counter for iweb
Website
Silicon Photonics

Published book, click here

« Silicon Photonics: Fueling the Next Information Revolution | Main | Ranovus shows 200 gigabit direct detection at ECOC »
Sunday
Oct162016

600-gigabit channels on a fibre by 2017

NeoPhotonics has announced an integrated coherent receiver that will enable 600-gigabit optical transmission using a single wavelength. A transmission capacity of 48 terabits over the fibre’s C-band is then possible using 80 such channels.

NeoPhotonics’ micro integrated coherent receiver operates at 64 gigabaud, twice the symbol rate of deployed 100-gigabit optical transport systems and was detailed at the recent ECOC show.

Current 100 gigabit-per-second (Gbps) coherent systems use polarisation-multiplexing, quadrature phase-shift keying (PM-QPSK) modulation operating at 32 gigabaud. “That is how you get four bits [per symbol],” says Ferris Lipscomb, vice president of marketing at NeoPhotonics.

Optical designers have two approaches to increase the data transmitted on a wavelength: they can use increasingly complex modulation schemes - such as 16 quadrature amplitude modulation (16-QAM) or 64-QAM - and they can increase the baud rate. “You double the baud rate, you double the transmission capacity,” says Lipscomb. “And using 64-QAM and 64 gigabaud, you can go to 600 gigabit per channel; of course when you do that, you reduce the reach.”

The move to the higher 64 gigabaud symbol rate will help Internet content providers increase capacity between their large-scale data centres. Typical transmission distances between sites are relatively short, up to 100km.

Telcos too will benefit from the higher baud rate as it will enable them to use software-defined networking to adapt, on-the-fly, a line card’s data rate and reach depending on the link. Such a flexible rate coherent line card would allow 600Gbps on a single channel over 80km, 400 gigabit (16-QAM) over 400km, or 100 gigabit over thousands of kilometers.

 

Status

NeoPhotonics says it is now sampling its 64 gigabaud coherent receiver. It is still premature to discuss when the high-speed coherent receiver will be generally available, the company says, as it depends on the availability of other vendors’ components working at 64 gigabaud. These include the modulator, the trans-impedance amplifier and the coherent digital signal processor ASIC (DSP-ASIC).

Lipscomb says that a 64-gigabaud modulator in lithium niobate already exists but not in indium phosphide. The lithium niobate modulator is relatively large and will fit within a CFP module but the smaller CFP2 module will require a 64-gigabaud indium phosphide modulator.

“General availability will be timed based on when our customers are ready to go into production,” says Lipscomb. “Trials will happen in the first half of 2017 with volume shipments only happening in the second half of next year.”

 

Using 64-QAM and 64 gigabaud, you can go to 600 gigabit per channel

 

Challenges 

A micro integrated coherent receiver has two inputs - the received optical signal and the local oscillator - and four balanced receiver outputs. Also included are two polarisation beam splitters and two 90-degree hybrid mixers.

Lipscomb says Neophotonics worked for over a year to develop its coherent receiver: “It is a complete design from the ground up.”

The slowest element sets the speed at which the receiver can operator such that the design not only involves the detector and trans-impedance amplifier but other elements such as the wirebonds and the packaging. “Everything has to be upgraded,” says Lipscomb. “It is not just a case of plopping in a faster detector and everything works.”

 

Nano-ICR and the CFP2-DCO

The industry is now working on a successor, smaller coherent detector dubbed the nano integrated coherent receiver (nano-ICR). “It has not all gelled yet but the nano-ICR would be suitable for the CFP2-DCO.”

The CFP2-DCO is a CFP2 Digital Coherent Optics pluggable module that integrates the coherent DSP-ASIC. In contrast, the CFP2 Analog Coherent Optics (CFP2-ACO) modules holds the optics and the DSP-ASIC resides on the line card.

“As the new DSPs come out using the next CMOS [process] nodes, they will be lower power and will be accommodated in the CFP2 form factor,” says Lipscomb. “Then the optics has to shrink yet again to make room for the DSP.”

Lipscomb sees the CFP2-ACO being used by system vendors that have already developed their own DSP-ASICs and will offer differentiated, higher-transmission performance. The CFP2-DCO will be favoured for more standard deployments and by end-customers that do not want to be locked into a single vendor and a proprietary DSP.

There is also the CFP2-DCO’s ease of deployment. In China, currently undertaking large-scale 100-gigabit optical transport deployments, operators want a module that can be deployed in the field by a relatively unskilled technician. “The ACOs with the analogue interface tend to require a lot of calibration,” says Lipscomb. “You can’t just plug it in and it works; you have to run it in, calibrate it and bring it up to get it to work properly.”

The CFP2-DCO module is expected in 2018 as the DSP-ASICs will require an advanced 12nm or even 7nm CMOS process.

Reader Comments

There are no comments for this journal entry. To create a new comment, use the form below.

PostPost a New Comment

Enter your information below to add a new comment.
Author Email (optional):
Author URL (optional):
Post:
 
Some HTML allowed: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <code> <em> <i> <strike> <strong>