• DocumentCode
    1288906
  • Title

    WDM packet switch architectures and analysis of the influence of tunable wavelength converters on the performance

  • Author

    Danielsen, Soeren Lykke ; Mikkelsen, Benny ; Joergensen, Carsten ; Durhuus, Terji ; Stubkjaer, Kristian E.

  • Author_Institution
    Electromagn. Inst., Tech. Univ., Lyngby, Denmark
  • Volume
    15
  • Issue
    2
  • fYear
    1997
  • fDate
    2/1/1997 12:00:00 AM
  • Firstpage
    219
  • Lastpage
    227
  • Abstract
    A detailed analytical traffic model for a photonic wavelength division multiplexing (WDM) packet switch block is presented and the requirements to the buffer size is analyzed. Three different switch architectures are considered, each of them representing different complexities in terms of component count and requirements to the components, it is shown that the number of fiber delay-lines, that form the optical buffer, can be substantially reduced by the use of tunable optical wavelength converters, thereby exploiting the wavelength domain to solve contention of optical packets. For a 16×16 switch with four wavelength channels per inlet, all at a load of 0.8, the number of delay-lines is reduced from 47 to 12 by use of tuneable optical wavelength converters. Apart from the number of delay-lines the physical buffer structure is analyzed with special attention to the possibilities offered by optics, i.e., the possibility of several outlets sharing the same physical buffer. For the three architectures presented here, a tradeoff in the buffer architectures is addressed: a buffer physically shared among an outlets requires many wavelengths internally in the switch block, whereas, architectures with buffers dedicated to each outlet require a smaller number of wavelengths
  • Keywords
    optical delay lines; optical fibre communication; packet switching; photonic switching systems; telecommunication traffic; tuning; wavelength division multiplexing; WDM packet switch architectures; WDM packet switch block; analytical traffic model; buffer architectures; buffer size; component count; delay-lines; fiber delay-lines; optical buffer; optical packet contention; photonic wavelength division multiplexing; physical buffer structure; switch architectures; switch block; tunable optical wavelength converters; tunable wavelength converters; wavelength channels; wavelength domain; Analytical models; Optical buffering; Optical devices; Optical packet switching; Optical switches; Optical wavelength conversion; Packet switching; Propagation delay; Traffic control; Wavelength division multiplexing;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Journal_Title
    Lightwave Technology, Journal of
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • ISSN
    0733-8724
  • Type

    jour

  • DOI
    10.1109/50.554327
  • Filename
    554327