The invention is based on a priority application EP 05290507.2 which is hereby incorporated by reference.
The present invention relates to the field of telecommunications and more particularly to a method of transmitting wavelength multiplexed signals through an optical transport network.
Wavelength Division Multiplexing (WDM) is a technique of combining several optical signals at slightly different wavelengths for the joint transport through an optical transport network. Depending on the bitrate of the optical signals, a minimum channel spacing is required to make sure that all channels can be properly demultiplexed after transmission. As a general rule, the higher the bitrate, the larger is the required channel spacing.
The ITU-T has defined in G.694.1—which is incorporated by reference herein—several wavelength grids with channel spacing of 12.5 GHz, 25 GHz, 50 GHz, and 100 GHz, respectively. The bitrate used in today's WDM transport networks is 10 GBit/s at a channel spacing of 50 GHz. Future transmission networks will make use of 40 GBits/s signals requiring a channel spacing of 100 GHz.
Network elements are required in the transport network to add and drop individual wavelength channels to and from WDM signals, respectively. Such network elements are also known as reconfigurable optical add/drop multiplexers (ROADMs). In principle, a ROADM uses filters or wavelength gratings to extract individual channels and wavelength blockers to switch off dropped channels from the transit signal so that new channels can be added into the wavelength band corresponding to the dropped channel.
Such network elements are designed today for 10 GBit/s at a channel spacing of 50 GHz. With the introduction of 40 GBit/s transmission, all such network elements would have to be replaced or updated to 100 GHz channel spacing, which incurs high costs and is an obstacle for the introduction of 40 GBit/s transmission. It would be very advantageous if old equipment could be reused and 40 Gbit/s could be introduced gradually.
It is thus an object of the invention, to provide a method of transmitting higher bitrate optical wavelength channels over a transport network designed for the transport of lower bitrate optical wavelength channels. Moreover, it is an object of the present invention to provide an network element, which is easily adapted to the transport of lower and higher bitrate optical channels, both.
These and other objects that appear below are achieved by detuning with respect to the ITU wavelength grid the wavelengths of a higher bitrate WDM signal by at least 30% of the channel spacing of a lower bitrate WDM signal.
In particular, the method provides transmission of a wavelength multiplexed signal carrying higher bitrate wavelength channels having a first channel spacing through an optical transport network designed for the transport of wavelength division multiplexed signals carrying lower bitrate wavelength channels having a second channel spacing and conforming with a predefined wavelength grid. It contains the steps of:
With respect to the optical network element, the object is achieved by providing a control means, which configures the optical network element to block two adjacent wavelengths from the predefined ITU wavelength grid to extract one of the optical signals contained in the wavelength multiplexed signal
According to another aspect of the invention, a method is provided for transmitting a wavelength multiplexed signal carrying wavelength channels having a narrower channel spacing through an optical transport network designed for the transport of wavelength division multiplexed signals carrying wavelength channels having a wider channel spacing and conforming with a predefined wavelength grid. The method comprises the steps of:
In this scenario, any two adjacent wavelength channels can be blocked by convention network elements such as ROADMs.
Preferred embodiments of the invention will be described below with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which
a shows a predefined wavelength grid for 10 GBit/s transmission;
b shows the wavelength grid as recommended by ITU-T for 40 GBit/s transmission;
c shows an optimized wavelength grid according to the invention;
a shows wavelength blocking performed by a reconfigurable optical add/drop multiplexer the in the predefined wavelength grid for 10 GBit/s transmission;
b shows the same wavelength blocking but with a 40 GBit/s channel using the ITU-T wavelength grid;
c shows the same wavelength blocking for a 40 GBit/s channel but using the optimized wavelength grid according to the invention;
a shows an example of a WDM signal in a 400 GHz sub-band SB carrying 8 wavelength channels A1-A8 with 10 GBit/s optical signals. The individual optical signals have due to their modulation with the 10 GBit/s data. a certain width. This requires that a 50 GHz spacing S2 is applied to clearly separate the individual channels in the WDM signal.
b shows the situation when 4 wavelength channels B1-B4 with 40 GBit/s optical signals are combined at wavelengths that correspond to the ITU-T wavelength grid. Since the individual optical signals are broader than for in the case above due to their higher bitrate modulation, the wavelength spacing S1 between the channels must be larger, i.e., 100 GHz. As another consequence, the resulting WDM signal will not fit entirely into the same sub-band SB. As can be observed, channel B1 reaches out of the sub-band SB at the left end of the wavelength scale.
A basic idea of the invention is therefore, to use for 40 GBit/s signals a wavelength grid which is shifted with respect of the ITU-T wavelength grid. This is shown in
The signal fraction split off by coupler CP1 is fed to demultiplexer DMX, which separates the individual wavelength channels contained therein, selects those channels that are configured to be dropped, and makes these available at corresponding tributary ports. The transit signal, i.e. the main signal coming from the coupler CP1 still contains these channels to be dropped. This signal is shown schematically as signal WM1 in
A wavelength blocker is a device which is capable of selectively blocking, passing, or attenuating individual channels, while simultaneously passing transit channels with minimal attenuation. A wavelength blocker can be implemented using a plurality of shutters arranged between a demultiplexer and a multiplexer such as described for example in U.S. Pat. No. 6,504,970. As the ROADM is designed for 10 GBit/s transmission, wavelength blocker WB has shutters or “gates” for each 50 GHz wavelength channel. In the present embodiment, four wavelength channels are to be dropped and thus wavelength blocker WB closes the corresponding four gates to block these wavelengths. The resulting transit signal is shown schematically as signal WM2 in
The relation of the wavelength blocker and the wavelength grid is shown in
b shows the impact of the wavelength blocker on wavelength channels B1-B4 with 40 GBit/s data modulation at a channel spacing of 100 GHz, as defined by ITU-T. Channels B1-B4 correspond in this example to the wavelengths of channels A2, A4, A6, and A8, respectively. Due to the higher bitrate modulation, the optical signals are broader than for 10 GBit/s modulation. Therefore, one bandpass of the wavelength blocker does not attenuate one full wavelength channel. Since the optical signal from one wavelength channel overlaps the corresponding bandpass of the wavelength blocker on both sides, three adjacent gates need to be closed to erase this wavelength signal, but which would affect the neighboring channels, as well. Therefore, use of the ITU-T wavelength grid would necessitate the replacement of all wavelength blockers in the network.
Conversely,
The lower curve shows an optical test signal modulated with 40 GBit/s data using a NRZ modulation scheme (non-return-to-zero). A detuning of 25 GHz corresponds to 0.2 nm on the wavelength scale. As can be seen, the Q-factor, which stands for the system performance, is significantly degraded at a shift of 0.2 nm, i.e., when the carrier lies between two gates of the wavelength blocker. A detuning of 0.15 nm (i.e. 30% of the 50 MHz spacing) should be sufficient in this case to achieve at least some of the benefits described above.
The upper curve is a measurement of an optical test signal modulated with 40 GBit/s data using carrier-suppressed (CS-) RZ modulation (return-to-zero). As can be seen from
As has been found out, carrier-suppressed modulation schemes such as CS-RZ are preferred over NRZ modulation for the purpose of the invention. Another modulation scheme that will work fine with the invention is DPSK (differential phase shift keying) or RZ-DPSK. It should be understood that carrier-suppressed modulation schemes benefit most from the channel shift according to the invention. For non-carrier-suppressed modulation schemes, the central carrier might just be located on a “dip” between two “pixels” of the wavelength blocker, which leads to a higher insertion loss.
According to the invention 40 GBit/s optical transmitters can now be used in a network system including wavelength blockers designed for 10 GBit/s transmission, provided that their emission wavelength is detuned as described above. In order to make network elements such as ROADs or reconfigurable optical crossconnects, which include wavelength blockers, compatible with the invention, the respective network element's controller that controls the individual gates of the wavelength blocker need to be adopted to close two adjacent gates to block one of the 40 GBits/s optical signals contained in the wavelength multiplexed signal. The controller is typically a programmable device such as a computer workstation, so that the necessary changes can be made by a simple software update. Moreover, the invention affects the transmitter side in a transport network, since the transmitters must be adapted to emit optical signals at the detuned wavelengths, as well as the receiver sie, which must be adapted to demultiplex the detuned wavelength channels.
Somewhere in the transmission line, there is a reconfigurable optical add/drop multiplexer of the type as described with reference to
Another aspect of the present invention is shown in
In this scenario, two channels will be dropped or added per “pixel” of the wavelength blocker. Pixels DR1, DR2, and DR5 of the wavelength blocker are shown in
Instead of a wavelength blocker, a Wavelength Selective Switch (WSS) can equally be used in the context of the invention. A Wavelength Selective Switch (WSS) is a 1×N device, which has one input and N outputs (often 9). Each input wavelength can be directed to any one of the N output ports. Several wavelengths can also be sent to the same outputs. Output wavelengths can be independently attenuated and blocked.
| Number | Date | Country | Kind |
|---|---|---|---|
| 05290507.2 | Mar 2005 | EP | regional |