Leading U.S telecom operator Verizon and NEC Corporation of America jointly completed a field trial transmitting high bit-rate technologies, including 100G, 450G and 1T (1 terabit or 1000G), coexisting on the same fiber.
As we look to a future when data rates go beyond 100G, it’s important to begin examining how these technologies perform,”said Glenn Wellbrock, director of optical transport network architecture and design at Verizon, and an author of the paper. This trial gives us a good first step toward analyzing the capabilities of future technologies.”
The trial measured the quality of the signal for all channels as well as the intensity of the optical signal. The final determination resulted in the conclusion that these superchannels were able to carry higher capacities while improving spectral efficiency without sacrificing distance.
“NEC is committed to the introduction of ultra-high-speed optical DWDM systems and has an extensive history in achieving the most advanced research and development results in the optical networking area globally,” said Jim Nakajima, senior vice president at NEC. This joint effort with Verizon demonstrates our capability to introduce novel concepts, confirm their performance, and validate our long-term strategy to service the carrier marketplace with viable high-bandwidth solutions for optical networks.”
The two companies specifically focused on transmission performance over a significant fiber distance since previous experiments of this type have only been performed in a lab environment.
Verizon has led the industry in 100G technology since 2007, when the company successfully completed the industry’s first field trial of 100G optical traffic on a live system. The company continued to mark significant achievements through November 2010 when it deployed a 100G ultra-long-haul optical transmission system on the same European network route.
Recently,NECstrengthened its strategic operations in Latin America. The company opened its new regional headquarters in Latin America, as part of the strategy. This decision is part of an overall strategy of regionalization, which covers five main geographic areas outside of Japan; Asia-Pacific, China, EMEA (Europe -Middle East-Africa), North America and Latin America. NEC Latin America’s regional office is located in Sao Paulo, Brazil. The company selected Brazil to host its regional headquarters as it represents the region’s largest market and it is an emerging global power.