Abstract
In this paper, we investigate the performance of optical burst switched networks for erbium-doped fiber amplifiers (EDFAs) and semiconductor optical amplifiers (SOAs). We show that EDFAs are more suitable for burst switching as compared to SOAs. We further investigate the burst length for 18, 24.6 and 55 km optical switched network. It is observed that burst length should neither be very small nor very large. If the burst length is small, throughput will be less, and if the burst length is very large, delay will be very large. This is due to higher wait times incurred when packets are formed into larger bursts causing additional overall delay. It is observed that performance decreases up to a small burst length of 1500 μs, which is the minimum burst length required for the creation of the burst. Once this burst is created, there is significant improvement in the quality factor up to 3000 μs. After this burst length, the performance again degrades. Hence the burst length can be optimized for the best quality factor in optical burst switched networks. We further show that by increasing EDFA gain, the quality deteriorates as increasing the EDFA gain results in increased levels of additive phase noise, which can further induce nonlinearities.
Published Version
Talk to us
Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have