Paper
1 November 1996 Switch with large optical buffers (SLOB) for ATM traffic
David Kennedy Hunter
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
Recently, optical ATM switches, composed of optical switches, fiber delay lines and other devices, have been proposed by researchers world-wide as a way of overcoming the EMI, pinout and interconnection problems that would be encountered in future large electronic switch cores. Attaining the size of buffers in optical ATM fabrics that would be required in practice is a major problem; in this paper, an architectural solution is presented. A technique is introduced for cascading many small switches to form a bigger switch with a larger buffer depth. A special feature of this scheme is that the number of cascaded switches is proportional to the logarithm of the buffer depth, providing an economical and feasible hardware solution. Architectural concepts are discussed and justified mathematically, and an electronic control scheme is introduced. Cell loss and delay performance, and buffer dimensioning are considered. The performance in terms of crosstalk and noise will be covered in a companion paper. In conclusion, it is clear that optical switching elements, with a buffer depth of several hundred required for bursty traffic, can be constructed using fewer components than other schemes, and, by implication, better noise and crosstalk performance.
© (1996) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
David Kennedy Hunter "Switch with large optical buffers (SLOB) for ATM traffic", Proc. SPIE 2919, All-Optical Communication Systems: Architecture, Control, and Network Issues II, (1 November 1996); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.256351
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CITATIONS
Cited by 2 scholarly publications.
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KEYWORDS
Switches

Asynchronous transfer mode

Optical switching

Chemical elements

Control systems

Electromagnetic coupling

Optical components

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