Fiber Optic Networks
Where Fiber is Used
History
First fiber optic network installed in Chicago in 1976 (Link Ch 3k) Now more than 90% of long-distance voice links use fiber optics CATV is sent over fiber optics using an analog transmission
Soon it will convert to digital compressed video
The Internet backbone is also fiber
Where New Fiber is Going
The Last Mile
Fiber to the home Fiber to the Curb Fiber to the office Fiber to the telephone Fiber to the desktop
Economics of Fiber
Telephony
A single strand of fiber can carry more traffic than thousands of copper pairs
Fiber saves in materials costs, installation, splicing labor and reliability, and uses less space in the conduits
Fiber is the clear choice for high traffic and long distance links
FTTC and FTTH
Fiber To The Curb and Fiber To The Home
Not cost-efficient yet, but will become needed as customers demand more bandwidth
SONET
Synchronous Optical Network
A standard to enable telecommunications networks to interoperate The international equivalent to SONET is SDH (Synchronous Digital Hierarchy) Now that data traffic surpasses voice traffic, SONET is threatened by IP (Internet Protocol) and VoIP (Voice over IP)
Fiber To The Premises (FTTP)
Telcos are deploying FTTP
Verizon spent $1 billion in 2005 to deploy FTTP to 3 million homes and businesses in 16 states It plans to continue spending $1 to $2 billion per year on FTTP until 2010
AT&T is spending $6 billion on FTTN (Fiber To The Neighborhood or Fiber To The Node) to be completed in 2008 (links Ch 3d, 3e)
CATV (Cable television)
CATV often converts from copper to fiber by overbuilding existing metal cable
Attaching fiber to existing hanging cables, or Pulling fiber through existing underground ducts
LANs (Local Area Networks)
Most computer networks use UTP (Unshielded Twisted-Pair) copper cables
UTP has a maximum length of 100 meters, and a maximum speed of 1 Gbps Fiber is not popular to the desktop because the electronics cost more Fiber is popular on network backbones
Ethernet
Ethernet is the most popular LAN standard
Runs at 10 Mbps, 100 Mbps, 1 Gbps, or 10Gbps Can run over copper or fiber 10 Gbps is new and slowly gaining acceptance, and may replace Fibre Channel for server clusters (link Ch 3f)
Media Converters
Convert UTP Ethernet to Fiber Optics
Allows an Ethernet network to be greatly extended, mixing fiber and copper on the LAN
Image from link Ch 3g (versitron.com)
Media Converters
This is a 1 Gbps media converter
Specifications for the 1 Gbps Converter
Note error on last line 500 km is impossible for multimode
Older LAN Standards
All these obsolete LAN standards could run over either copper or fiber
ARCnet WangNet DECnet Token Ring
Older Fiber LAN Standards
These obsolete LAN standards were designed for fiber
Fiber Distributed Data Interface (FDDI)
Replaced by Ethernet
Enterprise System Connection Architecture (ESCON)
Replaced by Fibre Channel
Fibre Channel
Fibre Channel is used for server clusters and storage area networks
Specialized Networks
IEEE 1394 and TOSLINK
Used for consumer electronics over copper or plastic optical fiber
MOST (Media Oriented System Transport)
Automotive multimedia connecting media devices within the car
Flexray
Automotive network for safety devices like airbags
Other Applications of Fiber Optics
Surveillance and news cameras Security devices like card readers Electric utilities control the grid with fiber optics, to avoid electromagnetic interference (EMI)
Fiber v. Copper
Copper cables must be 100 meters or less That means you need a powered telecom closet on each floor Fiber only needs one telecom closet per building
Cost of Fiber v. Copper
Copper components are cheaper, but you need more total equipment and it uses more space If you include everything, fiber may even be cheaper than copper
Future-Proofing the Installation
Plan for growth Install extra fibers
Most people still use 62.5/125 multimode
50/125 multimode runs faster and will make future expansion of bandwidth possible Except specialty dispersion-shifted or dispersion-flattened which are not recommended for general use
Singlemode fiber is all the same
Termination
Termination is attaching connectors to the end of the fiber strands Fiber cannot be used until it is terminated Termination is the largest labor cost for fiber
Install extra strands, but dont terminate them till you need them
The Future of Fiber
Fiber offers the most bandwidth, which will be increasingly needed by:
Voice over IP Video conferencing Video and high-speed gaming over the Internet
Korean Internet users have 20 Mbps connections, and are currently installing 100 Mbps FTTH (see links Ch 2m, 2n, 2o)