OWC-enabled Spine and Leaf Architecture Towards Energy Efficient Data Center Networks
Abrar S. Alhazmi, Sanaa H. Mohamed, T. E. H. El-Gorashi, Jaafar M. H., Elmirghani

TL;DR
This paper proposes an energy-efficient wireless data center network architecture using Optical Wireless Communication (OWC) with a spine and leaf design, achieving significant power savings and high data rates.
Contribution
It introduces a novel OWC-enabled spine and leaf architecture with IR WDM systems and PON interconnections, enhancing scalability and energy efficiency in data centers.
Findings
Achieves data rates up to 15 Gbps in the data center links.
Reduces power consumption by 42% compared to traditional architectures.
Demonstrates the feasibility of IR WDM OWC systems for data center communication.
Abstract
Due to the emergence of new paradigms and services such as 5G/6G, IoT, and more, current deployed wired Data Center Networks (DCNs) are not meeting the required performance metrics due to their limited reconfigurability, scalability, and throughput. To that end, wireless DCNs using technologies such as Optical Wireless Communication (OWC) have become viable and costeffective solutions as they offer higher capacity, better energy efficiency, and better scalability. This paper proposes an OWC-based spine and leaf DCNs where the leaf switches are enabled with OWC transceivers, and the spine switches are replaced by Access Points (APs) in the ceiling connected to a backbone network. The APs are interconnected through a Passive Optical Network (PON) that also connects the architecture with upper network layers. An Infrared (IR) OWC system that employs Wavelength Division Multiplexing (WDM)…
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Taxonomy
TopicsOptical Network Technologies · Advanced Photonic Communication Systems · Advanced Optical Network Technologies
