linear effects are all dependent on optical power levels, channels spacing etc.
DWDM Problems
With DWDM the aggregate optical power on a single fibre is high With the use of amplifiers the optical power level can rise to point where non-linear effects occur:
Four wave mixing (FWM): spurious components are created interfering with wanted signals Stimulated Raman Scattering (SRS)
Non-linear effects are dependent on optical power levels, channels spacing etc:
1 2 3
Spurious components cause two problems:
4 =
1 + 2 3
Interference between wanted signals Power is lost from wanted signals into unwanted spurious signals
The total number of mixing components increases dramatically with the number of channels
M = 1/2 ( N3 - N )
Thus three channels creates 12 additional signals and so on. As N increases, M increases rapidly.....
1
Original plus FWM components
Because of even spacing some FWM components overlap DWDM channels
123 213 312 132 223
2 3
113
112
For the three channels , and calculate all 1 2 3 the possible combinations produced by adding two channel 's together and subtracting one channel . For example - is written as 1 + 2 3 1 2 3 and is calculated as 1542.14 + 1542.94 - 1543.74 = 1541.34 nm Note the interference to wanted channels caused by the FWM components 312, 132, 221 and 223
Increasing channel spacing (not really an option because of limited spectrum) Employing uneven channel spacing Reducing aggregate power Reducing effective aggregate power within the fibre
FWM is most efficient at the zero-dispersion wavelength Problem is that the "cure" is in direct conflict with need minimise dispersion to maintain bandwidth
To be successful the approach used must reduce unwanted component levels to at least 30 dB below a wanted channel.
As before for the three channels , and 1 2 3 calculate all the possible combinations produced by adding two channel 's together and subtracting one channel . Note that because of the unequal spacing there is now no interference to wanted channels caused by the generated FWM components
For the three channels , and shown calculate all the possible FWM 1 2 3 component wavelengths. Determine if interference to wanted channels is taking place. If interference is taking place show that the use of unequal channel spacing will reduce interference to wanted DWDM channels.
3 channels 1.6 nm spacing
Channel 1 2 3 nm 1530.00 1531.60 1533.20
Traditional non-multiplexed systems have used dispersion shifted fibre at 1550 to reduce chromatic dispersion Unfortunately operating at the dispersion minimum increases the level of FWM Conventional fibre (dispersion minimum at 1330 nm) suffers less from FWM but chromatic dispersion rises Solution is to use "Non-Zero Dispersion Shifted Fibre" (NZ DSF), a compromise between DSF and conventional fibre (NDSF, Non-DSF) ITU-T standard is G.655 for non-zero dispersion shifted singlemode fibres
Dispersion Characteristics
Corning LEAF
Corning LEAF has an effective area 32% larger than conventional NZ-DSF Claimed result is lower FWM Impact on system design is that it allows higher fibre input powers so span increases
Section of DWDM spectrum NZ-DSF shows higher FWM components LEAF has lower FWM and higher per channe\l power DWDM channel FWM component
Wavelength Selection
Conventional DSF (G.653) is most affected by FWM Using equal channel spacing aggravates the problem ITU-T G.692 suggests a methodology for choosing unequal channel spacings for G.653 fibre ITU suggest the use equal spacing for G.652 and G.655 fibre, but according to a given channel plan Note that the ITU standards look at DWDM in frequency not wavelength
Basic rule is that each frequency (wavelength) is chosen so that no new powers generated by FWM fall on any channel Thus channel spacing of any two channels must be different from any other pair Complex arrangement based on the concept of a frequency slot "fs" fs is the minimum acceptable distance between an FWM component and a DWDM channel As fs gets smaller error rate degrades For 10 Gbits/s the "fs" is 20 GHz.
Because of non-linearity problems wavelength selection and introduction is complex NOT just a matter of picking the first 8 or 16 wavelengths! Order of introduction of new wavelengths is fixed as the system is upgraded Table shows order of introduction for Nortel S/DMS system
WDM in LANs
Still in its infancy Expensive by comparison with single channel 10 Gbits/sec proposals Singlemode fibre only Typical products from ADVA networking and Nbase-Xyplex
Products use a small numbers of channel such as 4 (Telecoms WDM is typically 32 +) Wavelengths around 1320 nm, Telecoms systems use 1530-1570 nm
Nbase-Xyplex System
Total source wavelength variation of the order of 6-7 nm is assumed Guard-band equal to one third of the minimum channel spacing is sufficient. Hence 20 nm chosen
1270 1290 1310 1330 1350 1370 1390 1410 1430 1450 1470 1490 1510 1530 1550 1570 1590 1610
CDWM Details
Flexible and scalable solutions moving from 8 to 16 optical channels using two fibres for the two directions of transmission Up to 8+8 optical channels using only one fibre for the two directions. Support for 2.5 Gbit/s provided but also support for a bit rate of 1.25 Gbit/s has been added, mainly for Gigabit-Ethernet applications. . Two indicative link distances are covered in G.695: one for lengths up to around 40 km and a second for distances up to around 80 km
8 Ch Mux/Demux CWDM card
Why CWDM?
CWDM is a cheaper and simpler alternative to DWDM, estimates point to savings up to 30% Why is CWDM more cost effective?
Less expensive uncooled lasers may be used - wide channel spacing. Lasers used require less precise wavelength control, Passive components, such as multiplexers, are lower-cost CWDM components use less space on PCBs - lower cost
DFB laser, typical temperature drift 0.08 nm per deg. C For a 70 degree temperature range drift is 5.6 nm
A clear migration route from CWDM to DWDM is essential Migration will occur with serious upturn in demand for bandwidth along with a reduction in DWDM costs Approach involves replacing CWDM single channel space with DWDM "band" May render DWDM band specs such as S, C and L redundant?