290 research outputs found

    A low-energy rate-adaptive bit-interleaved passive optical network

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    Energy consumption of customer premises equipment (CPE) has become a serious issue in the new generations of time-division multiplexing passive optical networks, which operate at 10 Gb/s or higher. It is becoming a major factor in global network energy consumption, and it poses problems during emergencies when CPE is battery-operated. In this paper, a low-energy passive optical network (PON) that uses a novel bit-interleaving downstream protocol is proposed. The details about the network architecture, protocol, and the key enabling implementation aspects, including dynamic traffic interleaving, rate-adaptive descrambling of decimated traffic, and the design and implementation of a downsampling clock and data recovery circuit, are described. The proposed concept is shown to reduce the energy consumption for protocol processing by a factor of 30. A detailed analysis of the energy consumption in the CPE shows that the interleaving protocol reduces the total energy consumption of the CPE significantly in comparison to the standard 10 Gb/s PON CPE. Experimental results obtained from measurements on the implemented CPE prototype confirm that the CPE consumes significantly less energy than the standard 10 Gb/s PON CPE

    Solutions for a single carrier 40 Gbit/s downstream long-reach passive optical network

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    This paper presents a single carrier 40 Gbit/s downstream long-reach passive optical network (LR-PON) topology as candidate for upgrading cur rent f ber infrastructure towards higher data rates. A 100 km LR-PON network was investigated and 2 solutions to overcome chromatic dispersion were proposed. Firstly, a dispersion compensated element is added to compensate the mean length of the feeder f ber. Secondly, an advanced modulation scheme, i.e. 3-level electrical duo-binary is introduced. This scheme has the advantage of allowing lower bandwidth APDs and requires only limited additional electronics. Furthermore, to overcome the inherent discrepancy between aggregated line rate and user rate, and hence the reduced power effciency, the BiPON protocol is added to minimize signal processing at the high line rates

    Energy-efficiency improvements for optical access

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    This article discusses novel approaches to improve energy efficiency of different optical access technologies, including time division multiplexing passive optical network (TDM-PON), time and wavelength division multiplexing PON (TWDM-PON), point-to-point (PTP) access network, wavelength division multiplexing PON (WDM-PON), and orthogonal frequency division multiple access PON (OFDMA-PON). These approaches include cyclic sleep mode, energy-efficient bit interleaving protocol, power reduction at component level, or frequency band selection. Depending on the target optical access technology, one or a combination of different approaches can be applied

    10 Gbit/s bit interleaving CDR for low-power PON

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    A novel, low power, downstream clock and data recovery (CDR)- decimator architecture is proposed for next generation, energy efficient 10 Gbit/s optical network units (ONUs). The architecture employs a new time division multiplexing bit-interleaving downstream concept for passive optical networks (Bi-PON) allowing early decimation of the incoming data and lowering of the processing speed to the user rate of the ONU, thus reducing the power consumption significantly

    An asymmetric high serial rate TDM-PON with single carrier 25 Gb/s upstream and 50 Gb/s downstream

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    We report a 2:1 rate asymmetric high serial rate time division multiplexing passive optical network (TDM-PON) with single carrier 25 Gb/s upstream and 50 Gb/s downstream. In the upstream, we present a first 25 Gb/s three-level modulated burst-mode receiver employing a 1/4-rate linear burst-mode avalanch photodiode transimpedance amplifier and a custom decoder IC. We successfully demonstrated burst-mode sensitivity of -20.4 dBm with 18 dB dynamic burst-to-burst for 25 Gb/s upstream links. In another direction, a downstream in upper O-band is proposed and demonstrated with three-level duo-binary modulation at 50 Gb/s in real time. The upstream and downstream transmission experiments show that the proposed asymmetric 50 G/25 G high serial rate TDM-PON can support >= 32 users while covering more than 20 km reach

    Demonstration of Low-Power Bit-Interleaving TDM PON

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