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Shawn, Re. 1) – the statements on flagship speeds apply really only to residential deployments. In terms of business services, there are no flagship speeds, and we deploy any data rates that make economic sense on the given platform. The evaluation of a breakpoint is typically done by comparing TCO for a P2P solution providing similar capacity, i.e., when it becomes cheaper to offer a specific number of Gbps to customer over dedicated fiber versus using shared medium. TCO in this case includes fiber cost, edge router cost, etc. to make sure that the comparison does make sense. From my perspective, the assumption in point 1) is false. The driver is to have ability to offer more than 25G in the future per customer, and that was the reason why we started looking at 50G and 100G options, meaning 50G and 100G MAC speeds, not aggregate for 4 independent channels. That is what was written into our objectives. Re 2) – there is a lot of speculation as to where tunable optics will go. It is reasonably well established in long haul transport today, but even there cost delta is still there, after all the years of development and the reasons for deployment are different than in access. For some reason there is an underlying assumption that we need to build 4x25G system, that looks and feels like NG-PON2. I do not know where it came from and I do not believe this is what we were discussing in SG phase. I would be concerned that proving the need for such a project and its unique market identify would be rather hard, given that NG-PON2 is in development. At this time, I would suggest we focus on delivering wat we set out to do: 25G system, 50G system, and 100G system – there are a lot of challenges without adding extra options to address undocumented requirements. Yes, we can bake in a lot of bells and whistles into this system, but the end goal is simple: low cost, scalable system, with typical Ethernet cost curve and reliability. We have a long way to cover in this project, and a lot of hurdles to come over, let’s not add to the already long list of technical challenges we need to address. Regards From: Shawn Esser [mailto:shawn.esser@xxxxxxxxxxx] Some more explanation based on questions raised by Marek: 1. “Some assumptions do not make sense to me, for example, limiting capacity per ONU to 25G. If that was the case, we’d be working on 25G x 4 system, and not on 25/50/100G system.” 2. “ I fail to see how 3.5x cost of optics [for wavelength-tunable 25G ONU] is better than 1.5x for fixed solution [for fixed-wavelength 25G ONU]” a. Moreover, I think the cost of wavelength-tunable 25G ONU (3.5X) needs to be compared with the cost of the 50G ONU (2.5X) and 100G ONU (5.5X). Individuals have stated that ONU’s with 50G and 100G capacity should be deployed in lieu of deploying 25G ONU’s at fixed wavelengths of λ1, λ2, λ3, even if the data service tier to the premise only need to be 25G or less. Only 1 set of optics would be active in the 50G and 100G ONU’s in this case. The argument is that OpEx is higher with 3 additional, different 25G ONU’s versus just using 50G ONU and/or 100G ONU even when only 25G ONU capacity is needed . Following this same reasoning, a wavelength-tunable 25G ONU would reduce part numbers thus reducing OpEx compared to 3 different fixed-wavelength 25G ONU’s. Also, a wavelength-tunable 25G ONU provides more flexibility than fixed-wavelength 25G ONU’s because a premise can be flexibly moved to another wavelength to manage bandwidth contention – this would provide further OpEx savings. A 100G ONU would have to be deployed to provide this same flexibility. b. With regards to 3.5X cost premium for wavelength-tunable optics, I just took this from Glen’s information. It is possible that the cost premium could be lower. I am aware of work going on that could substantially lower the costs of wavelength-tunable lasers – I don’t know if this is already baked into the forecasted 3.5X premium or not. Again, it is very hard to predict prices of optics in 5-10 years. Do we want to exclude wavelength-tunable options based on forecasts that are almost always wrong? Below is a decision tree that I created to try to move this forward. Some of the decisions can happen in parallel. Thanks,
From: Marek Hajduczenia [mailto:marek.hajduczenia@xxxxxxxxx] Francois, I am sure that we can draw different conclusions based on this deck, depending on discussion at the meeting. Some points made in Shaw’s presentation need further clarification. Some assumptions do not make sense to me, for example, limiting capacity per ONU to 25G. If that was the case, we’d be working on 25G x 4 system, and not on 25/50/100G system. We are not. Also, I fail to see how 3.5x cost of optics is better than 1.5x for fixed solution. This 2.5x times delta will be substantial, when looking at the past cost of ONU optics when it was coming into the market. Also, note that any reason for going with tunable optics becomes moot when we consider 50G systems: then the cost for tunable optics would be 7x higher and for fixed, it is 2.5 higher when compared with fixed single channel 25G system. The delta seems to grow quite steeply. I would suggest that we follow Shaw’s conclusion and try to settle on 25G single wavelength solution first, which will open opportunity to go and design other elements of the system (PCS, FEC, etc.). Regards From: Francois Menard [mailto:fmenard@xxxxxxxxxxx] Folks, Here is a summary of my analysis of Shaw’s presentation on 25G ONU options for increasing network capacity in 100G EPON: 1. There are 9 use cases based on capacity shared by 32 ONUs per PON: 2. - Use case 1 = 25G ONU with 0.8 Gbps Sustained Speeds per ONU 3. - Use case 2 = 25G ONU allowing 8.3 Gbps Flagship Speed on the PON 4. - Use case 3 = 25G ONU allowing 12.5 Gbps Billboard Speed on the PON 5. - Use case 4 = 50G ONU with 1.6 Gbps Sustained Speed per ONU 6. - Use case 5 = 50G ONU allowing 16.6 Gbps Flagship Speed on the PON 7. - Use case 6 = 50G ONU allowing 25 Gbps Billboard Speed on the PON 8. - Use case 7 = 100G ONU with 3.1 Gbps Sustained Speeds per ONU 9. - Use case 8 = 100G ONU allowing 33.3 Gbps Flagship Speed on PON 10. - Use case 9 = 100G ONU allowing 50 Gbps Billboard Speed on PON 11. There are four kinds of λ pairs: λ0, λ1, λ2, λ3 12. An O-band fixed channel for λ0 makes the most sense to achieve the lowest costs (less burst mode dispersion compensation to deal with at the OLT) & Laser costs at par with 10G EPON. 13. λ1, λ2 & λ3 should be DWDM in C-band and DWDM (to be in the contiguous tuning range of a Tunable DBR laser (limited to 10 nm)) 14. There are 7 kinds of ONUs Types A,B,C,D,E,F,G 15. - ONU Type A = 1X relative cost = 25G/λ0 (1 O-Band ch.) 16. - ONU Type B = 1.5X relative cost = 25G/λ1 (1 C-Band DWDM ch.) 17. - ONU Type C = 1.5X relative cost = 25G/λ2 (1 C-Band DWDM ch.) 18. - ONU Type D = 1.5X relative cost = 25G/λ3 (1 C-Band DWDM ch.) 19. - ONU Type E = 2.5X relative costs = 50G fixed on λ1..2 (Two C-Band DWDM ch.) 20. - ONU Type F = 3.5X relative costs = 25G Tunable in Tx & Rx across λ1..3 (1 Tuneable C-Band DWDM ch.) 21. - ONU Type G = 5.5X relative costs = 100G fixed on λ0..3 (1 O-Band + 3 C-Band DWDM ch.) 22. There are 3 options for network expansion all the way to 100 Gbps short of use cases 8 & 9: 1, 2A & 2B 23. - Option 1 uses ONU Types A, E ,G 24. - Option 2A uses ONU Types A, B, C, D 25. - Option 2B uses ONU types A & F 26. The relative costs for use cases 1 to 7 for each option are calculated as follows: 27. - Option 1 = 8*1X + 8*2.5X + 16*5.5X = 116X 28. - Option 2 = 8*1X + 8X 1.5X + 8*1.5X + 8*1.5X =44X 29. - Option 3 = 8*1X + 24 * 3.5X = 92X 30. The relative costs for use cases 8 & 9 are not calculated as depending on the number of ONUs servicing 33.3 Gbps Flagship or 50 Gbps Billboard Speeds on the PON From draw I propose to draw the following conclusions: 1. Use cases 4, 5, 6 & 7 associated with 50G & 100G ONUs can be accommodated by Type F ONUs 2. Type F ONUs avoid use of CWDM/DWDM Mux Demux inside ONU 3. Type F ONU can replace use of Type B,C,D ONUs 4. Type F ONUs can satisfy Use Cases 1 to 7 Shaw’s presentation supports my postulate. Should the relative costs of the Type F ONU be reduced from 3.5X to become that of a Type B, C or D ONU, i.e. 1.5X, then the relative costs of Option 2B becomes 8*1X + 25*1.5X = 44X, which is same as 2A. Another option would be 2B’ based on 32 * 1.5X = 48X with the number of ONU types being reduced to 1, should λ0 is be the same tuning range as λ1..3. Since Option 2A with a relative cost of 44X requires four kinds of ONUs, its deployment OpEx will be much greater than option 2B or 2B’. Therefore I offer the following proposal which may accommodate the best of both worlds. Having a low cost λ0 at part with 10G EPON, along with that of accommodating the use case of allowing Type F ONUs to be used on λ0, thus allowing all users with Type F ONUs to make use of 100% of the capacity of the 100G E-PON. Further, a low cost Type E ONU which may be able to be manufactured with two instances of a Type F ONUs and a Type G ONU may be able to be manufactured with four instances of a Type F ONU. Further, should the number of channels be greater than 4, the ability to re-use multiple instances of Type F ONUs for channel bonding will make sense. Furthermore, should there be more than one instance of 100G EPON on two sets of 4 channels on the same PON, ONUs based on Type F components tunable across all instances of 100G EPON will allow the same ONU to roam across all instances of 100G EPON. The proposal is to accomodate at least a a fifth channel λ4 on top of λ0..3, only applicable in the direction of the ONU to the OLT. This 5th channel would not need to exist in the direction of the OLT to the ONU, as the OLT will not need tunable transceiver like in NG-PON2. Further, unlike NG-PON2, in NG-EPON, it is not yet anticipated that an external wavelength multiplexer would be utilized and rather, it seems to be expected that any increase in speed on the PON will require swapping out the OLT transceiver with a single 25 channel pair with one with two or four instances of 25G channel pairs and that the OLT transceiver will include an integrated Mux/Demux. NG-PON2 allows for an external mux/demux with individual 10G channels coming from different OLT ports. The reason why the 5th channel will not be required in the direction of the OLT to the ONU, is that I expect the 1.5X relative cost of Type F ONU to remain exactly the same for an ONU capable of Tunable Rx across λ0..4 versus that of λ1..3, given the use of discrete tunable filters in front of a single instance of a wideband avalanche photodetector. This is unlike the case of a III-V gain chip, which is limited in its gain range with the laws of physics defying the possibility of covering O-band and C-band with a single III-V chip instance. The use case I fear is that of having to implement λ0 inside a Type G ONU requiring to include an O-Band as well as a C-Band transmitter in the same ONU, which would not make sense from the perspective of a photonics integrated circuit design, as well as would nullifying the benefits of allowing NG-EPON to evolve its tuning range beyond that of four channels. CONCLUSION: Thanks to Shawn for putting together this nice relative cost framework fulfilling IEEE’ policy for openly discussing about the costs of implementing standards. I have used it to show how the relative costs for Option 2B (44X) could become at par with that of Option 2A (44X). I have also show how the marginally higher relative cost of Option 2B’ (48X) (if λ0 is in the same tuning range as λ1..3) would evidently have a lower OpEx for operators than Option 2A (as only 1 kind of 25G ONU would be needed in Option 2B’ versus that of four kinds of ONUs in Option 2A). I have used the framework to demonstrates that a single kind of Type F ONU could cover 7 out of the 9 use cases of 100G EPON. Since the deployment of 100G EPON is years away, users of 100G EPON will be disadvantage once Type F ONUs become available at a 1.5X relative cost over that of Type A ONUs, should 100G EPON not accommodate use of Tunable ONUs. -=Francois=- -- Francois Menard AEPONYX inc. Cell: +1 (819) 609-1394 From: Shawn Esser <shawn.esser@xxxxxxxxxxx>
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