INGR Roadmap
Paper in proceeding, 2022

Optical networks have long played a central role in telecommunication networks, forming the fiber backbone of the Internet. Over time fiber optic systems have evolved and found deployment increasingly closer to the network edge. Today, optical systems extend to the server network interface cards and home access networks. New application areas have emerged such as the use of free space communications using LiFi technologies, space communication networks between satellites and ground stations. Looking ahead, optical systems in many areas will continue to be driven by the need for higher speeds and capacity in order to keep up with traffic demands. In addition to faster interfaces speeds, parallel fiber or spatial division multiplexing will be used for future capacity growth. In several application areas, new functionality is expected such as low latency in Xhaul networks and optical switching and co-packaged optics in data centers. LiFi will become critical for mitigating RF interference for in-building networks. Intense research is underway to develop quantum networks to connect quantum computers. This general trend toward new functionalities for optical systems, moving beyond capacity growth in fiber networks, is driven in large part by the increasing performance and demands of today's user equipment and applications. From the network edge to the data centers, components are reliant on optics. The integration of optics into these new applications and the higher levels of functionality demanded of optics motivate the use of roadmaps to guide research and development and overcome future roadblocks.

quantum networks

LiFi

data center interconnect

data center networks

wavelength division multiplexing

spatial division multiplexing

co-packaged optics

Optical networks

Xhaul

space communications

Author

Dan Kilper

Trinity College Dublin

Thas A. Nirmalathas

University of Melbourne

Tom Hausken

Osa Conservation

Reza Vaez-Ghaemi

Viavis Solutions

Hwan Seok Chung

Electronics and Telecommunications Research Institute (ETRI)

Prakash Ramchandran

Cloud24×7

V. Jungnickel

Fraunhofer-Institut fur Nachrichtentechnik Heinrich-Hertz-Institut - HHI

Murat Yuksel

University of Central Florida

Surgey Ten

Corning Research and Development Corporation

Rudra Dutta

North Carolina State University

Paolo Monti

Chalmers, Electrical Engineering, Communication, Antennas and Optical Networks

Lena Wosinska

Chalmers, Electrical Engineering, Communication, Antennas and Optical Networks

Peter Andrekson

Chalmers, Microtechnology and Nanoscience (MC2), Photonics

S.V. Subramaniam

George Washington University

Ahsutosh Dutta

The Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory

K. R.S. Murthy

i3 World

Zuqing Zhu

University of Science and Technology of China

Brad Kloza

IEEE

Matthew Borst

IEEE

Haydar Cukurtepe

TED Üniversitesi

Rentao Gu

Beijing University of Posts and Telecommunications (BUPT)

Proceedings - 2022 IEEE Future Networks World Forum, FNWF 2022


9781665462501 (ISBN)

2022 IEEE Future Networks World Forum, FNWF 2022
Virtual, Online, Canada,

Subject Categories

Computer Engineering

Telecommunications

Communication Systems

DOI

10.1109/FNWF55208.2022.00140

More information

Latest update

4/26/2024