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Dive into the research topics where Slavisa Aleksic is active.

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Featured researches published by Slavisa Aleksic.


IEEE\/OSA Journal of Optical Communications and Networking | 2009

Analysis of Power Consumption in Future High-Capacity Network Nodes

Slavisa Aleksic

Power consumption and the footprint of future network elements are expected to become the main limiting factors for scaling the current architectures and approaches to capacities of hundreds of terabits or even petabits per second. Since the underlying demand for network capacity can be satisfied only by contemporaneously increasing transmission bit rate, processing speed, and switching capacity, it unavoidably will lead to increased power consumption of network nodes. On the one hand, using optical switching fabrics could relax the limitations to some extent, but large optical buffers occupy larger areas and dissipate more power than electronic ones. On the other hand, electronic technology has made fast progress during the past decade regarding reduced feature size and decreased power consumption. It is expected that this trend will continue in the future. This paper addresses power consumption issues in future high-capacity switching and routing elements and examines different architectures based on both pure packet-switched and pure circuit-switched designs by assuming either all-electronic or all-optical implementation, which can be seen as upper and lower bounds regarding power consumption. The total power consumption of a realistic and appropriate technology for future high-performance core network nodes would probably lie somewhere between those two extreme cases. Our results show that implementation in optics is generally more power efficient; especially circuit-switched architectures have a low power consumption. When taking into account possible future developments of Si CMOS technology, even very large electronic packet routers having capacities of more than hundreds of terabits per second seem to be feasible. Because circuit switching is more power efficient and easier to implement in optics than pure packet switching, the scalability limitation due to increased power consumption could be considerably relaxed when a kind of dynamic optical circuit switching is used within the core network together with an efficient flow aggregation at edge nodes.


IEEE\/OSA Journal of Optical Communications and Networking | 2011

Dimensioning the Future Pan-European Optical Network With Energy Efficiency Considerations

Anna Tzanakaki; Kostas Katrinis; T Politi; A. Stavdas; Mario Pickavet; P. Van Daele; Dimitra Simeonidou; Mike O'Mahony; Slavisa Aleksic; Lena Wosinska; Paolo Monti

This paper studies the overall energy consumption of a pan-European optical transport network for three different time periods: today and in five and ten years from now. In each time period the pan-European network was dimensioned using traffic predictions based on realistic data generated by the optical networking roadmap developed in the framework of the European project Building the Future Optical Network in Europe-BONE. A wavelength routed wavelength division multiplexed optical network based on either transparent or opaque node architectures was examined considering exclusively either 10 Gbit/s or 40 Gbit/s per channel data rates. The results manifest that transparent optical networking technologies are expected to provide significant energy savings of the order of 35% to 55%. It was also shown that the migration towards higher data rates, i.e., from 10 Gbit/s to 40 Gbit/s, is assisting in improving the overall energy efficiency of the network.


IEEE Communications Magazine | 2015

Optical interconnects at the top of the rack for energy-efficient data centers

Jiajia Chen; Yu Gong; Matteo Fiorani; Slavisa Aleksic

The growing popularity of cloud and multimedia services is dramatically increasing the traffic volume that each data center needs to handle. This is driving the demand for highly scalable, flexible, and energy-efficient networks inside data centers, in particular for the edge tier, which requires a large number of interconnects and consumes the dominant part of the overall power. Optical fiber communication is widely recognized as the highest energy- and cost-efficient technique to offer ultra-large capacity for telecommunication networks. It has also been considered as a promising transmission technology for future data center applications. Taking into account the characteristics of the traffic generated by the servers, such as locality, multicast, dynamicity, and burstiness, the emphasis of the research on data center networks has to be put on architectures that leverage optical transport to the greatest possible extent. However, no feasible solution based on optical switching is available so far for handling the data center traffic at the edge tier. Therefore, apart from conventional optical switching, we investigate a completely different paradigm, passive optical interconnects, and aim to explore the possibility for optical interconnects at the top of the rack. In this article, we present three major types of passive optical interconnects and carry out a performance assessment with respect to the ability to host data center traffic, scalability, optical power budget, complexity of the required interface, cost, and energy consumption. Our results have verified that the investigated passive optical interconnects can achieve a significant reduction of power consumption and maintain cost at a similar level compared to its electronic counterpart. Furthermore, several research directions on passive optical interconnects have been pointed out for future green data centers.


IEEE Communications Letters | 2014

Energy-Efficient Elastic Optical Interconnect Architecture for Data Centers

Matteo Fiorani; Slavisa Aleksic; Maurizio Casoni; Lena Wosinska; Jiajia Chen

To address the urgent need for high-capacity, scalable and energy-efficient data center solutions, we propose a novel data center network architecture realized by combining broadcast-and-select approach with elastic channel spacing technology. We demonstrate that the proposed architecture is able to scale efficiently with the number of servers and offers lower energy consumption at a competitive cost compared to the existing solutions.


IEEE\/OSA Journal of Optical Communications and Networking | 2011

Performance and Power Consumption Analysis of a Hybrid Optical Core Node

Matteo Fiorani; Maurizio Casoni; Slavisa Aleksic

Hybrid optical switching (HOS) is a switching paradigm that aims to combine optical circuit switching, optical burst switching, and optical packet switching on the same network. This paper proposes a novel integrated control plane for an HOS core node. The control plane makes use of a unified control packet able to carry the control information for all the different data formats and employs an appropriate scheduling algorithm for each incoming data type. Three possible node architectures are presented and an analytical model is introduced to analyze their power consumption. Also, the concept of increase in power efficiency is introduced to compare the considered architectures. The performance and power consumption analysis of the node have been carried out through the use of a simulation model developed specifically for the scope. The obtained results show the effectiveness of HOS networks.


Computer Networks | 2013

Energy efficiency of femtocell deployment in combined wireless/optical access networks

Slavisa Aleksic; Margot Deruyck; Willem Vereecken; Wout Joseph; Mario Pickavet; Luc Martens

Optical/wireless convergence has become of particular interest recently because a combined radio wireless and optical wired network has the potential to provide both mobility and high bandwidth in an efficient way. Recent developments of new radio access technologies such as the Long Term Evolution (LTE) and introduction of femtocell base stations open new perspectives in providing broadband services and applications to everyone and everywhere, but the instantaneous quality of radio channel varies in time, space and frequency and radio communication is inherently energy inefficient and susceptible to reflections and interference. On the other hand, optical fiber-based networks do not provide mobility, but they are robust, energy efficient, and able to provide both an almost unlimited bandwidth and high availability. In this paper, we analyze the energy efficiency of combined wireless/optical access networks, in which LTE technology provides ubiquitous broadband Internet access, while optical fiber-based technologies serve as wireless backhaul and offer high-bandwidth wired Internet access to business and residential customers. In this contest, we pay a particular attention to femtocell deployment for increasing both access data rates and area coverage. The paper presents a novel model for evaluating the energy efficiency of combined optical/wireless networks that takes into account the main architectural and implementational aspects of both RF wireless and optical parts of the access network. Several hypothetical network deployment scenarios are defined and used to study effects of femtocell deployment and power saving techniques on networks energy efficiency in urban, suburban and rural areas and for different traffic conditions.


IEEE Journal of Selected Topics in Quantum Electronics | 2011

Energy Efficiency of Electronic and Optical Network Elements

Slavisa Aleksic

Decoupling of economic growth and energy consumption becomes a very important goal that can be achieved only by increasing the energy efficiency of new technologies and processes, i.e., the ability to provide a higher performance by consuming less energy. Communication networks play a significant role as a crucial part of the information and communication technologies. An adequate and future-ready communication network infrastructure has become one of the most important strategic goals of any government, region, and municipality because a high-capacity network leads to an accelerated development of both business and society. However, an increase in capacity is mostly associated with an increase in both total power consumption and power density of the related telecommunication equipment. Since the current technology is already approaching the fundamental limits with regard to the power density, there is a need to examine new approaches for achieving high energy efficiency. This paper aims to give an overview on possible potentials of new technologies for implementing energy-efficient network elements. It identifies main energy-related issues in high-performance network elements and tries to draw attention to some promising approaches for implementing low-consuming components and networks.


Journal of Optical Networking | 2009

Photonics in switching: enabling technologies and subsystem design

Kyriakos Vlachos; Carla Raffaelli; Slavisa Aleksic; Nicola Andriolli; Dimitris Apostolopoulos; Hercules Avramopoulos; Didier Erasme; D. Klonidis; Martin Nordal Petersen; Mirco Scaffardi; Karsten Schulze; Maria Spiropoulou; Stelios Sygletos; Ioannis Tomkos; Carmen Vazquez; O. Zouraraki; Fabio Neri

This paper describes recent research activities and results in the area of photonic switching carried out within the framework of the EU-funded e-Photon/ONe+ network of excellence, Virtual Department on Optical Switching. Technology aspects of photonics in switching and, in particular, recent advances in wavelength conversion, ring resonators, and packet switching and processing subsystems are presented as the building blocks for the implementation of a high-performance router for the next-generation Internet.


Journal of Electrical and Computer Engineering | 2014

Hybrid optical switching for data center networks

Matteo Fiorani; Slavisa Aleksic; Maurizio Casoni

Current data centers networks rely on electronic switching and point-to-point interconnects. When considering future data center requirements, these solutions will raise issues in terms of flexibility, scalability, performance, and energy consumption. For this reason several optical switched interconnects, which make use of optical switches and wavelength division multiplexing (WDM), have been recently proposed. However, the solutions proposed so far suffer from low flexibility and are not able to provide service differentiation. In this paper we introduce a novel data center network based on hybrid optical switching (HOS). HOS combines optical circuit, burst, and packet switching on the same network. In this way different data center applications can be mapped to the optical transport mechanism that best suits their traffic characteristics. Furthermore, the proposed HOS network achieves high transmission efficiency and reduced energy consumption by using two parallel optical switches. We consider the architectures of both a traditional data center network and the proposed HOS network and present a combined analytical and simulation approach for their performance and energy consumption evaluation. We demonstrate that the proposed HOS data center network achieves high performance and flexibility while considerably reducing the energy consumption of current solutions.


optical fiber communication conference | 2010

Power efficiency of extended reach 10G-EPON and TDM/WDM PON

Ana Lovrić; Slavisa Aleksic

We estimate power consumption of several advanced PON technologies and architectures w/o and w/ reach extenders. Our results show that hybrid TDM/WDM PON has the potential to provide the highest energy efficiency.

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Dive into the Slavisa Aleksic's collaboration.

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Matteo Fiorani

Royal Institute of Technology

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Maurizio Casoni

University of Modena and Reggio Emilia

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Ana Lovrić

Vienna University of Technology

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Andreas Poppe

Austrian Institute of Technology

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Florian Hipp

Austrian Institute of Technology

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Bernhard Schrenk

Austrian Institute of Technology

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Dominic Winkler

Vienna University of Technology

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Gerald Franzl

Vienna University of Technology

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Naida Fehratovic

Vienna University of Technology

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Vjeko Krajinovic

Vienna University of Technology

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