08 FTTH Merged
08 FTTH Merged
Remote Terminal
Optical Network Terminal
Central Office Optical Line Terminal
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What is Telecommunication?
• Is communication at a distance
through electrical signal, or
electromagnetic waves.
It includes
• Mechanical communication
• Electrical communication
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Historical Perspective
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Wireless & Wire communication
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Wireless networks
Wireless transmission method
• Logical choice to network a LAN segment
.
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Advantages
• To span a distance beyond the capabilities
of typical cabling,
• To provide a backup communications
• To link portable or temporary workstations
• To overcome situations where normal cabling
is difficult or financially impractical
• To remotely connect mobile users or networks
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Applications of wireless technology 7
Mobile telephones
Wireless energy transfer
Wireless Medical Technologies
Computer interface devices
Wireless data communications
Wi-Fi
Cellular data service
GSM ,CDMA (Code Division Multiple
Access),GPRS (General Packet Radio
Service) 3G networks (W-CDMA,
EDGE)
Mobile Satellite Communications
Evolution of Telecommunication 8
Technology
Mobile radio telephone (also known as "0G")
Mobile broadband
1G
2G
3G
4G
5G
LTE (telecommunication)
Mobile radio telephone (also known as "0G")
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Mobile broadband
• Mobile phones.
• Mobile Internet.
• PC cards (PC data cards) and Express cards
• USB
• Mobile broadband modems
• Mobile broadband,
• laptop computers, net book computers
• Smart phones, iPads, PDAs
• Mobile Internet devices
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ADSL
Minimum
point of
entry
CABLE TV NETWORKS
The cable TV network started as a video service provider, but it has moved to the
business of Internet access.
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5. CABLE TV NETWORKS
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Cable companies are now competing with telephone companies for the residential
Customer who wants high-speed data transfer. In this section, we briefly discuss this
technology
1. Bandwidth
2. Sharing.
3. CM and CMTS
4. Data Transmission Schèmes: Data Over Cable System Interface Specification
(DOCSIS).
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CABLE TV FOR DATA TRANSFER
(1) Bandwidth:
In an HFC system, the last part of the network, from the fiber node to the
subscriber premises, is still a coaxial cable.
This coaxial cable has a bandwidth that ranges from 5 to750 MHz(approx)
To provide Internet access, the cable company has divided this bandwidth
into three bands:
(1). Video (2) .Downstream data (3).Upstream data bands.
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CABLE TV FOR DATA TRANSFER(cont’d…)
Upstream Data Band:
It occupies the lower band, from 5 to 42 MHz.
This band is also divided into 6-MHz channels.
The upstream data band uses lower frequencies that are more
susceptible to noise and interference. For this reason, the QAM technique
is not suitable for this band. A better solution is QPSK.
Upstream data are modulated using the QPSK modulation technique.
Data Rate There are 2 bits baud in QPSK. The standard specifies 1 Hz/baud;
theoretically, upstream data can be sent at 12 Mbps (2 bits/Hz x 6 MHz).
However, practically the data rate is usually less than 12 Mbps.
The theoretical upstream data rate is 12 Mbps.
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CABLE TV FOR DATA TRANSFER(cont’d…)
(2) Sharing
Both upstream and downstream bands are shared by the subscribers.
Upstream Sharing
The upstream data bandwidth is 37 MHz. This means that there are only six 6-MHz
channels available in the upstream direction.
A subscriber needs to use one channel to send data in the upstream direction.
Downstream Sharing
The downstream band has 33 channels of 6 MHz. A cable provider probably has
more than 33 subscribers; therefore, each channel must be shared between a
group of subscribers
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CABLE TV FOR DATA TRANSFER(cont’d…)
(3) CM and CMTS
To use a cable network for data transmission, need two key devices:
Cable Modem(CM)
Cable Modem Transmission System (CMTS).
1. The cable modem (CM): It is installed on the subscriber premises.
It is similar to an ADSL modem.
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CABLE TV FOR DATA TRANSFER(cont’d…)
2. Cable Modem Transmission System(CMTS)
The cable modem transmission system (CMTS) is installed inside the distribution hub by the
cable company.
It receives data from the Internet and passes them to the combiner, which sends them to the
subscriber.
The CMTS also receives data from the subscriber and passes them to the Internet.
Figure below shows the location of the CMTS.
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CABLE TV FOR DATA TRANSFER(cont’d…)
Multimedia Cable Network Systems (MCNS) designed to create a standard for data
transmission over an HFC network called “Data Over Cable System Interface
Specification “(DOCSIS).
DOCSIS defines all the protocols necessary to transport data from a CMTS to a CM
Upstream Communication
Downstream Communication
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Cable Modem Basics
Cable TV (CATV) Network serves as the Internet Service
Provider (ISP)
Cable Modem modulates/transmits and
demodulates/receives to/from a CATV channel
Downstream: data received at the modem is
communicated to one or more PCs on a LAN via
Ethernet, USB, PCI Bus, etc.
Upstream: data requests from the PC are transmitted
through the modem to the CATV network via coaxial
cable, phone line or wireless.
CATV data service interfaces to the Internet via Cable
Modem Termination System (CMTS )
Cable Modem Network Overview
Headend: DOCSIS-certified CMTS (Cable Modem Termination System)
One Headend supports @ 2000 Cable Modem Users on a single TV Channel
CMTS interfaces the CATV network to the Internet
CMTS output channel combined with TV video signals
CATV Network to Subscriber via coaxial cable
One-to-Two splitter: One signal to Set Top Box (STB), other to Cable Modem
Cable Modem
One Modem can support up to 16 users in a local-area network
PC/Ethernet Card
Cable Modem connected to PC via ethernet, USB, PCI Bus, etc
Cable Modem Architecture
Transmit/Upstream
QPSK/QAM Modulator performs:
QPSK/QAM-16 modulation
Reed-Solomon Encoding
D/A Conversion
Up-conversion to the selected
frequency/channel
Receive/Downstream
RF Tuner
Converts TV Channel to a fixed lower
frequency (6-40MHz)
QAM Demodulator performs:
A/D conversion
QAM-64/256 demodulation
MPEG frame synchronization
Error Correction (Reed-Solomon)
MAC - Media Access Control
Implemented partially in hardware and
software
Data and Control Logic
Tunable Bandpass Filter
Low Pass Filter BB Base Band
Receive Path
Diplex Filter – splits/combines bands for 2-way capability on CATV systems
Tuner – isolates TV channel and mixes it down to Analog IF (6-40MHz)
Analog to Digital Conversion
Decimation Filters to down-sample to the symbol rate
QAM Demodulator
MPEG Frame synchronization
Automatic Gain Control (AGC)
Equalizer – removes distortions, and cancels echoes or multi-path conditions
Carrier Removal
Automatic Frequency Control (AFC)
QAM Demodulator
TUNER
Diplex Analog RF Analog IF Decimate Dig BB
Tunable ADC QAM
Filter LNA VGA LPF to Symbol
Demodulation
BPF Rate
(Internal or
Fixed
External to Variable Freq
Modem) Freq
64-QAM 256-QAM
6 MHz 31.2 Mbps 41.6 Mbps
8 MHz 41.4 Mbps 55.2 Mbps
* Symbol rate listed under Modulation does not compensate for error correction and other overhead
** Data rates listed in the table use a symbol rate of 6.9 Msym/s for 8MHz BW and 5.2Msym/s for 6MHz BW
Finite Impulse
Reponse Numerically Controlled
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Introduction
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OSI Model's 7 Layers
Application to Application
APPLICATION APPLICATION
Application to Application
PRESENTATION PRESENTATION
Application to Application
SESSION SESSION
Hop to Hop
DATA LINK Switch DATA LINK
Hop to Hop
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Host and Media Layer
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Data, Protocol & Activities
OSI Layers TCP/IP Suit Activities
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Physical Layer
From data link layer To data link layer
Transmission medium
One of the major function of the physical layer is to move data in the form of electromagnetic signals
across a transmission medium.
Its responsible for movements of individual bits from one hop (Node) to next.
Both data and the signals can be either analog or digital.
Transmission media work by conducting energy along a physical path which can be wired or wireless
Concerned:
Physical characteristics of interface and medium (Transmission medium)
Representation of bits (stream of bits (0s or 1s) with no interpretation and encoded into signals)
Data rate (duration of a bit, which is how long it last)
Synchronization of bits (sender and receivers clock must be synchronized)
Line configuration (Point-to-Point, Point-to-Multipoint)
Physical topology
Transmission mode (Simplex, half duplex, full duplex)
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Data Link Layer (Host to Host)
From network layer To network layer
Data link layer is responsible for moving frames from one hop (Node) to the next.
Concerned:
Framing (stream of bits into manageable data units)
Physical addressing (MAC Address)
Flow Control (mechanism for overwhelming the receiver)
Error Control (trailer, retransmission)
Access Control (defining master device in the same link)
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Network Layer (Source to Destination)
From transport layer To transport layer
The network layer is responsible for the delivery of individual packets from the source
host to the destination host.
Concerned:
Logical addressing (IP Address)
Routing (Source to destination transmission between networks)
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Transport Layer (Process to Process)
From session layer From session layer
Segments Segments
The transport layer is responsible for the delivery of a message from one process to
another
Concerned:
Service-point addressing (Port address)
Segmentation and reassembly (Sequence number)
Connection control (Connectionless or connection oriented)
Flow control (end to end)
Error Control (Process to Process)
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Session Layer (Dialog initiation)
From Presentation layer To Presentation layer
Concerned:
Dialog Control (Half Duplex/Full duplex)
Synchronization (Synchronization points, process inline within same page)
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Presentation Layer (dependency)
From application layer To application layer
Concerned:
Translation (interoperability between different encoding system)
Encryption (Privacy schemes)
Compression (data compression)
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Application Layer (user level service)
USER USER
(Human or Program) (Human or Program)
Application layer
Application layer
Concerned:
Network virtual terminal (Software)
File transfer, access and management
Mail services
Directory services (access to distributed database sources for global information about various objects
and services)
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