DocumentCode
1471272
Title
100G and Beyond Transmission Technologies for Evolving Optical Networks and Relevant Physical-Layer Issues
Author
Ip, Ezra ; Ji, Philip ; Mateo, Eduardo ; Huang, Yue-Kai ; Xu, Lei ; Qian, Dayou ; Bai, Neng ; Wang, Ting
Author_Institution
NEC Labs. America, Princeton, NJ, USA
Volume
100
Issue
5
fYear
2012
fDate
5/1/2012 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage
1065
Lastpage
1078
Abstract
As 100-Gb/s digital coherent systems enter commercial deployment, an effort is underway to uncover the technologies that will enable the next-generation optical fiber communication systems. We envisage that future optical transport will be software-defined, enabling flexible allocation of bandwidth resources, with dynamically adjustable per-channel data rates based on instantaneous traffic demand and quality-of-service requirements, leading to unprecedented network agility. Software-defined transponders will have the programmability to adopt various modulation formats, coding rates, and the signal bandwidth based on the transmission distance and type of fiber. Digital signal processing will become increasingly ubiquitous and sophisticated, capable of compensating all types of channel impairments, enabling advanced forward error correction coding, and performing functions previously handled poorly by optical analog hardware such as spectrum shaping and demultiplexing of optical channels.
Keywords
bandwidth allocation; demultiplexing; error correction codes; forward error correction; next generation networks; optical fibre networks; optical modulation; telecommunication channels; telecommunication traffic; transponders; advanced forward error correction coding; beyond transmission technology; channel impairment; coding rates; digital coherent system; digital signal processing; dynamically adjustable per-channel data rate; instantaneous traffic demand; modulation formats; next-generation optical fiber communication system; optical analog hardware; optical channel demultiplexing; optical network; optical transport; quality-of-service requirement; relevant physical-layer issues; signal bandwidth resource allocation; software-defined transponder; spectrum shaping; transmission distance; unprecedented network agility; Digital signal processing; Optical fiber networks; Optical fibers; Optical filters; Optical receivers; Optical transmitters; Coherent detection; digital signal processing; error correction coding; fiber optic communications; modulation formats; multicore fibers; multimode fibers; nonlinear compensation; optical signal processing; optical time division multiplexing; orthogonal frequency division multiplexing; single mode fibers; space division multiplexing;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Proceedings of the IEEE
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0018-9219
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/JPROC.2012.2183329
Filename
6170863
Link To Document