Optical Networking in Future-land: From Optical-bypass-enabled to Optical-processing-enabled Paradigm
Dao Thanh Hai

TL;DR
This paper proposes a new optical network paradigm leveraging all-optical mixing and aggregation technologies to enhance spectral efficiency, challenging traditional interference-avoidance approaches and demonstrating potential gains through mathematical modeling and simulations.
Contribution
It introduces a novel optical-processing-enabled network paradigm utilizing in-network all-optical mixing, supported by a mathematical routing model and numerical analysis on realistic topologies.
Findings
Spectral gains achieved through aggregation-aware routing.
Demonstrated potential of optical channel (de-)aggregation technologies.
Quantified improvements over conventional routing methods.
Abstract
Conventional wisdom in designing the optical switching nodes is rooted in the intuition that when an optical channel crossing an intermediate node, it should be maximally isolated from other optical channels to avoid interference. Such long-established paradigm perceiving the interference of optical channels transiting at the same node as an adversarial factor and should therefore circumvent, albeit reasonable, may leave vast unexplored opportunities. Indeed, rapid advances in all-optical signal processing technologies has brought opportunities to re-define the optical node architecture by upgrading its naive functionalities from simply add/drop and cross-connecting to proactively mixing optical channels in photonic domain. Specifically, all-optical channel (de-) aggregation technologies have been remarkably advancing in recent years, permitting two or more optical channels at lower…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAdvanced Optical Network Technologies · Optical Network Technologies · Advanced Photonic Communication Systems
