SPATIAL SPECTRAL MESH
20210297757 · 2021-09-23
Assignee
Inventors
- Jose M. Castro (Naperville, IL, US)
- Richard J. Pimpinella (Frankfort, IL)
- Robert A. Reid (Battle Ground, IN, US)
- Bulent Kose (Burr Ridge, IL, US)
- Yu Huang (Orland Park, IL, US)
- Asher S. Novick (Chicago, IL, US)
Cpc classification
H04Q2011/0026
ELECTRICITY
G02B6/356
PHYSICS
G02B6/2938
PHYSICS
G02B6/3556
PHYSICS
G02B6/29386
PHYSICS
G02B6/3518
PHYSICS
International classification
Abstract
A fiber optic interconnection assembly has a plurality of leaf components and a plurality of spine components. Each leaf component of the plurality of leaf components is connected to each spine component of the plurality of spine components. Each spine components of the plurality of spine components is connected to each leaf component of the plurality of leaf components. Wherein the connections for each leaf component to each of the spine components is at a different wavelength and the connections for each spine component to each of the leaf components is at a different wavelength.
Claims
1. A fiber optic interconnection assembly comprising: a plurality of leaf components; and a plurality of spine components wherein each leaf component is of the plurality of leaf components is connected to each spine component of the plurality of spine components, each spine components of the plurality of spine components is connected to each leaf component of the plurality of leaf components, and further wherein the connections for each leaf component to each of the spine components is at a different wavelength and the connections for each spine component to each of the leaf components is at a different wavelength.
2. The fiber optic interconnection assembly of claim 1 wherein each spine component and each leaf component includes a reflector array.
3. A fiber optic interconnection assembly comprising a plurality of N leaf components; and a plurality of N spine components Wherein leaf component is connected to each spine component, each spine components is connected to each leaf component, and further wherein the connections for each spine component being at one of N different wavelengths with a wavelength for each connection being different and further wherein the connections for each leaf component being at one of N different wavelengths with a wavelength for each connection being different.
4. The fiber optic interconnection assembly of claim 1 wherein each spine and leaf component include a reflector array.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0009]
[0010]
[0011]
[0012]
[0013]
[0014]
[0015]
[0016]
[0017]
[0018]
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
[0019] The present invention, describes an apparatus and design methods to enable efficient multi-port bi-directional connections using mesh topologies required in current and future data centers networks, and HPC applications. The apparatus according to the present invention uses optical technologies, i.e,. thin films or holographic optical elements implemented in 2D or 3D configurations, are disclosed here in configurations that enable large numbers of connections with less inter-connecting fibers. Systems and methods in accordance with the present invention leverages the wide adoption of multi-wavelength transceivers utilizing wavelength division multiplexing, i.e., SWDM, CDWM, DWDM, or WDM using 4, 8 or more wavelengths.
[0020] The disclosed apparatus can implement complex network topologies inside compact small form factor modules such as Panduit's HD Flex Cassettes, enabling the efficient scaling of data centers with less fiber and connections, and higher reliability.
[0021] The apparatus according to the present invention can assist in constructing leaf-spine data center fabrics using current 100 Gb/s CWDM4, SWDM4 or future transceivers operating at ≥200 Gbps. For example, transmission speeds of 200 Gbps (2 fiber-pairs 4 wavelengths, NRZ, 25 GBaud or 1 fiber-pair, 4 wavelengths, PAM-4, 25 GBaud), 400 Gbps (4 pairs, 4 wavelengths, NRZ 25 Gbaud), 800 Gbps, (4 pairs, 4 wavelengths, PAM-4,25 GBaud), 1.6 Tbps (4 pairs, 8 wavelengths, PAM-4, 25 GBaud, or 4 pairs, 4 wavelengths, PAM-4, 50 GBaud) or 3.2 Tbps (4 pairs, 8 wavelengths, PAM-4, 50 GBaud) among many other combination of number of fibers, allocated spectrum, modulation format and symbol rate.
[0022] Examples of several embodiments of the present invention are illustrated in
[0023] The input and output ports can utilize parallel connectivity such as MPO connectors, 106, 110. In the example shown in
[0024] In this example, the first reflector, 201, reflects only λ1 and passes λ2, λ3, and λ4. The second reflector is tuned to reflect different wavelengths, λ2, λ3, and λ4 for 203, 205 and 207 respectively. Various optical filtering technologies can be utilized, i.e., thin film filters, or holographic elements. The reflective optical pass-band window matches the separation of the transmitted wavelength with a specified guard band to compensate for thermal drift, or nominal wavelength variation of the transceivers. In 209, the combined spectrum of the reflected signal is shown.
[0025] Details of array 114 are shown in
[0026] The operation of the reflector array that corresponds to MSM-4P, shown in
P.sub.ij=k mod(j+i−2,N.sub.λ)+1
where, is the position of the mirror in row i and column j, k is a proportionality factor, and N.sub.λ is the number of wavelengths, 4 in this example.
[0027] The reflectors separate and recombine wavelengths of different input ports to the associated output ports 309, 311, 313 and 315. The relationships between input and output ports can be grouped per each transmitted wavelength as shown in table I.
TABLE-US-00001 TABLE I connectivity map between input ports I_1, I_2, I_3, I4 and output ports O_1, O_2, O_3, O_4. λ1 λ2 λ3 λ4 O_1 I_1 I_2 I_3 I_4 O_2 I_4 I_1 I_2 I_3 O_3 I_3 I_4 I_1 I_2 O_4 I_2 I_3 I_4 I_1
[0028]
[0029] Also, it is noted that all the nodes launch or receive exactly, N.sub.λ=4 wavelengths, which efficiently matches all the wavelength of the transceivers utilized. This four-port mesh is produced without fibers. The fibers are only used to connect the leaf switches to inputs of the MSM-4p and the spines switches to the output ports of the MSM-4P. It should be noted that the terms input and output ports are interchangeable here since links are bi-directional as shown in
[0030]
[0031] In this figure, an array of 16 elements using 4 types of multi-wavelength reflectors, 401, 403, 405 and 407, are designed to reflect 4 wavelengths and separate and recombine up to 16 parallel ports. The interconnection map per wavelength is shown in table II.
TABLE-US-00002 TABLE II Interconnectivity map for 16 ports. The ports are grouped in arrays of 4 elements per direction to estimate the number required MPO connectors. For example, output port 1 is labeled O_1_1 and input port 16 is I_16_4. λ1 λ2 λ3 λ4 O_1_1 I_1_4 I_6_4 I_11_4 I_16_4 O_1_2 I_16_3 I_1_3 I_6_3 I_11_3 O_1_3 I_11_2 I_16_2 I_1_2 I_6_2 O_1_4 I_6_1 I_11_1 I_16_1 I_1_1 O_2_1 I_16_4 I_1_4 I_6_4 I_11_4 O_2_2 I_11_3 I_16_3 I_1_3 I_6_3 O_2_3 I_6_2 I_11_2 I_16_2 I_1_2 O_2_4 I_1_1 I_6_1 I_11_1 I_16_1 O_3_1 I_11_4 I_16_4 I_1_4 I_6_4 O_3_2 I_6_3 I_11_3 I_16_3 I_1_3 O_3_3 I_1_2 I_6_2 I_11_2 I_16_2 O_3_4 I_16_1 I_1_1 I_6_1 I_11_1 O_4_1 I_6_4 I_11_4 I_16_4 I_1_4 O_4_2 I_1_3 I_6_3 I_11_3 I_16_3 O_4_3 I_16_2 I_1_2 I_6_2 I_11_2 O_4_4 I_11_1 I_16_1 I_1_1 I_6_1
[0032]
[0033]
[0034] The heights are calculate following a modular addition or subtraction as described previously for the case of the reflector position. In this design, the input signals are feed horizontally (plane XY) whereas the output signals are collected in the vertical axis. It should be noted that due to the different heights, the reflected light does not hit more than 4 reflectors. The interconnection map per wavelength is shown in table III,
TABLE-US-00003 TABLE III connectivity map between 64 input/output ports. The ports are grouped in array groups of 4 to represent the number of MPO connectors. λ1 λ2 λ3 λ4 O_1_1 I_1_4 I_6_4 I_11_4 I_16_4 O_1_2 I_16_3 I_1_3 I_6_3 I_11_3 O_1_3 I_11_2 I_16_2 I_1_2 I_6_2 O_1_4 I_6_1 I_11_1 I_16_1 I_1_1 O_2_1 I_16_4 I_1_4 I_6_4 I_11_4 O_2_2 I_11_3 I_16_3 I_1_3 I_6_3 O_2_3 I_6_2 I_11_2 I_16_2 I_1_2 O_2_4 I_1_1 I_6_1 I_11_1 I_16_1 O_3_1 I_11_4 I_16_4 I_1_4 I_6_4 O_3_2 I_6_3 I_11_3 I_16_3 I_1_3 O_3_3 I_1_2 I_6_2 I_11_2 I_16_2 O_3_4 I_16_1 I_1_1 I_6_1 I_11_1 O_4_1 I_6_4 I_11_4 I_16_4 I_1_4 O_4_2 I_1_3 I_6_3 I_11_3 I_16_3 O_4_3 I_16_2 I_1_2 I_6_2 I_11_2 O_4_4 I_11_1 I_16_1 I_1_1 I_6_1 O_5_1 I_13_4 I_2_4 I_7_4 I_12_4 O_5_2 I_12_3 I_13_3 I_2_3 I_7_3 O_5_3 I_7_2 I_12_2 I_13_2 I_2_2 O_5_4 I_2_1 I_7_1 I_12_1 I_13_1 O_6_1 I_12_4 I_13_4 I_2_4 I_7_4 O_6_2 I_7_3 I_12_3 I_13_3 I_2_3 O_6_3 I_2_2 I_7_2 I_12_2 I_13_2 O_6_4 I_13_1 I_2_1 I_7_1 I_12_1 O_7_1 I_7_4 I_12_4 I_13_4 I_2_4 O_7_2 I_2_3 I_7_3 I_12_3 I_13_3 O_7_3 I_13_2 I_2_2 I_7_2 I_12_2 O_7_4 I_12_1 I_13_1 I_2_1 I_7_1 O_8_1 I_2_4 I_7_4 I_12_4 I_13_4 O_8_2 I_13_3 I_2_3 I_7_3 I_12_3 O_8_3 I_12_2 I_13_2 I_2_2 I_7_2 O_8_4 I_7_1 I_12_1 I_13_1 I_2_1 O_9_1 I_9_4 I_14_4 I_3_4 I_8_4 O_9_2 I_8_3 I_9_3 I_14_3 I_3_3 O_9_3 I_3_2 I_8_2 I_9_2 I_14_2 O_9_4 I_14_1 I_3_1 I_8_1 I_9_1 O_10_1 I_8_4 I_9_4 I_14_4 I_3_4 O_10_2 I_3_3 I_8_3 I_9_3 I_14_3 O_10_3 I_14_2 I_3_2 I_8_2 I_9_2 O_10_4 I_9_1 I_14_1 I_3_1 I_8_1 O_11_1 I_3_4 I_8_4 I_9_4 I_14_4 O_11_2 I_14_3 I_3_3 I_8_3 I_9_3 O_11_3 I_9_2 I_14_2 I_3_2 I_8_2 O_11_4 I_8_1 I_9_1 I_14_1 I_3_1 O_12_1 I_14_4 I_3_4 I_8_4 I_9_4 O_12_2 I_9_3 I_14_3 I_3_3 I_8_3 O_12_3 I_8_2 I_9_2 I_14_2 I_3_2 O_12_4 I_3_1 I_8_1 I_9_1 I_14_1 O_13_1 I_5_4 I_10_4 I_15_4 I_4_4 O_13_2 I_4_3 I_5_3 I_10_3 I_15_3 O_13_3 I_15_2 I_4_2 I_5_2 I_10_2 O_13_4 I_10_1 I_15_1 I_4_1 I_5_1 O_14_1 I_4_4 I_5_4 I_10_4 I_15_4 O_14_2 I_15_3 I_4_3 I_5_3 I_10_3 O_14_3 I_10_2 I_15_2 I_4_2 I_5_2 O_14_4 I_5_1 I_10_1 I_15_1 I_4_1 O_15_1 I_15_4 I_4_4 I_5_4 I_10_4 O_15_2 I_10_3 I_15_3 I_4_3 I_5_3 O_15_3 I_5_2 I_10_2 I_15_2 I_4_2 O_15_4 I_4_1 I_5_1 I_10_1 I_15_1 O_16_1 I_10_4 I_15_4 I_4_4 I_5_4 O_16_2 I_5_3 I_10_3 I_15_3 I_4_3 O_16_3 I_4_2 I_5_2 I_10_2 I_15_2 O_16_4 I_15_1 I_4_1 I_5_1 I_10_1
[0035]
[0036] By adding tunability to the reflectors using thermal, electrical (LCD), or mechanical mean, a reconfigurable circuit based switch can be produced. Even if the MSM is passive, the servers can select the required ports to direct the signal, providing the means to switch the wavelength in which the data are being transmitted.