DocumentCode :
1457431
Title :
An Agile and Medium-Transparent MAC Protocol for 60 GHz Radio-Over-Fiber Local Access Networks
Author :
Kalfas, George ; Pleros, Nikos
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Inf., Aristotle Univ. of Thessaloniki, Thessaloniki, Greece
Volume :
28
Issue :
16
fYear :
2010
Firstpage :
2315
Lastpage :
2326
Abstract :
We present an agile and medium-transparent Medium Access Control (MT-MAC) protocol for seamless and dynamic capacity allocation over both optical and wireless transmission media in 60 GHz broadband Radio-Over-Fiber (RoF) networks. Medium transparency is achieved by means of parallelism between two simultaneously running contention periods and through nesting of wireless user-specific dataframes within Remote Antenna Unit (RAU)-specific optical Superframes. The first contention period reports on the traffic requesting RAUs and decides about the wavelength assignments, whereas the second contention period arbitrates traffic between wireless clients served by the same RAU. Seamless service delivery is completed by RAU-dedicated optical Superframes, each one incorporating multiple user-specific and time-division multiplexed dataframes that are opto-electronically converted at the RAU site and get transmitted wirelessly down to each end-user. The proposed MAC protocol is demonstrated to operate successfully both in RoF-over-bus as well as in RoF-over-Passive Optical Network (PON) architectures requiring only minor variations for getting adapted to the network topology. Its performance for both network topologies is evaluated through simulations for different number of end-users, different loads and network node densities and for bit-rates up to 3 Gb/s, both for a Poisson and for a burst-mode traffic model. Successful operation is demonstrated for all different cases, confirming its agility and showing that extended range 60 GHz LAN areas between wireless users even without line of sight conditions can be obtained. Moreover, the high throughput and low latency values for non-saturated network conditions reveal its potential for transforming broadband 60 GHz picocellular networks into highly effective RoF-enabled 60 GHz Wireless LANs even for high-bandwidth and time-sensitive applications like High-Definition video streaming.
Keywords :
access protocols; local area networks; radio-over-fibre; subscriber loops; time division multiplexing; video streaming; LAN; MAC protocol; RoF-over-passive optical network; broadband radio-over-fiber; capacity allocation; frequency 60 GHz; high definition video streaming; medium transparent medium access control protocol; optical superframe; optical transmission media; radio-over-fiber local access networks; remote antenna unit; time division multiplexed dataframe; wireless transmission media; Access protocols; All-optical networks; Media Access Protocol; Network topology; Optical fiber networks; Optical network units; Passive optical networks; Telecommunication traffic; Wireless LAN; Wireless application protocol; 60 GHz local access network (LAN); 60 GHz wireless network; Medium access control (MAC) protocol; medium-transparent MAC (MT-MAC); optical bus topology network; passive optical network (PON); radio-over-fiber (RoF) network;
fLanguage :
English
Journal_Title :
Lightwave Technology, Journal of
Publisher :
ieee
ISSN :
0733-8724
Type :
jour
DOI :
10.1109/JLT.2010.2046394
Filename :
5439940
Link To Document :
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