Data Communication - Multiplexing
Data Communication - Multiplexing
Chapter 8 Multiplexing
introduction
Multiplexing allows several users to share a high capacity data link to maximize link utilization. Common application of multiplexing is in long-haul communication trunks on long-haul networks are high-capacity fiber, coaxial, or microwave links . Need for multiplexing can be justified by: -the higher the data rate, the cost per kbps is less. -most data communicating devices require modest data rate support.
Multiplexing
FDM cont.
e.g. broadcast radio (AM, FM), cable TV, and long distant voiceband signals. Drawbacks of FDM: -Channel allocated even if no data to be transmitted. -crosstalk. -intermodulation noise.
FDM System
Supergroup
60 channel FDM of 5 group signals on carriers between 420kHz and 612 kHz
Mastergroup
10 supergroups
Commercial systems of 160 channels of 10 Gbps now available Laboratory systems (Alcatel) 256 channels at 39.8 Gbps each
10.1 Tbps Over 100km
WDM Operation
Same general architecture as other FDM Number of sources generating laser beams at different frequencies(wavelengths). Multiplexer consolidates sources for transmission over single fiber Optical amplifiers amplify all wavelengths
Typically tens of km apart
Demux separates channels at the destination Most WDM operate in the 1550nm wavelength range Was 200GHz per channel Now 50GHz per channel.
TDM System
Error control
Errors are detected and handled by individual channel systems
Framing
No flag or SYNC characters bracketing TDM frames Must provide frame synchronizing mechanism Added-digit framing
One control bit added to each TDM frame
Looks like another channel - control channel
Identifiable bit pattern used on control channel e.g. alternating 01010101unlikely on a data channel receiver compare incoming bit patterns on each channel with sync pattern to synchronize.
Pulse Stuffing
Problem - Synchronizing data sources Clocks in different sources drift cause loss of synchronization. Data rates from different sources not related by simple rational number Solution - Pulse Stuffing
Outgoing data rate (excluding framing bits) higher than sum of incoming rates Stuff extra dummy bits or pulses into each incoming signal until its rate matches the local clock Stuffed pulses inserted at fixed locations in frame and removed at demultiplexer
Mixed Data
DS-1 can carry mixed voice and data signals 24 channels used No sync byte Can also interleave DS-1 channels
Ds-2 is four DS-1 giving 6.312Mbps
SONET/SDH
Synchronous Optical Network (ANSI) Synchronous Digital Hierarchy (ITU-T) Compatible Signal Hierarchy
Synchronous Transport Signal level 1 (STS-1) or Optical Carrier level 1 (OC-1) 51.84Mbps Carry DS-3 or group of lower rate signals (DS1 DS1C DS2) plus ITU-T rates (e.g. 2.048Mbps) Multiple STS-1 combined into STS-N signal ITU-T lowest rate is 155.52Mbps (STM-1)
Statistical TDM
In Synchronous TDM many slots are wasted Statistical TDM allocates time slots dynamically based on demand Multiplexer scans input lines and collects data until frame full Data rate on line lower than aggregate rates of input lines
Performance
Output data rate less than aggregate input rates May cause problems during peak periods
Buffer inputs Keep buffer size to minimum to reduce delay
Upstream
User requests timeslots on shared upstream channel
Dedicated slots for this
ADSL Design
Asymmetric
Greater capacity downstream than upstream Perfect fit to internet requirement
Use echo cancellation or FDM to give two bands Use FDM within bands
Range 5.5km
Discrete Multitone
DMT Multiple carrier signals at different frequencies Some bits on each channel 4kHz subchannels Send test signal and use subchannels with better signal to noise ratio 256 downstream subchannels at 4kHz (60kbps)
15.36MHz Impairments bring this down to 1.5Mbps to 9Mbps
DMT Transmitter
xDSL
High data rate DSL Single line DSL Very high data rate DSL See Table 8.8