The broadband access network has evolved significantly over the past few decades. Early networks were based on DOCSIS and DSL technologies. While these provided reasonable broadband speeds, they had limited bandwidth and could not scale efficiently. This led to the development of fiber-based passive optical network (PON) technologies like GPON.
GPON networks have become the predominant fiber access technology globally. GPON uses a point-to-multipoint architecture with passive optical splitters to serve multiple premises. The ITU-T G.984 standard defines GPON networks with a maximum downstream capacity of 2.5 Gbps and upstream capacity of 1.25 Gbps.
Most GPON onu are designed to support services like high-speed internet, IPTV, and VoIP. The ONU CATV connects to the provider ONT via fiber, coaxial cable, or Category 5 cable. GPON onu products from vendors like Huawei and ZTE support advanced functions like:
CATV overlay for delivering conventional TV services
RF video overlay for IPTV
VoIP with quality of service
Multicast IPTV transport
Ethernet interfaces for data services
GPON has proven to be highly scalable and efficient. However, growing bandwidth demands are driving the need for higher speed PON technologies. The next evolution is XG-PON, also known as 10G PON. XG-PON boosts the downstream capacity to 10 Gbps and the upstream capacity to 2.5 Gbps.
XG-PON ONT equipment conforms to the ITU-T G.9807.2 standard. Key enhancements include:
10G class B+ optics
Enhanced modulation for higher efficiency
Improved forward error correction
The higher bandwidth enables carriers to deliver 10G data services and advanced IPTV services. Most XG-PON ONT support a mix of Ethernet and CATV interfaces to carry different types of traffic. Some models also support POTS interfaces for traditional telephony.
A key benefit of XG-PON is backward compatibility with existing GPON networks. This enables carriers to upgrade the backbone network while still serving legacy GPON ONU. The XG-PON OLT supports coexistence with 1G and 2.5G GPON ports.
XPON ONT Dual-band are also available that can connect selectively to either XG-PON or GPON. This provides maximum flexibility for network migration. The operator can gradually switch over customers to the new 10G service while maintaining the existing GPON service.
Beyond XG-PON, the next target is 50G PON. Emerging standards like 50G EPON and 50G GPON aim to increase capacity to 50 Gbps downstream and 25 Gbps upstream. However, these are still under development.
In summary, the continual enhancement of PON technology is critical for broadband network advancement. Operators are eager to leverage new standards like XG-PON to enable faster, more advanced services and prepare for the future. The evolution will continue with upcoming standards like 50G PON.