Design and Implementation of A Fiber To The Home FTTH Access Network Based On GPON
Design and Implementation of A Fiber To The Home FTTH Access Network Based On GPON
Design and Implementation of A Fiber To The Home FTTH Access Network Based On GPON
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Mahmoud Al-Quzwini
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Mahmoud M. Al-Quzwini
College of Engineering, Al-Nahrain University, Baghdad, Iraq
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International Journal of Computer Applications (0975 – 8887)
Volume 92 – No.6, April 2014
high reliability
In addition to this section, the paper is organized as follows:
section 2 introduces an explanation to the basic components support network survivability and protection policy
of a GPON FTTH access network, section three presents the
general architecture of these networks, section four discusses 2.3 Optical Network Terminal ONT
issues related to the traffic rates and flow mechanism, it also Optical Network Terminals (ONTs) are deployed at
explains in details the idea of type B protection used in GPON customer’s premises. ONTs are connected to the OLT by
FTTH access networks, section five charts the design steps means of optical fiber and no active elements are present in
and present the designed feeder network and part of the the link.
distribution network, the terminology used in addressing each
part in the network is clarified in this section as well, section In GPON the transceiver in the ONT is the physical
six discusses the procedure to validate the design of the connection between the customer premises and the central
network, section seven summarizes the implementation steps office OLT. WDM triplexer module separates the three
and finally section eight wraps up the paper with the wavelengths 1310nm, 1490nm and 1550nm (for CATV
important conclusions. service). ONT receives data at 1490nm and sends burst traffic
at 1310nm. Analogue video at 1550nm is received. Media
2. COMPONENTS OF GPON FTTH Access Controller (MAC) controls the upstream burst mode
traffic in an orderly manner and ensures that no collision
ACCESS NETWORK occur due to upstream data transmission from different homes
A passive optical network (PON) is a point-to-multipoint, [29]
shared optical fiber to the premises network architecture in
which unpowered optical splitters are used to enable a single They are fiber to copper media converters that offer RJ11,
optical fiber to serve multiple premises, typically 64–128. RJ45, and F-Series connectors to any device. These devices
passive optical networks are typically passive, in the sense are available in many configurations and port densities up to
that they employ a simple passive optical splitter and 24 ports. ONTs are available for outdoor and indoor use,
combiner for data transport. A PON takes advantage of provide POE or no POE, 10/100/1000, AES encryption, and
wavelength division multiplexing (WDM), using one can include batteries for survivability in the event of a power
wavelength for downstream traffic and another for upstream outage.
traffic on a single Non-zero dispersion-shifted fiber (ITU-T
GPON uses Dynamic Bandwidth Allocation that is it
G.652).
dynamically allocates the bandwidth depending on the
2.1 Optical Line Terminal OLT number of packets available in the T-CONT. Once the OLT
The Optical Line Terminal (OLT) is the main element of the reads the number of packets waiting in T-CONT it assigns the
network and it is usually placed in the Local Exchange and bandwidth. If there are no packets waiting in the T-CONT,
it’s the engine that drives FTTH system [29]. The most then OLT assigns the bandwidth to other T-CONT which
important functions that OLT perform are traffic scheduling, have packets waiting in T-CONT. If an ONT has a long queue
buffer control and bandwidth allocation [28]. OLTs typically OLT can assign multiple T-CONTS to that ONT [32].
operate using redundant DC power (-48VDC) and have at
least 1 Line card for incoming internet, 1 System Card for on-
3. GPON FTTH ACCESS NETWORK
board configuration, and 1 to many GPON cards. Each GPON ARCHITECTURE
card consists of a number of GPON ports. GPON’s have a tree topology in order to maximize their
coverage with minimum network splits, thus reducing optical
2.2 Optical Splitters power [3]. An FTTH access network comprises five areas,
The optical splitter splits the power of the signal. that is each namely a core network area, a central office area, a feeder
link (fiber) entering the splitter may be split into a given area, a distribution area and a user area as shown Figure 1. In
number of fibers leaving the splitter and there is usually three [10] the core network area is not considered as a part of the
or more levels of fibers corresponding to two or more levels FTTH access network. The network architecture adopted by
of splitters. This enables sharing of each fiber by many users. this paper is to use two level of splitting between the central
Due to power splitting the signal gets attenuated but its office and the user premises achieving an overall splitting
structure and properties remain the same. The passive optical ratio of 1:64. Level one splitter is 2:4 where the digit 2 comes
splitter need to have the following characteristics [29]: from type B protection to be explained in section 4. The
broad operating wavelength range distance between the OLT and ONT may be more than 20 km
depending on the total available optical power budget, which
low insertion loss and uniformity in any conditions is a factor of the OLT laser port and the total loss budget [29].
minimal dimensions
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International Journal of Computer Applications (0975 – 8887)
Volume 92 – No.6, April 2014
Outside
Outside Plant
Plant OSP
OSP
Core
Core Network
Network Central
Central Office
Office Distribution
Distribution Customer
Customer
Feeder
Feeder Network
Network Network
Network Premises
Premises
ONT-
1
bllee
p CCaab
FDT-1 DDrroop
2:4 1:16
GPON LT(1)
FAT-1
FAT-1
Voice
Voice Core
Core ONT-
Network
Network 16
OLT
FDT-2 1:16
2:4
FAT-2
FAT-2
Data
Data Core
Core
Network
Network
GPON LT(M) 1:16
FDT-N
2:4 FAT-3
FAT-3
ONT-
49
1:16
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International Journal of Computer Applications (0975 – 8887)
Volume 92 – No.6, April 2014
FDT-1 FDT-1
2:4 2:4
GPON LT(1) GPON LT(1)
OLT
OLT
FDT-2 FDT-2
2:4 2:4
Link Failure
FDT-N FDT-N
2:4 2:4
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International Journal of Computer Applications (0975 – 8887)
Volume 92 – No.6, April 2014
FDT-2 that each GPON port can serve a total of 64 users. A bottom-
2:4 top approach is used to determine the required number of
GPON ports. By simple math, we can see that 16 GPON ports
with 64 split ratio are quite enough to serve 1000 users. This
GPON LT(M) statement is true for FTTH networks where the locations are
FDT-N geographically located close to each other and the number of
2:4 users distributed evenly among locations, which is not our
case. Due to the constraints of our network, the number of
required ports will be calculated depending on the number of
FATs. According to the 64 splitting ratio, each GPON port
can serve a total of 4 FATs as each FAT contain 1:16 splitter,
then 48 GPON ports are required to serve the 185 FATs.
Another bunch of redundant 48 GPON ports is used to
provide type-B protection. The total number of OLT GPON
cards used by the design will be 12, with 6 cards in each
Fig. 4 Type B protection in GPON FTTH access network, direction. 6 FDTs are used to hold level-1 splitters with each
the OLT sends and receives traffic through the standby FDT hold 8 splitters. As a result each FDT will be connected
GPON ports to overcome GPON-port failure to one OLT card using 8 Fibers from one direction and to the
backup card using 8 fibers from the other direction as shown
5. DESIGN OF THE GPON FTTH in Figure 6. Two feeder rings are used, the first feeder
consists 12 fibers among which 8 are connected to the 8 level-
ACCESS NETWORK 1 splitters inside FDT-3. The second feeder forms the second
The Design of an FTTH access network is challenging one; it ring connecting the other 5 FDTs. The extra 4 and 32 fibers,
needs to compromise different factors including size, cost, and in the first and second feeders respectively, are reserved for
scalability. There is no standard FTTH access network model future expansion or maintenance.
as the viability of access networks strongly depends on the Figures 7 and 8 show the distribution network connected to
subscriber density (subscribers per km2) and on settlement FDT-3 and FDT-4 respectively, due to space limitation the
structures, thus the modeling has to rely upon a concrete other distribution networks will not be presented, however the
settlement structure, a given country, and the results derived design procedure discussed above is followed in the design of
depend on that country [18]. all distribution networks of the project . The legend presented
To design the Outside Plant OSP, Desk top planning does not in Figure 7 applies equally in Figure 8. Three distribution
work, each root is surveyed physically and then planned fiber cables connected to FDT-3, namely 3/1, 3/2, and 3/3.
accordingly using knowledge and experience. International The circles in the figures refer to splicing closures. The
standards cannot be applied as each country has its own number inside the circle refers to the FDT/closure numbers,
unique underground factors. Ground thermal line or freeze for example, 4/1 refers to the first closure in FDT-4. The
line should be considered to identify the point in the FATs are presented as ellipses in the design, the number
underground where the temperature of the surrounding soil inside each ellipse indicates the FAT address. The
remains constant (not freezing nor overheating) thus allowing terminology adopted with FATs is to use 4 digit numbering.
for a constant temperature for the FO cable to lay in. Another The first digit from the left refers to the FDT code, the second
important factor that should be addressed is to decide the digit refers to the distribution cable sequence number and the
depth and the type of the backfill material necessary to reduce last two digits refer to the sequence number of the fiber strand
the ground vibration effects. used to connect that FAT. This terminology applies equally to
distribution networks connected all other FDTs. For example,
in Figure 5, FAT number 4121 is an FAT in the first
Figure (5) summarizes the sequence of steps involved in the
distribution cable of FDT-4, and connected to the 21th fiber
design of the FTTH access network in discussion. In reference
strand of that distribution cable. This terminology makes the
to Figure 1, the design starts with the customer premises,
design, implementation management, reporting and future
moving backward until reaching the central office in a
expansion easier. Two symbols are used for the FATs, the
bottom-up approach. The network particularly considered in
semicircle refers to FAT which only hold level-2 splitter,
this paper is required to provide service (voice and data) to a
while the semicircle over a triangle refers to an FAT which
total of 1000 users in 238 locations. According to the
holds level-2 splitter and provide splicing-closure function as
geographical separation of these locations and the number of
well. The lines refer to FO cables paths. The length of each
users per individual location, 185 FATs are used to connect
path, in
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International Journal of Computer Applications (0975 – 8887)
Volume 92 – No.6, April 2014
Site Survey
FDT-3
FDT-6
Mapping 12-FO
of OLT
locations
into GIS 72-FO
map
FDT-2
Out Side Plant
OSP Design
(feeder and
distrbution) FDT-5
FDT-4
Is the design No Fig. 6 The feeder part of the GPON FTTH access network
valid ?
meters, is shown in the figures. The black lines represent
Yes trench paths, the red lines indicate areal paths, and the green
lines refer to situations where electrical poles are used to carry
distribution cables.
Determination of
Active
Determination of
the requird civil
Determination of
passive
6. DESIGN VALIDATION
components work components In order to assess the feasibility of the proposed design of the
(number of (FDTs, FATs, FTTH network and that each user in the network can receive
GPON ports and spliters, closures, adequate power , the total optical power loss between the
ONTS) FO cable length)
GPON port of the OLT and that of the ONT should be
considered. This loss can be summarized by the following
Total Cost
equation:
Calculation
𝑙𝑜𝑠𝑠 = 𝑙𝑐𝑎𝑏𝑙𝑒 + 𝑙𝑠𝑝𝑙𝑖𝑡𝑡𝑒𝑟 + 𝑙𝑠𝑝𝑙𝑖𝑐𝑒 + 𝑙𝑐𝑜𝑛𝑛𝑒 𝑐𝑡𝑜𝑟 (1)
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International Journal of Computer Applications (0975 – 8887)
Volume 92 – No.6, April 2014
Table 2. Parameters contributing to the optical power loss in GPON FTTH access networks
Parameter Description Value
𝑙𝑐𝑎𝑏𝑙𝑒 Account for the loss in optical signal power as it traverse the fiber cable, it is 0.21 dB/km
measured in dB/km. OTDR is used to measure the exact value of this parameter.
𝑙𝑠𝑝𝑙𝑖𝑡𝑡𝑒𝑟 Refers to splitter insertion loss, it varies according to the splitting ratio. The 8 dB for level-1 splitter.
values of used for this parameter are obtained from datasheets of the 14 dB for level-2 splitter
corresponding splitter.
𝑙𝑠𝑝𝑙𝑖𝑐𝑒 Represent the loss introduced due to splicing; it is measured by the fusion splice 0.003 dB
machine. The value shown represent the maximum loss obtained
𝑙𝑐𝑜𝑛𝑛𝑒𝑐𝑡𝑜𝑟 Manifests the loss introduced by connectors coupling. 0.2 dB
3312
3309
3314
297
1-FO
05
1-FO 33
3308
3311
1033
3/8
1-FO
540
33
04
233 3307
1-
32
O
FO
2-F
4
180
150
1-FO 3310
114
3313
830
3/11 O 3/7
4-F
0
86
3315 1-FO
1-
FO
0
135 3/6 76
2-FO
400
1-FO
2-FO
20
40
7-FO
2-FO
1-FO
03
06
33
33
866 1154
3316
14
1-FO 2-FO 4-FO 7-FO
-F
36
O
1
7855 O 3/4
1 -F
3302
271
FO
2-
1215
Legend 3317
3301
18-FO
3318
FDT
3/3
2020
Closure 3/1
3101
1-FO
FDT-3
4116 FAT 20
13-FO
3/2
4117
150
FAT (Join)
1-FO
3201
3/1
Trench Path 123
12-FO
165
960 360
Poles Path
5-FO 2-FO
3203
3/2
Electricity Path
5-FO
3204
3209 3202
71
3211
3213
3205
1-FO 2-FO
3/3
380
2820
3206
1-FO
97
3210
240
3212
3027
3208
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International Journal of Computer Applications (0975 – 8887)
Volume 92 – No.6, April 2014
255
4201
4/2
90 6-FO
4/3
4202
1-FO
4203
FDT-4
4301
24-FO
4/1
4102 4124
655
4101
545
4204
568
110
4103
4120 4119
1-FO
4205
4206
20-FO
4123
84
3-FO
1-FO 1-FO
684
4105
4106
490
4118
18-FO
4108
4107
220 13
4/7
41 6-FO 1-FO
300
4109
1-F
O
11
4117
12-FO
38
4/2 4/3
355
2-FO
1-FO
11
4111
561
-FO
4110
1366
4/4
4112 8-FO
602
3-F
O
14
41
16
25
1-F
O
4/5
18
57
2-F
O
50
4/6
O
1-F
1-F
15
O
41
16
41
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International Journal of Computer Applications (0975 – 8887)
Volume 92 – No.6, April 2014
8. CONCLUSIONS
This paper presented a detailed design and implementation of
a type B protected GPON based FTTH access network In order to assess the validity of the design, the optical power
serving 1000 users, it adopted engineering approach to budgets is calculated for remote locations, and the results
emphasize practical aspects and field experience. The design showed that the highest power loss was -23.196 dB which is
procedure followed a bottom top approach, in which the size well below the upper limit. The implementation steps and
of the network and its components is defined after analyzing testing procedures are discussed, these steps are summarized
the requirements, the number of locations, the geographical in an implementation chart. The adoption of the procedure
separation and the available infrastructure. OSP design presented in this paper has saved a lot of efforts, cost and it
should be based on the physical survey of each root, desk top has speeded up project commission.
design causes wasting of a lot of time and cost when some
roots needs to be redesigned to fit with the physical
environments or to avoid certain obstacle.
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International Journal of Computer Applications (0975 – 8887)
Volume 92 – No.6, April 2014
Civil work
1-Treanching
2- Poles Deployment Yes
Fault? Fault location
FDTs No
Deployment
Yes Yes
Fault? Fault location Fault? Fault location
No
No
Indoor drop cables
FDT splicing deployment and
(level-1 sipltter) splicing between TB
and ATB
Yes Yes
Fault? Fault location Fault? Fault location
No
FATs ATB-to-ONT
Deployment batchcording
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International Journal of Computer Applications (0975 – 8887)
Volume 92 – No.6, April 2014
PVC pipe
HDPE duct
Fig. 13 Level-1 splitter inside the FDT Fig. 14 FDT splicing brackets
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International Journal of Computer Applications (0975 – 8887)
Volume 92 – No.6, April 2014
Fig. 18 level-2 splitter inside the FAT Fig. 19 Pole mounted FAT
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International Journal of Computer Applications (0975 – 8887)
Volume 92 – No.6, April 2014
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IJCATM : www.ijcaonline.org 42