NeoPhotonics has entered the fray as a supplier of long-distance CFP pluggable modules that integrate the coherent DSP-ASIC chip with the optics.
The company has announced two such CFP Digital Coherent Optics (CFP-DCO) modules: a 100 gigabit-per-second (Gbps) module and a dual-rate 100Gbps and 200Gbps one.
“Our rationale [for entering the CFP-DCO market] is we have all the optical components and the [merchant coherent] DSPs are now becoming available,” says Ferris Lipscomb (pictured), vice president of marketing at NeoPhotonics. “It is possible to make this product without developing your own custom DSP, with all the expense that entails.”
-DCO versus -ACO
The pluggable transceiver line-side market is split between Digital Coherent Optics and Analog Coherent Optics (ACO) modules.
Optical module makers are already supplying the more compact CFP2 Analog Coherent Optics (CFP2-ACO) transceivers. The CFP2-ACO integrates the optics only, with the accompanying coherent DSP-ASIC chip residing on the line card. The CFP2-ACO suits system vendors that have their own custom DSP-ASICs and can offer differentiated, higher-transmission performance while choosing the optics in a compact pluggable module from several suppliers.
In contrast, the CFP-DCO suits more standard deployments, and for those end-customers that do not want to be locked into a single vendor and a proprietary DSP. The -DCO is also easier to deploy. 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. Deploying an ACO requires an engineer to perform the calibration due to the analogue interface between the module and the DSP, says NeoPhotonics.
The DCO also suits those systems vendors that do not have their own DSP and do not want to source a merchant coherent DSP and implement the analogue integration on the line card.
Our rationale [for entering the CFP-DCO market] is we have all the optical components and the [merchant coherent] DSPs are now becoming available
One platform, two products
The two announced ClearLight CFP-DCO products are a 100 gigabit-per-second (Gbps) module implemented using polarisation multiplexing, quadrature phase-shift keying modulation (PM-QPSK), and a module that supports both 100Gbps and 200Gbps using PM-QPSK and 16 quadrature amplitude modulation (PM-16QAM), respectively.
The two modules share the same optics and DSP-ASIC. Where they differ is in the software loaded onto the DSP and the host interface used. The lower-speed module has a 4 by 25-gigabit interface whereas the 200-gigabit CFP-DCO uses an 8 by 25-gigabit-wide interface. “The 100-gigabit CFP-DCO plugs into existing client-side slots whereas the 200-gigabit CFPs have to plug into custom designed equipment slots,” says Lipscomb.
The 100-gigabit CFP-DCO has a reach of 1,000km plus and has a power consumption under 24W. Lipscomb points out that the actual specs including the power consumption are negotiated on a customer-by-customer basis. The 200-gigabit CFP-DCO has a reach of 500km.
NeoPhotonics says it is using a latest-generation 16nm CMOS merchant DSP. NTT Electronics (NEL) and Clariphy have both announced 16nm CMOS coherent DSPs.
“We are designing to be able to second-source the DSP,” says Lipscomb. “There are currently only two merchant suppliers but there are others that have developments but are not yet at the point where they would be in the market.”
The CFP-DCO modules also support flexible grid that can fit a carrier within the narrower 37.5GHz channel to increase overall transmission capacity sent across a fibre’s C-band.
NeoPhotonics’s 100Gbps CFP-DCO is already sampling and it expected to be generally available in mid-2017, while the 200Gbps CFP-DCO is expected to be available one-quarter later.
“For 200-gigabit, you need to have customers building slots,” says Lipscomb. “For 100-gigabit, there are lots of slots available that you can plug into; 200-gigabits will take a little bit longer.”
NeoPhotonics’ CFP-DCO delivers the line rate used by the Voyager white box packet optical switch being developed as part of the Telecom Infra Project backed by Facebook and ten operators including Deutsche Telekom and SK Telecom. But the one-rack-unit Voyager packet optical platform uses four 5"x7" modules not pluggable CFP-DCOs to achieve the total line rate of 800Gbps.
Roadmap
NeoPhotonics is developing coherent module designs that will use higher baud rates than the standard 32-35 gigabaud (Gbaud), such as 45Gbaud and 64Gbaud.
The company also plans to develop a CFP2-DCO. Such a module is expected around 2018 once lower-power DSP-ASICs become available that can fit within the 12W power envelope of the CFP2. Such merchant DSP-ASICs will likely be implemented in a more advanced CMOS process such as 12nm or even 7nm.
Acacia Communications is already sampling a CFP2-DCO. Acacia designs its own silicon photonics-based optics and the coherent DSP-ASIC.
NeoPhotonics is also considered future -ACO designs beyond the CFP2 such as the CFP8, the 400-gigabit OSFP form factor and even the CFP4. “We are studying it but we don't know yet which directions things are going to go,” says Lipscomb.
Corrected on Dec 22nd. The Voyager box does not use pluggable CFP-DCO modules.