OPTICAL CROSS-CONNECT DEVICE
20210219031 ยท 2021-07-15
Inventors
- Hiroki Kawahara (Tokyo, JP)
- Hiroshi Yamamoto (Tokyo, JP)
- Katsuhiro Araya (Tokyo, JP)
- Yoshihiko Uematsu (Tokyo, JP)
- Toshiyuki Oka (Tokyo, JP)
Cpc classification
H04Q3/52
ELECTRICITY
H04Q2011/0026
ELECTRICITY
H04J14/0217
ELECTRICITY
H04J14/0212
ELECTRICITY
International classification
Abstract
[Problem] To improve the add/drop rates while suppressing the apparatus scale of the ROADM.
[Solution] ROADM includes a wavelength cross-connect portion connected to a plurality of degrees, and a transponder accommodation function portion configured to relay an optical signal of the wavelength cross-connect portion to a transponder, in which the transponder accommodation function portion is configured such that a plurality of elements E that are a plurality of wavelength selective switches including one input port receiving an optical signal from a direction of the wavelength cross-connect portion and a plurality of output ports transmitting an optical signal in a direction toward the transponder is cascade-connected in a plurality of stages, and a plurality of elements E positioned at the same stage of the plurality of stages of cascade connection, to which an optical signal is propagated from the same degree of the plurality of degrees of the wavelength cross-connect portion, are multiple-connected as one module.
Claims
1-4. (canceled)
5. An optical cross-connect apparatus comprising: a wavelength cross-connect portion connected to a plurality of degrees; and a transponder accommodation function portion configured to relay an optical signal of the wavelength cross-connect portion to a transponder, wherein the transponder accommodation function portion is configured such that a plurality of wavelength selective switches including one input port receiving an optical signal from a direction of the wavelength cross-connect portion and a plurality of output ports transmitting an optical signal in a direction toward the transponder is cascade-connected in a plurality of stages.
6. The optical cross-connect apparatus of claim 5, wherein the plurality of wavelength selective switches positioned at an identical stage of the plurality of stages of cascade connection, to which an optical signal is propagated from a degree of the plurality of degrees of the wavelength cross-connect portion, are multiple-connected as one module.
7. The optical cross-connect apparatus of claim 5, wherein the plurality of wavelength selective switches to which an optical signal is propagated from a degree of the plurality of degrees and an output port of the wavelength cross-connect portion, are multiple-connected as one module.
8. The optical cross-connect apparatus of claim 5, wherein the plurality of wavelength selective switches positioned at an identical stage of the plurality of stages of cascade connection, which propagate an optical signal to a degree of the plurality of degrees of the wavelength cross-connect portion, are multiple-connected as one module.
9. The optical cross-connect apparatus of claim 5, wherein the plurality of wavelength selective switches which propagate an optical signal to a degree of the plurality of degrees and an input port of the wavelength cross-connect portion, are multiple-connected as one module.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF DRAWINGS
[0028]
[0029]
[0030]
[0031]
[0032]
[0033]
DESCRIPTION OF EMBODIMENTS
[0034] An embodiment of the present disclosure will be described below with reference to the drawings.
[0035]
[0036] In the ROADM, the following three types of modules are disposed in order from the top. Here, the horizontal broken line in
[0037] (1) A group of wavelength selective switches 1M WSS of the wavelength cross-connect portion, indicated by W[1] to W[D] on the upper side of
[0038] (2) A group of wavelength selective switches 1A WSS of the transponder accommodation function portion of E[1, 1, 1] to E[1, n, x5] on the center side of
[0039] (3) A group of the wavelength selective switches DB CPL of the transponder accommodation function portion of C[1] to C[X] on the lower side of
[0040] The group (1) of the ROADM will be described. 1M WSS having the following three types of ports is provided as modules W[1] to W[D] with the number of degrees, D on the drop side of the wavelength cross-connect portion.
[0041] (1a) one input port that receives an input from its own degree (one output port on the add side, on the contrary).
[0042] (1b) D1 output ports for internally connecting to the 1M WSS of the drop side of each of other degrees 2 to D (see
[0043] (1c) MD+1 output ports for internally connecting to each 1A WSS of the transponder accommodation function portion.
[0044] The group (2) of the ROADM will be described. In the transponder accommodation function portion, when the 1A WSS is one element (E: Element), those elements are cascade-connected in n stages. The element E of the group (2) includes one input port that receives an optical signal from the direction of the wavelength cross-connect portion and a plurality of output ports that transmits the optical signal in the direction toward each transponder. (On the add side, conversely, the element E has a plurality of input ports and one output port)
[0045] A set of cascade-connected elements in the first stage to the n-th stage is grouped separately (in the figure, a dotted rectangle) for each of the degrees 1 to D.
[0046] To make the positional relationship of each element E easy to understand, an ID is added to the element E with three indices E[i, j, k]. For example, E[D, 1, 2] indicates E=Element, D=D-th degree, 1=first stage cascade, 2=second in the accommodation number.
[0047] The first stage of the cascade is positioned at the boundary with the wavelength cross-connect portion. The MD+1 output ports (1c) from the 1M WSS of the wavelength cross-connect portion connect to the input ports of the elements E[1, 1, 1], E[1, 1, 2], . . . E[1, 1, MD+1], respectively.
[0048] The second stage of the cascade is a group of elements that receives the output ports of the first stage elements of the cascade and transfers to the input port of the third stage element of the cascade. For example, E[1, 2, 1] receives an input from the first output port of E[1, 1, 1], and outputs to E[1, 3, 1] to E[1, 3, A], respectively.
[0049] The n-th stage (final stage) of the cascade is positioned at the boundary with the group (3) of the DB CPL of C[1] to C[X] positioned further below.
[0050] The group (3) of the ROADM will be described. The transponder accommodation function portion is provided with the DB CPLs having output ports connected to the transponders as modules C[1] to C[X]. Here, the DB CPL, that is, a CPL (Coupler) of D inputs and B outputs is used, but a Wavelength Selective Switch (WSS) of D inputs and B outputs may be used, or when the ROADM has a CDC function, a Multicast Switch (MCS) of D inputs and B outputs may be used.
[0051] C[1] receives inputs from a total D of the elements E[1, n, 1] to E[D, n, 1] (see
[0052] The C[2] also receives inputs from a total D of the elements E[1, n, 2] to E[D, n, 2], and outputs signals to the transponder at B output ports.
[0053] The C[X] also receives inputs from a total D of the elements E[1, n, X] to E[D, n, X], and outputs signals to the transponder at B output ports.
[0054] The transponder (not illustrated) connected to each of the C[1] to C[X] is configured as a drop destination receiver or an add source transmitter.
[0055] The number of accommodated transponders in one ROADM as a whole is calculated as follows.
[0056] The number of accommodated transponders=(the number of C[n]s =X)(the number of output ports per C[n], B)
[0057] (the number of C[n]s, X)=(the total number of the elements E in the n-th stage of cascade)(the number of output ports per element E, A)
[0058] (the total number of elements E in the n-th stage of the cascade)=A to the power of (n1)(MD+1)
[0059] Accordingly, the number of accommodated transponders=A to the n-th power(MD+1)B.
[0060] The configuration of the ROADM of the comparative example has been described above with reference to
[0061] In the present embodiment described with reference to
[0062]
[0063] The WSS includes input ports Pi[1, 1] to Pi[1, 4], output ports Po[1, 1] to Pi[3, 4], a Planar Lightwave Circuit (PLC) 10, and spatial optical system 20. The input port Pi[i, j] indicates j-series multiple-connecting of the i-th input port. The output port Po[i, j] indicates j-series multiple-connecting of the i-th output port. The spatial optical system 20 is constituted with a lens 21 and a Liquid Crystal on Silicon (LCOS) element 22.
[0064] The PLC 10 includes four Spatial Beam Transformers (SBTs) constituted with each including an input/output optical waveguide 11, a slab waveguide 12, and an array waveguide 13. A total of four SBTs are prepared for one input port and three output ports. The constituent elements of the SBT (the input/output optical waveguide 11, the slab waveguide 12, and the array waveguide 13) are known ones described in the optical signal processing apparatus disclosed in JP 2017-219695 A and the optical signal processing apparatus disclosed in JP 2016-212128 A.
[0065] The optical signal input from each of the input ports Pi[1, 1] to Pi[1, 4] to the SBT[1] in the PLC 10 is emitted from the array waveguide 13 at a different angle for each j-series. The emitted optical signal is collected and reflected at different positions (WSS[1] to WSS[4]) of the LCOS element 22 that is a spatial light modulator via the lens 21, and is output to each of the output ports Po[1, 1] to Pi[3, 4] via SBT[2] to SBT[4]. That is, each optical signal can be regarded as input/output of an independent optical system.
[0066] Accordingly, the SBTs for the input/output ports of the WSS (one input +three outputs =four in total) are prepared, and the PLC 10 including the SBTs and the spatial optical system 20 can be shared by a plurality of j-series. That is, it can be expected that the initial introduction cost is suppressed, the power consumption is reduced, and the load on the control system is reduced as compared with the comparative example in which j modules are individually prepared.
[0067]
[0070] Similarly, elements E[1, n, x2] to E[1, n, x3] branched from the second output port of the w[1] are also aggregated into one separate multiple WSS 112.
[0071] Similarly, elements E[1, n, x4] to E[1, n, x5] branched from the (MD+1)th output port of the w[1] are also aggregated into one separate multiple WSS 113.
[0072] That is, the number of the multiple WSS is one in the first cascade stage, and the number of the multiple WSSs per stage is MD+1 in each of the second to n-th stages of the cascade. The multiple WSS connecting of the elements E is merely an aggregation closed within one degree, and the multiple WSS connecting of the elements E across a plurality of degrees is not performed.
[0073] With the configuration of
[0074]
[0078] The multiple WSS connecting of the elements E is merely an aggregation closed within one degree, and the multiple WSS connecting of the elements E across a plurality of degrees is not performed.
[0079] The configuration of
[0080] Hereinafter, the configuration of the comparative example to which the multiple WSS is not applied (
[0081] Hereinafter, the reliability of the module provided in the ROADM, that is, the tolerance of the module to failure will be described. In the configuration of the comparative example (
[0082] First, when a failure occurs in a module connected to a specific degree (for example, a failure of the element E[1, 2, 3]), the influence of the module failure can be avoided by setting such that an optical signal can pass through a detour path using another degree (for example, the element E[2, 2, 3] is used as a substitute).
[0083] Additionally, when a failure occurs in a module connected to a specific drop port (for example, a failure of the element E[1, 1, 1]), the influence of the module failure can be avoided by setting such that an optical signal can pass through a detour path using another drop port (for example, the element E[1, 1, 2] is used as a substitute).
[0084] The above is the effect on the reliability of the module in the configuration of the comparative example (
[0085] On the other hand, in the first example (
[0086] First, when a failure occurs in the module connected to a specific degree, the detour path using another degree can be set in the same manner as in the comparative example in both the first example and the second example of the present embodiment.
[0087] Additionally, when a failure occurs in the module connected to a specific drop port, in the second example of the present embodiment, a detour path using another degree can be set similarly to the comparative example.
[0088] Next, the signal deterioration of an optical signal flowing into the ROADM will be described. In general, increasing the integration of the multiple WSS reduces the number of modules. However, as a side effect of the increase, crosstalk between WSSs occurs between a plurality of optical signals of the same wavelength that pass through the SBT and the LCOS element 22 that are shared components, and the crosstalk is the main factor that deteriorates the signal characteristics.
[0089] However, in both the first example and second example of the present embodiment, in the MD+1 output ports connected from the wavelength cross-connect portion 1M WSS of each degree to the transponder accommodation function portion, there is no case where optical signals of the same wavelength are simultaneously input for the plurality of output ports.
[0090] As a result, it is possible to avoid the influence of signal deterioration due to the crosstalk between WSSs that is a problem when the multiple WSS is applied.
[0091] In the present embodiment, as the configuration of the ROADM (optical cross-connect apparatus) according to the present disclosure, as illustrated in
REFERENCE SIGNS LIST
[0092] 10 PLC
[0093] 11 Input/output optical waveguide
[0094] 12 Slab waveguide
[0095] 13 Array waveguide
[0096] 20 Spatial optical system
[0097] 21 Lens
[0098] 22 LCOS element