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Journal ArticleDOI

Optical traffic grooming in OFDM-based elastic optical networks [Invited]

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TLDR
In this paper, the authors proposed a novel optical grooming approach to aggregate and distribute traffic directly at the optical layer in OFDM-based elastic optical networks, and the results demonstrate that significant transmitter and spectrum savings can be achieved by the optical grooming versus the non-grooming scenario, and a tradeoff between optimizing the number of transmitters and optimizing spectrum usage should be considered during network planning.
Abstract
Orthogonal frequency-division multiplexing (OFDM) is a multi-carrier modulation technology that transmits a high-speed data stream using multiple spectrally overlapped lower-speed subcarriers. Optical OFDM (O-OFDM) technology is a promising candidate for future high-speed optical transmission. Based on O-OFDM, a novel elastic optical network architecture with immense flexibility and scalability in spectrum allocation and data rate accommodation can be built to support diverse services and the rapid growth of Internet traffic. This architecture can provide various services directly at the optical layer in a spectrum-efficient way through bandwidth-elastic optical paths. However, carrying various data rate services using a single type of bandwidth-variable transponder might not be cost-efficient. Electrical traffic grooming is a traditional approach for sub-wavelength service accommodation in wavelength division multiplexing networks. However, it places additional electrical switching and optical-electrical-optical conversion requirements on the network, which may lead to higher cost and energy consumption. In contrast, grooming traffic optically is an attractive option for elastic optical networks. In this paper, we propose a novel optical grooming approach to aggregate and distribute traffic directly at the optical layer in OFDM-based elastic optical networks. We study routing and spectrum allocation algorithms of optical grooming to show the benefits of this approach. Our results demonstrate that significant transmitter and spectrum savings can be achieved by the optical grooming versus the non-grooming scenario, and a trade-off between optimizing the number of transmitters and optimizing spectrum usage should be considered during network planning.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Routing and Spectrum Allocation in Elastic Optical Networks: A Tutorial

TL;DR: A tutorial that covers the key aspects of elastic optical networks, and explores the experimental demonstrations that have tested the functionality of the elastic optical network, along with the research challenges and open issues posed by flexible networks.
Journal ArticleDOI

A tutorial on the flexible optical networking paradigm: State of the art, trends, and research challenges

TL;DR: This work provides a comprehensive view of the different pieces composing the “flexible networking puzzle” with special attention given to capturing the occurring interactions between different research fields and suggests an optimal network-wide solution can be offered.
Journal ArticleDOI

Spectrum management techniques for elastic optical networks: A survey

TL;DR: A range of spectrum management techniques for elastic optical networks are reviewed and classified, including offline and online routing and spectrum assignment (RSA), distance-adaptive RSA, fragmentation-aware RSA, traffic grooming, and survivability.
Journal ArticleDOI

Spectrum management in heterogeneous bandwidth optical networks

TL;DR: A comprehensive metric, Fragmentation Index, is devised to capture the essence of fragmentation and shows that an admission policy that differentiates different bandwidth lightpaths by spectrum partitioning achieves better provisioning efficiency by resolving these two problems.
Journal ArticleDOI

Study and Analysis of Routing and Spectrum Allocation (RSA) and Routing, Modulation and Spectrum Allocation (RMSA) Algorithms in Elastic Optical Networks (EONs)

TL;DR: This study reviews and analyzes one of the most important topics in EON namely Routing and Spectrum Allocation (RSA), and compares them through both quality of performance and computational complexity aspects for the first time.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Spectrum-efficient and scalable elastic optical path network: architecture, benefits, and enabling technologies

TL;DR: This article proposes a novel, spectrum- efficient, and scalable optical transport network architecture called SLICE, which enables sub-wavelength, superwa wavelength, and multiple-rate data traffic accommodation in a highly spectrum-efficient manner, thereby providing a fractional bandwidth service.
Journal ArticleDOI

Elastic optical networking: a new dawn for the optical layer?

TL;DR: The drivers, building blocks, architecture, and enabling technologies for a whole new elastic optical networking paradigm are described, as well as early standardization efforts.
Journal ArticleDOI

A Survey on OFDM-Based Elastic Core Optical Networking

TL;DR: A novel elastic optical network architecture with immense flexibility and scalability in spectrum allocation and data rate accommodation could be built to support diverse services and the rapid growth of Internet traffic in the future.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Routing and Spectrum Allocation in OFDM-Based Optical Networks with Elastic Bandwidth Allocation

TL;DR: This work considers the planning problem of an OFDM-based optical network where connections are given a traffic matrix that includes the requested transmission rates of the connections to be served, and proposes a heuristic algorithm that serves connections one-by-one and uses it to solve the Planning problem by sequentially serving all traffic matrix connections.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Defragmentation of transparent Flexible optical WDM (FWDM) networks

TL;DR: The network defragmentation process consolidates the available spectrum significantly while minimizing the number of interrupted connections and proposes heuristics to achieve this goal.
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