4.6 Article

Supporting Heterogenous Traffic on Top of Point-to-Multipoint Light-Trees

Journal

SENSORS
Volume 23, Issue 5, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/s23052500

Keywords

optical point-to-multipoint; multilayer optical networks; metro and access networks

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New 5G and beyond services require innovative solutions in optical transport to improve efficiency, flexibility, and cost-effectiveness. Optical point-to-multipoint (P2MP) connectivity is proposed as an alternative to reduce capital and operational expenditures. This paper introduces optical constellation slicing (OCS) as a technology that enables efficient communication between source and multiple destinations. Simulation results show that OCS and digital subcarrier multiplexing (DSCM) provide good performance in terms of BER. A quantitative study demonstrates that OCS and DSCM offer better efficiency and cost savings compared to traditional optical P2P connectivity.
New 5 G and beyond services demand innovative solutions in optical transport to increase efficiency and flexibility and reduce capital (CAPEX) and operational (OPEX) expenditures to support heterogeneous and dynamic traffic. In this context, optical point-to-multipoint (P2MP) connectivity is seen as an alternative to provide connectivity to multiple sites from a single source, thus potentially both reducing CAPEX and OPEX. Digital subcarrier multiplexing (DSCM) has been shown as a feasible candidate for optical P2MP in view of its ability to generate multiple subcarriers (SC) in the frequency domain that can be used to serve several destinations. This paper proposes a different technology, named optical constellation slicing (OCS), that enables a source to communicate with multiple destinations by focusing on the time domain. OCS is described in detail and compared to DSCM by simulation, where the results show that both OCS and DSCM provide a good performance in terms of the bit error rate (BER) for access/metro applications. An exhaustive quantitative study is afterwards carried out to compare OCS and DSCM considering its support to dynamic packet layer P2P traffic only and mixed P2P and P2MP traffic; throughput, efficiency, and cost are used here as the metrics. As a baseline for comparison, the traditional optical P2P solution is also considered in this study. Numerical results show that OCS and DSCM provide a better efficiency and cost savings than traditional optical P2P connectivity. For P2P only traffic, OCS and DSCM are utmost 14.6% more efficient than the traditional lightpath solution, whereas for heterogeneous P2P + P2MP traffic, a 25% efficiency improvement is achieved, making OCS 12% more efficient than DSCM. Interestingly, the results show that for P2P only traffic, DSCM provides more savings of up to 12% than OCS, whereas for heterogeneous traffic, OCS can save up to 24.6% more than DSCM.

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