Title :
ARTEMIS: 40-gb/s all-optical self-routing node and network architecture employing asynchronous bit and packet-level optical signal processing
Author :
Kehayas, Efstratios ; Vyrsokinos, Konstantinos ; Stampoulidis, Leontios ; Christodoulopoulos, Kostas ; Vlachos, Kyriakos ; Avramopoulos, Hercules
Author_Institution :
Photonics Commun. Res. Lab., Nat. Tech. Univ. of Athens
Abstract :
A 40-Gb/s asynchronous self-routing network and node architecture that exploits bit and packet level optical signal processing to perform synchronization, forwarding, and switching in the optical domain is presented. Optical packets are self-routed on a hop-by-hop basis through the network by using stacked optical tags, each representing a specific optical node. Each tag contains necessary control signals for configuring the node-switching matrix and forwarding each packet to the appropriate outgoing link and onto the next hop. In order to investigate the feasibility of their approach physical-layer simulations are performed, modeling each optical subsystem of the node showing acceptable signal quality and end-to-end bit error rates. In the All-optical self-RouTer EMploying bIt and packet-level procesSing (ARTEMIS) control plane, a timed/delayed resource reservation-based signaling scheme is employed combined with a load-balancing feedback-based contention-avoidance mechanism that can guarantee a high performance in terms of blocking probability and end-to-end delay
Keywords :
delays; error statistics; feedback; optical fibre networks; optical information processing; optical switches; probability; synchronisation; telecommunication network routing; 40 Gbit/s; ARTEMIS; all-optical self-routing node; asynchronous bit; asynchronous self-routing network; blocking probability; contention-avoidance mechanism; control signals; delayed resource; end-to-end bit error rates; end-to-end delay; hop-by-hop basis; load-balancing feedback; network architecture; node-switching matrix; optical forwarding; optical packets; optical subsystem; optical switching; packet-level optical signal processing; reservation-based signaling; signal quality; stacked optical tags; synchronization; timed resource; Delay; High speed optical techniques; Logic gates; Optical buffering; Optical fiber networks; Optical interferometry; Optical packet switching; Optical signal processing; Optical wavelength conversion; Routing; All-optical logic gate; all-optical signal processing; asynchronous traffic; feedback-based protocols; optical packet switching; optical-burst switching (OBS); self-routing; semiconductor optical amplifier (SOA); timed/delayed reservation;
Journal_Title :
Lightwave Technology, Journal of
DOI :
10.1109/JLT.2006.878071