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Copper wire shown to be competitive with fiber optic cable for
LANS December 8, 2003
Penn State engineers have
developed and simulation tested a copper wire transmission scheme for
distributing a broadband signal over local area networks (LANS) with a
lower average bit error rate than fiber optic cable that is 10 times more
expensive.
Dr. Mohsen Kavehrad, the W. L. Weiss professor of
electrical engineering and director of the Center for Information and
Communications Technology Research who led the study, says, "Using copper
wire is much cheaper than fiber optic cable and, often, the wire is
already in place. Our approach can improve the capability of existing
local area networks and shows that copper is a competitor for new
installations in the niche LAN market."
Kavehrad presented the
Penn State team's results in a paper, 10Gbps Transmission over Standard
Category-5, 5E, 6 Copper Cables, at the IEEE GLOBCOM Conference in San
Francisco, Calif., Thursday, Dec. 4. His co-authors are Dr. John F.
Doherty, associate professor of electrical engineering, Jun Ho Jeong,
doctoral candidate in electrical engineering, Arnab Roy, a master's
candidate in electrical engineering, and Gaurav Malhotra, a master's
candidate in electrical engineering.
The Penn State approach
responds to the IEEE challenge to specify a signaling scheme for a next
generation broadband copper Ethernet network capable of carrying broadband
signals of 10 gigabits per second. Currently, the IEEE standard carries
one gigabit over 100 meters of category 5 copper wire which has four
twisted pairs of wire in each cable.
"In the existing copper
gigabit systems, each pair of wires carries 250 megabits per second. For a
10 gigabit system, each pair will have to carry 2.5 gigabits per sec,"
Kavehrad explains. "At these higher speeds, some energy penetrates into
the other wires and produces crosstalk."
The Penn State scheme
eliminates crosstalk by using a new error correction method they developed
that jointly codes and decodes the signal and, in decoding, corrects the
errors.
Kavehrad says, "Conventional wisdom says you should deal
with the wire pairs one pair at a time but we look at them jointly. We use
the fact that we know what signal is causing the crosstalk interference
because it is the strongest signal on one of the wires." The Penn State
approach also takes account of the reduction or loss of signal energy
between one end of the cable and the other that can become severe in 100
meter copper systems.
"We jointly code and decode the signals in
an iterative fashion and, at the same time, we equalize the signals," adds
the Penn State researcher. "The new error correction approach acts like a
vacuum cleaner where you first go over the rough spots and then go back
again to pick up more particles."
A MATLAB simulation has shown
that the scheme is possible and can achieve an average bit error rate of
10 to the minus 12 bits per second. Fiber optic cable typically achieves
10 to the minus nine. The work is continuing.
Penn State
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