Passive optical networks were first proposed by
British Telecommunications in 1987. Two major standard groups, the
Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE) and the
Telecommunication Standardization Sector of the
International Telecommunication Union (ITU-T), develop standards along with a number of other industry organizations. The
Society of Cable Telecommunications Engineers (SCTE) also specified
radio frequency over glass for carrying signals over a passive optical network.
CableLabs has developed coherent PON (CPON) that runs at 100 Gbit/s symmetrically and supports split ratios of up to 1:512. Coherent means it only needs a single wavelength of light to operate.
FSAN and ITU Starting in 1995, work on
fiber to the home architectures was done by the Full Service Access Network (FSAN) working group, formed by major telecommunications service providers and system vendors. The
International Telecommunication Union (ITU) did further work, and standardized on two generations of PON. The older ITU-T
G.983 standard was based on
Asynchronous Transfer Mode (ATM), and has therefore been referred to as APON (ATM PON). Further improvements to the original APON standard – as well as the gradual falling out of favor of ATM as a protocol – led to the full, final version of ITU-T G.983 being referred to more often as
broadband PON, or BPON. A typical APON/BPON provides 622 megabits per second (Mbit/s) (
OC-12) of downstream bandwidth and 155 Mbit/s (
OC-3) of upstream traffic, although the standard accommodates higher rates. The ITU-T
G.984 Gigabit-capable Passive Optical Networks (GPON, G-PON) standard, first defined in 2003, represented an increase, compared to BPON, in both the total bandwidth and bandwidth efficiency through the use of larger, variable-length packets. Again, the standards permit several choices of bit rate, but the industry has converged on 2.488 gigabits per second (Gbit/s) of downstream bandwidth, and 1.244 Gbit/s of upstream bandwidth. GPON Encapsulation Method (GEM) allows very efficient packaging of user traffic with frame segmentation. By mid-2008,
Verizon had installed over .
British Telecom,
BSNL,
Saudi Telecom Company,
Etisalat, and
AT&T were in advanced trials in Britain, India, Saudi Arabia, the UAE, and the US, respectively. GPON networks have now been deployed in numerous networks across the globe, and the trends indicate higher growth in GPON than other PON technologies.
G.987 defined
10G-PON in 2010 with 10 Gbit/s downstream and 2.5 Gbit/s upstream – framing is "G-PON like" and designed to coexist with GPON devices on the same network. XGS-PON is a related technology that can deliver upstream and downstream (symmetrical) speeds of up to 10 Gbit/s (gigabits per second), first approved in 2016 as G.9807.1. Asymmetrical 50G-PON was approved by the ITU in September 2021, and symmetrical 50G-PON was approved in September 2022. The first trial of 50G-PON took place in 2024 in Turkey. 100G-PON and 200G-PON have been demonstrated. The first demonstration of 100G-PON in a live network was done in Australia in 2024.
Security Developed in 2009 by
Cable Manufacturing Business to meet
SIPRNet requirements of the
U.S. Air Force, secure passive optical network (SPON) integrates gigabit passive optical network (GPON) technology and
protective distribution system (PDS). Changes to the
NSTISSI 7003 requirements for PDS and the mandate by the US federal government for GREEN technologies allowed for the
US federal government consideration of the two technologies as an alternative to active Ethernet and
encryption devices. The
chief information officer of the
United States Department of the Army issued a directive to adopt the technology by fiscal year 2013. It is marketed to the US military by companies such as
Telos Corporation. GPON used in
Fiber to the x deployments may face vulnerability to
Denial-of-service attack via optical signal injections, unresolved based on current commercially available technologies.
IEEE In 2004, the
Ethernet PON (EPON or GEPON) standard 802.3ah-2004 was ratified as part of the
Ethernet in the first mile project of the
IEEE 802.3. EPON is a "short haul" network using Ethernet packets, fiber optic cables, and single protocol layer. EPON also uses standard 802.3 Ethernet frames with symmetric 1 gigabit per second upstream and downstream rates. EPON is applicable for data-centric networks, as well as full-service voice, data and video networks.
10 Gbit/s EPON or 10G-EPON was ratified as an amendment IEEE 802.3av to IEEE 802.3. 10G-EPON supports 10/1 Gbit/s. The downstream
wavelength plan support simultaneous operation of 10 Gbit/s on one wavelength and 1 Gbit/s on a separate wavelength for the operation of IEEE 802.3av and IEEE 802.3ah on the same PON concurrently. The upstream channel can support simultaneous operation of IEEE 802.3av and 1 Gbit/s 802.3ah simultaneously on a single shared (1310 nm) channel. In 2014, there were over 40 million installed EPON ports, making it the most widely deployed PON technology globally. EPON is also the foundation for cable operators' business services as part of the DOCSIS Provisioning of EPON (DPoE) specifications. 10G EPON is fully compatible with other Ethernet standards and requires no conversion or encapsulation to connect to Ethernet-based networks on either the upstream or downstream end. This technology connects seamlessly with any type of IP-based or packetized communications, and, thanks to the ubiquity of Ethernet installations in homes, workplaces, and elsewhere, EPON is generally very inexpensive to implement. ==Network elements==