PSTN and ISDN
PSTN and ISDN
PSTN and ISDN
Telephone Network
(PSTN)
GROUP 2:
NGUON LEANGSIM, OTDOM SOURSDEY, PHAN CHIVON,
PHEAV PANHA, PROM CHAN MONY, SANN SEYHA, LAURA FROUIN
Content
1. Introduction
2. Evolution of PSTN (Circuit switching vs Packet
switching)
3. Structure of PSTN
4. Digital hierarchies (PDH E1 and T1, SONET, SDH)
5. Medium sharing
6. Exchanges
Introduction
PSTN (Public Switched Telephone Network) also known as
the plain old telephone system (POTS) is basically the inter-
connected telephone system over which telephone calls
are made via copper wires.
PSTN is based on the principles of circuit switching
Therefore when a call is made a particular dedicated
circuit activates which eventually deactivates when the
call ends
Telephone calls transmits as analogue signals across
copper wires
PSTN Architecture
Evolution of PSTN
Inception
1876: Invention of the first telephone by sir
Alexander Graham Bell
Telephones were sold in pairs and the
customers were supposed to lay out there
own cables
Connectivity type – point to point
connections
Network structure – mesh topology
28th January 1878 – Worlds’ first telephone
exchange was established at New - Haven
in Connecticut in the USA
Network structure – star topology
Switching technique – manual switching
Intermediate
1887 – Almon Brown Strowger invented the
first electromechanical switch, known as
the Strowger switch or step by step switch
1920’s – Rotary dial telephones enters
service
1935 – Crossbar switches were introduced
1950 – Time Division Multiplexing (TDM) is
introduced
1960s – touch tone pad phones were
introduced
1968 – stored program control switching
was introduces
Present
In today’s PSTN, call routing from
source to destination is
predominantly controlled by
digital switches that were
introduced in the 1970’s
Apart from voice
communications, data
communications are also
provided via the PSTN at present.
Structure of PSTN
National publish switched
telecommunication network
Local network: connects customers station to their local exchanges
Junction network: interconnects a group of local exchanges serving
an area and a tendem or trunk exchange.
The trunk network or toll network: provides long-distance circuits
between local areas throughout the country.
Tendem exchange means the sequences of trunks that exchange the
route of one line (customer or subscriber) to other line from local
exchange to regional exchange to national exchange and last one is
international exchange.
Digital hierarchies
In digital multiplexing several message are transmitted
via same physical channel. For multiplexing 64 kbit/s
channels in digital exchanges following three methods
are available
PDH (plesiochronous digital hierarchy) is the multiplex
group of 24 or 30 channels which used to build block for
larger number of channels in higher-order multiplex
systems. (European PDH and North America PDH)
SONET (synchronous optical network)
SDH (synchronous digital hierarchy)
European plesiochronous digital
hierarchy
These system all use bit interleaving. The frame length is the same as for the primary
multiplex, i.e. 125 µs since determined by the basic channel sampling rate of 8 kHz.
European PCM frame = 32 time slots x 8bits x 8000 Hz = 2048 kbit/s
E1 = 2048 Mbps (30 channels)
E2 = 8448 Mbps (120 channels)
E3 = 34,368 Mbps (480 channels)
E4 = 139,264 Mbps (1920 channels)
North American plesiochronous
digital hierarchy