Title :
Metro network design methodologies that build a next-generation network infrastructure based on this generation´s services and demands
Author :
Skoog, Ronald ; Von Lehmen, Ann ; Clapp, George ; Gannett, Joel W. ; Kobrinski, Haim ; Poudyal, V.
Author_Institution :
Telcordia Technol. Inc., Red Bank, NJ, USA
Abstract :
This paper describes two key network architecture design concepts that relate to evolving existing transport networks into economically viable next-generation optical networks. Today´s metropolitan transport networks largely consist of synchronous optical network/synchronous digital hierarchy rings or switch-to-switch fiber connections for some form of optical Ethernet. The result is an optical-electrical-optical infrastructure that has limited use in providing wavelength services. Wavelength-division multiplexing (WDM) is the enabling technology for wavelength services, but it has limited penetration in the metropolitan area due to its cost justification being dependent primarily on fiber relief. The first part of this paper shows how existing services, primarily using time-division-multiplexing (TDM) transport, can be used to economically justify a WDM infrastructure while achieving significantly lower costs than legacy design techniques would produce. Dynamic bandwidth-on-demand (BoD) service is another elusive goal envisioned for next-generation metropolitan networks. This paper addresses how an economically viable BoD infrastructure can be built based on revenues from existing enterprise services rather than relying on revenues from new and unproven services. Quantitative analyses, presented in the paper, show the key parameters that determine when BoD services will be used, how bandwidth granularity affects BoD decisions, and how the customer´s use of BoD drives service provider network design considerations.
Keywords :
SONET; metropolitan area networks; optical fibre LAN; synchronous digital hierarchy; telecommunication services; wavelength division multiplexing; SDH; SONET; WDM; bandwidth-on-demand service; metropolitan transport network design; optical Ethernet; switch-to-switch fiber connections; synchronous digital hierarchy rings; synchronous optical network; time-division multiplexing transport; wavelength division multiplexing; wavelength services; Board of Directors; Costs; Design methodology; Ethernet networks; Next generation networking; Optical design; Optical fiber networks; SONET; Synchronous digital hierarchy; Wavelength division multiplexing; 65; Bandwidth-on-demand; BoD; SONET/SDH; WDM; network design; networks; next-generation networks; synchronous optical network/synchronous digital hierarchy; wavelength-division-multiplexing;
Journal_Title :
Lightwave Technology, Journal of
DOI :
10.1109/JLT.2004.836748