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Tuesday
Jan312012

OFC/NFOEC 2012: Technical paper highlights

Source: The Optical Society

Novel technologies, operators' experiences with state-of-the-art optical deployments and technical papers on topics such as next-generation PON and 400 Gigabit and 1 Terabit optical transmission are some of the highlights of the upcoming OFC/NFOEC conference and exhibition, to be held in Los Angeles from March 4-8, 2012. Here is a taste of some of the technical paper highlights.

 

Optical networking 

In Spectrum, Cost and Energy Efficiency in Fixed-Grid and Flew-Grid Networks (Paper number 1248601) an evaluation of single and multi-carrier networks at rates up to 400 Gigabit-per-second (Gbps) is made by the Athens Information Technology Center. One finding is that efficient spectrum utilisation and fine bit-rate granularity are essential if cost and energy efficiencies are to be realised. 

In several invited papers, operators report their experiences with the latest networking technologies. AT&T Labs discusses advanced ROADM networks; NTT details the digital signal processing (DSP) aspects of 100Gbps DWDM systems and, in a separate paper, the challenge for Optical Transport Network (OTN) at 400Gbps and beyond, while Verizon gives an update on the status of MPLS-TP.  As part  of the invited papers, Finisar's Chris Cole outlines the next-generation CFP modules.

 

Optical access

Fabrice Bourgart of FT-Orange Labs details where the next generation PON standards - NGPON2 - are going while NeoPhotonics's David Piehler outlines the state of photonic integrated circuit (PIC) technologies for PONS. This is also a topic tackled by Oclaro's Michael Wale: PICs for next-generation optical access systems. Meanwhile Ao Zhang of Fiberhome Telecommunication Technologies discusses the state of FTTH deployments in the world's biggest market, China.

 

Switching, filtering and interconnect optical devices

NTT has a paper that details a flexible format modulator using a hybrid design based on a planar lightwave circuit (PLC) and lithium niobate. In a separate paper, NTT discusses silica-based PLC transponder aggregators for a colourless, directionless and contentionless ROADM, while Nistica's Tom Strasser discusses gridless ROADMs. Compact thin-film polymer modulators for telecoms is a subject tackled by GigOptix's Raluca Dinu. 

One novel paper is on graphene-based optical modulators by Ming Liu, Xiang at the UC Berkeley (Paper Number: 1249064). The optical loss of graphene can be tuned by shifting its Fermi level, he says. The paper shows that such tuning can be used for a high-speed optical modulator at telecom wavelengths.

 

Optoelectronic Devices

CMOS photonic integrated circuits is the topic discussed by MIT's Rajeev Ram, who outlines a system-on-chip with photonic input and output. Applications range from multiprocessor interconnects to coherent communications (Paper Number: 1249068). 

A polarisation-diversity coherent receiver on polymer PLC for QPSK and QAM signals is presented by Thomas Richter of the Fraunhofer Institute for Telecommunications (Paper Number: 1249427). The device has been tested in systems using 16-QAM and QPSK modulation up to 112 Gbps.

 

Core network

Ciena's Maurice O'Sullivan outlines 400Gbps/ 1Tbps high-spectral efficiency technology and some of the enabling subsystems.  Alcatel-Lucent's Steven Korotky discusses traffic trends: drivers and measures of cost-effective and energy-efficient technologies and architectures for the optical backbone networks, while transport requirements for next-generation heterogeneous networks is the subject tackled by Bruce Nelson of Juniper Networks.

 

Data centre

IBM's Casimir DeCusatis presents a future - 2015-and-beyond - view of data centre optical networking. The data centre is also tackled by HP's Moray McLaren, in his paper on future computing architectures enabled by optical and nanophotonic interconnects. Optically-interconnected data centres are also discussed by Lei Xu of NEC Labs America.

 

Expanding usable capacity of fibre syposium

There is a special symposium at OFC/ NFOEC entitled Enabling Technologies for Fiber Capacities Beyond 100 Terabits/second. The papers in the symposium discuss MIMO and OFDM, technologies more commonly encountered in the wireless world.

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