9 research outputs found

    Energy Efficient High Port Count Optical Switches

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    The advance of internet applications, such as video streaming, big data and cloud computing, is reshaping the telecommunication and internet industries. Bandwidth demands in datacentres have been boosted by these emerging data-hungry internet applications. Regarding inter- and intra-datacentre communications, fine-grained data need to be exchanged across a large shared memory space. Large-scale high-speed optical switches tend to use a rearrangeably non-blocking architecture as this limits the number of switching elements required. However, this comes at the expense of requiring more sophisticated route selection within the switch and also some forms of time-slotted protocols. The looping algorithm is the classical routing algorithm to set up paths in rearrangeably non-blocking switches. It was born in the electronic switch era, where all links in the switches are equal. It is, therefore, not able to accommodate loss difference between optical paths due to the different length of waveguides and distinct numbers of crossings, and bends, leading to sub-optimal performance. We, therefore, propose an advanced path-selection algorithm based on the looping algorithm that minimises the path-dependent loss. It explores all possible set-ups for a given connection assignment and selects the optimal one. It guarantees that no individual path would have a sufficiently substantial loss, therefore, improve the overall performance of the switch. The performance of the proposed algorithm has been assessed by modelling switches using the VPI simulator. An 8×8 Clos-tree switch demonstrates a 2.7dB decrease in loss and 1.9dB improvement in IPDR with 1.5 dB penalty for the worst case. An 8×8 dilated Beneš shows more than 4 dB loss reduction for the lossiest path and 1.4 dB IPDR improvement for 1 dB power penalty. The improved algorithm can be run once for each switch design and store its output in a compact lookup table, enabling rapid switch reconfiguration. Microelectromechanical systems (MEMS) based optical switches have been fabricated with over 1,000 ports which meet the port count requirements in data centre networks. However, the reconfiguration speed of the MEMS switches is limited to the millisecond to microsecond timescale, which is not sufficient for packet switching in datacentres. Opto-electronic devices, such as Mach-Zehnder Interferometers (MZIs) and semiconductor optical amplifiers (SOAs) with nanosecond response time show the potential to fulfil the requirements of packet switching. However, the scalability of MZI switches is inherently limited by insertion loss and accumulated crosstalk, while the scalability of SOA switches is restricted by accumulated noise and distortion. We, therefore, have proposed a dilated Beneš hybrid MZI-SOA design, where MZIs are implemented as 1×2 or 2×1 low-loss switching elements, minimising crosstalk by using a single input, and where short SOAs are included as gain or absorption units, offering either loss compensation or crosstalk suppression though adding only minimal noise and distortion. A 4×4 device has been fabricated and exhibits a mere 1.3dB loss, an extinction ratio of 47dB, and more than 13dB IPDR for a 0.5dB power penalty. When operating with 10 Gb/s per port, 6pJ/bit energy consumption is demonstrated, delivering 20% reduced energy consumption compared with SOA-based switches. The tolerance of the current control accuracy of this switch is very broad. Within a 5 mA bias current range, the power penalty can be maintained below 0.2 dB for 8 dB IPDR and 12 mA for 10 dB IPDR with a penalty less 0.5 dB. The excellent crosstalk and power penalty performance demonstrated by this chip enable the scalability of this hybrid approach. The performance of 16×16 port dilated Beneš hybrid switch is experimentally assessed by cascading 4×4 switch chips, demonstrating an IPDR of 15 dB at a 1 dB penalty with a 0.6 dB power penalty floor. In terms of switches with port count larger than 16×16, the power penalty performance has been analysed with physical layer simulations fitted with state-of-the-art data. We assess the feasibility of three potential topologies, with different architectural optimisations: dilated Beneš, Beneš and Clos-Beneš. Quantitative analysis for switches with up to 2048 ports is presented, achieving a 1.15dB penalty for a BER of 10-3, compatible with soft-decision forward error correction.Cambridge Overseas Trust; China Scholarship Council

    Time-Synchronized Optical Burst Switching

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    Optical Burst Switching was recently introduced as a protocol for the next generation optical Wavelength Division Multiplexing (WDM) network. Currently, in legacy Optical Circuit Switching over the WDM network, the highest bandwidth utilization cannot be achieved over the network. Because of its physical complexities and many technical obstacles, the lack of an optical buffer and the inefficiency of optical processing, Optical Packet Switching is difficult to implement. Optical Burst Switching (OBS) is introduced as a compromised solution between Optical Circuit Switching and Optical Packet Switching. It is designed to solve the problems and support the unique characteristics of an optical-based network. Since OBS works based on all-optical switching techniques, two major challenges in designing an effective OBS system have to be taken in consideration. One of the challenges is the cost and complexities of implementation, and another is the performance of the system in terms of blocking probabilities. This research proposes a variation of Optical Burst Switching called Time-Synchronized Optical Burst Switching. Time-Synchronized Optical Burst Switching employs a synchronized timeslot-based mechanism that allows a less complex physical switching fabric to be implemented, as well as to provide an opportunity to achieve better resource utilization in the network compared to the traditional Optical Burst Switching

    Silicon photonic switching: from building block design to intelligent control

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    The rapid growth in data communication technologies is at the heart of enriching the digital experiences for people around the world. Encoding high bandwidth data to the optical domain has drastically changed the bandwidth-distance trade-off imposed by electrical media. Silicon photonics, sharing the technological maturity of the semiconductor industry, is a platform poised to make optical interconnect components more robust, manufacturable, and ubiquitous. One of the most prominent device classes enabled by the silicon photonics platform is photonic switching, which describes the direct routing of optical signal carriers without the optical-electrical-optical conversions. While theoretical designs and prototypes of monolithic silicon photonic switch devices have been studied, realizing high-performance and feasible switch systems requires explorations of all design aspects from basic building blocks to control systems. This thesis provides a holistic collection of studies on silicon photonic switching in topics of novel switching element designs, multi-stage switch architectures, device calibration, topology scalability, smart routing strategies, and performance-aware control plane. First, component designs for assembling a silicon photonic switch device are presented. Structures that perform 2×2 optical switching functions are introduced. To realize switching granularities in both spatial and spectral domains, a resonator-assisted Mach-Zehnder interferometer design is demonstrated with high performance and design robustness. Next, multi-stage monolithic switching devices with microring resonator-based switching elements are investigated. An 8×8 switch device with dual-microring switching elements is presented with a well-balanced set of performance metrics in extinction ratio, crosstalk suppression, and optical bandwidth. Continued scaling in the switch port count requires both an economic increase in the number of switching elements integrated in a device and the preservation of signal quality through the switch fabric. A highly scalable switch architecture based on Clos network with microring switch-and-select sub-switches is presented as a solution to reach high switch radices while addressing key factors of insertion loss, crosstalk, and optical passband to ensure end-to-end switching performance. The thesis then explores calibration techniques to acquire and optimize system-wide control points for integrated silicon switch devices. Applicable to common rearrangeably non-blocking switch topologies, automated procedures are developed to calibrate entire switch devices without the need for built-in power monitors. Using Mach-Zehnder interferometer-based switching elements as a demonstration, calibration techniques for optimal control points are introduced to achieve balanced push-pull drive scheme and reduced crosstalk in switching operations. Furthermore, smart routing strategies are developed based on optical penalty estimations enabled by expedited lightpath characterization procedures. Leveraging configuration redundancies in the switch fabric, the routing strategies are capable of avoiding the worst penalty optical paths and effectively elevate the bottom-line performance of the switch device. Additional works are also presented on enhancing optical system control planes with machine learning techniques to accurately characterize complex systems and identify critical control parameters. Using flexgrid networks as a case study, light-weight machine learning workflows are tailored to devise control strategies for improving spectral power stability during wavelength assignment and defragmentation. This work affirms the efficacy of intelligent control planes to predict system dynamics and drive performance optimizations for optical interconnect systems

    Optical Fiber Interferometric Sensors

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    The contributions presented in this book series portray the advances of the research in the field of interferometric photonic technology and its novel applications. The wide scope explored by the range of different contributions intends to provide a synopsis of the current research trends and the state of the art in this field, covering recent technological improvements, new production methodologies and emerging applications, for researchers coming from different fields of science and industry. The manuscripts published in the Special issue, and re-printed in this book series, report on topics that range from interferometric sensors for thickness and dynamic displacement measurement, up to pulse wave and spirometry applications
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