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Kouji HIRATA Hiroshi YAMAMOTO Shohei KAMAMURA Toshiyuki OKA Yoshihiko UEMATSU Hideki MAEDA Miki YAMAMOTO
This paper proposes a traveling maintenance method based on the resource pool concept, as a new network maintenance model. For failure recovery, the proposed method utilizes permissible time that is ensured by shared resource pools. In the proposed method, even if a failure occurs in a communication facility, maintenance staff wait for occurrence of successive failures in other communication facilities during the permissible time instead of immediately tackling the failure. Then, the maintenance staff successively visit the communication facilities that have faulty devices and collectively repair them. Therefore, the proposed method can reduce the amount of time that the maintenance staff take for fault recovery. Furthermore, this paper provides a system design that optimizes the proposed traveling maintenance according to system requirements determined by the design philosophy of telecommunication networks. Through simulation experiments, we show the effectiveness of the proposed method.
Hiroki KAWAHARA Kohei SAITO Masahiro NAKAGAWA Takashi KUBO Takeshi SEKI Takeshi KAWASAKI Hideki MAEDA
An optical-layer adaptive restoration scheme is validated by a real-time experiment and numerical analyses. In this paper, it is assumed that this scheme can adaptively optimize the bitrate (up to 600Gb/s) and an optical reach with 100Gb/s granularity to maintain high-capacity optical signal transmission. The practicality of 600-Gb/s/carrier optical signal transmission over 101.6-km field-installed fiber is confirmed prior to the adaptive restoration experiment. After modifying the field setup, a real-time experiment on network recovery is demonstrated with bitrate adaptation for 600-Gb/s to 400-Gb/s signals. The results indicate that this scheme can restore failed connections with recovery times comparable to those of conventional restoration scheme; thus 99.9999% system availability can be easily attained even under double-link failures. Numerical analysis clarifies that adaptive restoration can recover >80% of double-link failures on several realistic topologies and improvement amount against conventional scheme is semi-statistically characterized by restoration path length.
Fukutaro HAMAOKA Takeo SASAI Kohei SAITO Takayuki KOBAYASHI Asuka MATSUSHITA Masanori NAKAMURA Hiroki TANIGUCHI Shoichiro KUWAHARA Hiroki KAWAHARA Takeshi SEKI Josuke OZAKI Yoshihiro OGISO Hideki MAEDA Yoshiaki KISAKA Masahito TOMIZAWA
We demonstrated 1-Tb/s-class transmissions of field-deployed large-core low-loss fiber links, which is compliant with ITU-T G.654.E, using our newly developed real-time transponder consisting of a state-of-the-art 16-nm complementary metal-oxide-semiconductor (CMOS) based digital signal processing application-specific integrated circuit (DSP-ASIC) and an indium phosphide (InP) based high-bandwidth coherent driver modulator (HB-CDM). In this field experiment, we have achieved record transmission distances of 1122km for net data-rate 1-Tb/s transmission with dual polarization-division multiplexed (PDM) 32 quadrature amplitude modulation (QAM) signals, and of 336.6 km for net data-rate 1.2-Tb/s transmission with dual PDM-64QAM signals. This is the first demonstration of applying hybrid erbium-doped fiber amplifier (EDFA) and backward-distributed Raman amplifier were applied to terrestrial G.654.E fiber links. We also confirmed the stability of signal performance over field fiber transmission in wavelength division multiplexed (WDM) condition. The Q-factor fluctuations respectively were only less than or equal to 0.052dB and 0.07dB for PDM-32QAM and PDM-64QAM signals within continuous measurements for 60 minutes.
Hideki MAEDA Masatoyo SUMIDA Tsutomu KUBO Takamasa IMAI
We clarify the effectiveness of receiver-side compensation in offsetting fiber Bragg grating (FBG) dispersion induced-electrical signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) degradation in a 10 Gb/s 8-channel wavelength-division multiplexing (WDM) 6,400 km transmission system. The receiver-side compensation greatly improves the SNR degradation. The allowable accumulated FBG dispersion is -400 1000ps/nm for the worst arrangement, a single FBG at the transmitter, which is about half the accumulated fiber dispersion permissible with receiver-side compensation.