The present invention relates generally to passive optical networks, and in particular, to the logical partitioning of such passive optical networks.
Telecom network operators have been deploying successive generations of Passive Optical Networks (PONs) to provide fiber-to-the-premises and fiber-to-the-node. The need to evolve from one generation to the next is due to demand-driven need for capacity growth and is enabled by continuing technological improvements and cost reductions in optoelectronic and electronic devices. Over time, capacity of installed networks becomes insufficient to meet service needs, yet it is undesirable to replace still-functioning (and possibly not yet depreciated) equipment in the field. Further, if an entire network is to be upgraded, it may be difficult to replace every Optical Network Terminator (ONT) device (where an ONT is equipment placed at or in the subscriber premises). Therefore a need exists for a method and apparatus to increase the capacity of a deployed PON without replacing ONTs, even if it means modifying other portions of the PON infrastructure, such as the fiber distribution hub (FDH) or optical line terminator (OLT).
Skilled artisans will appreciate that elements in the figures are illustrated for simplicity and clarity and have not necessarily been drawn to scale. For example, the dimensions and/or relative positioning of some of the elements in the figures may be exaggerated relative to other elements to help to improve understanding of various embodiments of the present invention. Also, common but well-understood elements that are useful or necessary in a commercially feasible embodiment are often not depicted in order to facilitate a less obstructed view of these various embodiments of the present invention. It will further be appreciated that certain actions and/or steps may be described or depicted in a particular order of occurrence while those skilled in the art will understand that such specificity with respect to sequence is not actually required. Those skilled in the art will further recognize that references to specific implementation embodiments such as “circuitry” may equally be accomplished via replacement with software instruction executions either on general purpose computing apparatus (e.g., CPU) or specialized processing apparatus (e.g., DSP). It will also be understood that the terms and expressions used herein have the ordinary technical meaning as is accorded to such terms and expressions by persons skilled in the technical field as set forth above except where different specific meanings have otherwise been set forth herein.
In order to increase the capacity of a deployed passive optical network (PON) without replacing optical network terminators (ONTs), a PON is provided that is partitioned into multiple channels. The upstream and downstream channels in the PON are partitioned into M channels, with the number of channels on the upstream preferably equaling the number of channels on the downstream. In the downstream, the partitioning is accomplished by use of wavelength division multiplexing filters arranged in a way as to place groups of ONTs on M different wavelength bands, where all of the wavelength bands are within the downstream wavelength range of the existing PON. On the upstream, partitioning is accomplished using “injection locking” to narrow the possible wavelength range of each ONT transmitter to a portion of that possible in the existing PON.
Using the above technique, a working, operational PON can have its capacity increased in both the upstream and downstream by a factor of M, without having to replace ONTs in the field. This greatly reduces costs for network operators.
Turning now to the drawings, where like numerals designate like components,
As shown, OLT 106 comprises multiple optical line terminator (OLT) ports 101 coupled to a multiplexer/demultiplexer 102. The fiber output from multiplexer/demultiplexer 102 is coupled to yet another multiplexer/demultiplexer 104 existing within fiber distribution hub (FDH) 103. The output of FDH 103 then proceeds to multiple Optical Network Terminators (ONTs) 105.
ONTs 105 meet the following criteria:
The broadband passive optical network (BPON) standard defined in ITU-T Recommendation G.983.x specifies ONTs that meet these criteria. Within
The upstream and downstream channel in PON 100 is partitioned into M narrow channels, with the number of channels on the upstream preferably equaling the number of channels on the downstream (this is required primarily in order to allow higher layer protocols, especially the “Transmission Convergence”, or “TC” protocol, work without modification). In the downstream, the partitioning is accomplished by use of wavelength division multiplexing filters arranged in a way as to place groups of ONTs on M different wavelength bands, where all of the wavelength bands are within the downstream wavelength range of the existing PON. On the upstream, partitioning is accomplished using “injection locking” to narrow the possible wavelength range of each ONT transmitter to a portion of that possible in the existing PON.
Thus, an optical line terminator (OLT) partitions a downstream optical communications channel into M optical communications channels via the use of wavelength-division multiplexing. The OLT partitions an upstream optical communications channel into M upstream optical communications channels via the use of injection locking.
As shown, each OLT port 101 comprises photo-diode (photo-detector) 201, injection laser 202, transmit laser 203, circulator 204, and diplexer 205. In this particular embodiment the OLT partitions the upstream optical communications channel into M channels via the use of a light source producing an injection signal at a particular wavelength causing a laser in an Optical Network Terminator (ONT) to lock to the particular wavelength created by the injection laser. Injection locking of certain types of lasers, such as an F-P laser, is well known in the art. A small “injection” signal output from injection laser 202 is coupled into an F-P laser 208 which is an integral part of ONT 105 to cause it to lase at the same wavelength and polarization as the injection signal when it transmits. In general, the injection signal may be produced by a laser or a spectral slice of a broadband light source.
A “resonance mode” of a laser is a standing wave pattern formed by light waves confined in the laser cavity, and matched to its natural (or resonant) frequency. The injected signal competes with the F-P laser's resonance modes to lase. Successful injection locking requires the mode seeded by the injection signal to starve all other resonance modes of the laser. This, in turn, requires that the wavelength of the injection signal be at least approximately matched to a resonance mode, and that the power of the injection signal be greater than the amplified spontaneous emission (ASE) power of the laser at startup.
During operation of the PON shown in
Multiplexer/demultiplexer 102 can be a wavelength division multiplexer device, having passbands at each of its fan-out ports which correspond to an upstream wavelength and a downstream wavelength. Alternatively, it may be a 1:4 splitter, in which case an optical band pass filter (not shown), having a passband corresponding to an upstream wavelength must be inserted between each circulator 204 and photo detector 201.
The injection signal arrives at FDH 103 and is passed to 1:4 splitter 104 where it is divided into four identical signals and sent through one of four optical passband filters 206. Optical passband filters 206 serve to eliminate all but signals having a desired wavelength. The injection signal then enters 1:8 splitter 207 and reaches the desired ONT 105, causing it to transmit any upstream signal at the same wavelength as the injection signal.
When an ONT is permitted to transmit an upstream signal, it does so by turning on FP laser 208, which locks to the particular wavelength created by injection laser 202. The upstream signal is then modulated by varying the bias current applied to FP laser 208. The upstream signal passes to 1:8 splitter 207 where it is multiplexed with other ONT upstream signals and passed through filter 206 and then passed to 1:4 splitter 104, where it is combined with additional ONT transmissions. The signal then passes through fiber to multiplexer/demultiplexer 102 where it is demultiplexed and passed to OLT port 101. At OLT port 101, the signal is passed through circulator 204 to photodetector 201. Photodetector 201 converts the signal to electrical form so that it may be received by receiver 210.
As is evident, all upstream signals transmitted from ONTs 105 will be transmitted at a particular wavelength that has been set by a particular injection laser signal. Thus, on the upstream, partitioning is accomplished using “injection locking” to narrow the possible wavelength range of each ONT transmitter to a portion of that possible in the existing PON.
On the downstream, transmit laser 203 for each OLT is a Dense Wave Division Multiplexing (DWDM) laser, and has one wavelength from a set of M wavelengths. The partitioning is accomplished by use of wavelength division multiplexing filters 206 arranged in a way as to place groups of ONTs on M different wavelength bands, where all of the wavelength bands are within the downstream wavelength range of the existing PON.
During downstream transmissions, electrical signals from transmitter 209 are converted to optical signals by laser 203 to produce the downstream signal at one of M particular wavelengths. Diplexer 205 outputs the combined signal to multiplexer/demultiplexer 102 where it is multiplexed and transmitted over fiber to fiber distribution hub 103. A video overlay signal may be injected at some point between Diplexer 205 and multiplexer/demultiplexer 102. The signal arrives at FDH 103 and is passed to 1:4 splitter 104 divided into four identical signals and sent through one of several optical passband filters 206. Optical passband filters 206 serve to eliminate all but signals having a desired frequency. The signal again enters 1:8 splitter 207 and reaches the desired ONT 105.
It should be noted that some network operators provide broadcast television services using an “overlay” at a different wavelength than either of those of the OLT, typically 1555 nm. This signal is added to the composite PON signal, e.g., using diplexer 304.
The equipment needed for each PON in a telecommunications operator's central office therefore comprises M OLTs, the mux/demux, the source of the overlay signal and its associated diplexer (if present), along with fiber management and test equipment. A plurality of PONs is typically served out of a central office, so this equipment is replicated. A length of optical fiber, typically less than 20 km, forms the feeder portion of the PON, and connects the central office equipment to the fiber distribution hub (FDH). The FDH is typically located in an outdoor or underground enclosure, e.g., a street cabinet, pole-mounted cabinet or vault. In an existing PON it comprises at one splitter (typically a 32:1 splitter) for each PON served by the FDH, and fiber storage.
As shown in
To upgrade an existing PON, a network operator would take the following steps:
These steps are disruptive, and would have to be performed quickly to minimize outage. However, once the new arrangement is connected, the ONTs will be discovered and ranged on the M logically separate PONs. Each ONT will be assigned to new upstream and downstream center wavelengths by the 3-passband optical filter of
When the PON is partitioned into M logical PONs, traffic in both directions will be similarly partitioned. Thus, if all subscribers offered approximately equal traffic and the un-partitioned PON were not saturated, the partitioned PONs would each carry 1/M times the load of the un-partitioned PON. If the un-partitioned PON previously operated near saturation, the partitioning might provide enough headroom to drive it into a desirable unsaturated regime.
When the ONT receives the BWMap, it determines (step 821) whether it has been granted a transmission opportunity by the OLT, and, if so, at what time transmission may start. Asynchronously, the ONT may receive a data packet for upstream transmission (step 820). It fragments the data packet according to the AAL. Having been granted a transmission opportunity at step 821, it may proceed to transmit part or all of the cells that constitute the data packet, beginning at the indicated start time (step 822). It does so by turning on laser 105, and transmitting burst overhead followed serialized data cells. As laser 105 is turned on, the injection signal which impinges upon it causes the wavelength and polarization of its upstream transmit signal to lock to the wavelength and polarization of the injection signal. The binary symbols that represent bits of overhead and data are then applied to the laser's bias so as to modulate the upstream signal. The upstream signal is multiplexed (step 824) with upstream signals (i.e. at the other other M-1 wavelengths) in the FDH 103 and coupled onto the feeder fiber. At the OLT, the upstream signals are demultiplexed (step 825) and distributed to one photodetector 203. Note that through the operation of the MUX/DEMUX, all signals arriving at any photodetector 203 have the same wavelength, and a plurality of signals may arrive at an equal number of photodetectors at the same time. Photodetector 203 converts the upstream signal to an electrical form for receiver 210, which receives the signal (step 826), transforms it into a bit stream, and deserializes it into overhead bits and one or more cells. The cells are then reassembled into a user data packet, which the OLT may forward toward its ultimate destination, or possibly process (e.g., for management).
The above upstream and downstream transmission scheme results in a PON partitioned into M channels, with the number of channels on the upstream preferably equaling the number of channels on the downstream. In the downstream, the partitioning is accomplished by use of wavelength division multiplexing filters arranged in a way as to place groups of ONTs on M different wavelength bands, where all of the wavelength bands are within the downstream wavelength range of the existing PON. On the upstream, partitioning is accomplished using “injection locking” to narrow the possible wavelength range of each ONT transmitter to a portion of that possible in the existing PON.
Using the above technique, a working, operational PON can have its capacity increased in both the upstream and downstream by a factor of M, without having to replace ONTs in the field. This greatly reduces costs for network operators.
As discussed above, the downstream optical communications channel is partitioned by provisioning M OLT transmit lasers, each having a disjoint narrowed wavelength range within a total wavelength range of the original downstream channel and matched to a passband of a MUX/DEMUX in the ODN. Additionally upstream optical communication can be partitioned by injection locking M subsets of ONT transmit lasers to M injection locking signals via a wavelength selective MUX/DEMUX in the ODN.
While the invention has been particularly shown and described with reference to a particular embodiment, it will be understood by those skilled in the art that various changes in form and details may be made therein without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention. It is intended that such changes come within the scope of the following claims: