A trend evident at the OFC show earlier this month was the growing variety of coherent pluggable modules on display.
Whereas a coherent module maker would offer a product based on a coherent digital signal processor (DSP) and a basic design and then add a few minor tweaks, now the variety of modules offered reflects the growing needs of the network operators.
Acacia, part of Cisco, announced two coherent pluggable to coincide with OFC.
The Bright 400ZR+ QSFP-DD pluggable form factor is based on Acacia’s existing 400ZR+ offering. It has a higher transmit power of up to 5dBm and includes a tunable filter to improve the optical signal-to-noise ratio (OSNR) performance.
Acacia’s second coherent module is the fixed wavelength 400-gigabit 400G ER1 module designed for point-to-point applications.
“I can understand it being a little bit confusing,” says Tom Williams, vice president of marketing at Acacia. “We have maybe five or six configurations of modules based on the same underlying DSP and optical technology.”
Bright 400ZR+
The Bright 400ZR+ pluggable addresses a range of network architectures using the high-density QSFP-DD form factor, says Williams.
“Before you had to use the [larger] CFP2-DCO module, now we are bringing some of the functionality into the -DD,” he says. “The Bright 400ZR+ doesn’t replace the CFP2-DCO but it does move us closer to that.” As such, the module also supports OTN framing.
The Bright 400ZR+ has a higher launch power than the optical specification of the OpenZR+ standard but supports the same protocol so it can operate with OpenZR+ compliant pluggables.
The module uses internal optical amplification to achieve the 5dB launch power. The higher launch power is designed for various architectures and ROADM configurations.
“It is not that it allows a certain greater reach so much as the module can address a wider range of applications,” says Williams. “When you talk about colourless, directionless or colourless-directionless-contentionless (CDC-) reconfigurable optical add-drop multiplexing (ROADM) architectures, these are the types of applications this opens up.”
The integrated tunable filter tackles noise. In colourless ROADM-based networks, because the optical multiplexing occurs without filtering, the broadband out-of-band noise can raise the overall noise floor. This then decreases the overall OSNR. Amplification also increases the noise floor.
The tunable filter is used to knock down the overall noise floor, thereby improving the transmit OSNR.
The output power of the Bright 400ZR+ is configurable. The 5dBm launch power is used for ROADMs with array-waveguide gratings while for colourless multiplexing the tunable filter is used, reducing the output power to just above 1dBm.
“You are seeing an anchoring of interoperability that operators can use and then you are seeing people build on top of that with enhancements that add value and expand the use cases,” says Williams.
400 gigabits over 40km
As part of the OIF industry organisation’s work that defined the 400ZR specification, a 40km point-to-point unamplified link was also included. Acacia’s 400G ER1 is such an implementation with the ‘ER’ referring to extended reach, which IEEE defines as 40km.
“At every data rate there has always been an application for these ER reaches in access and enterprise,” says Williams. “The link is just a fibre, it's like the 10km LR specification, but this goes over 40km.”
The ER1 has been designed to reduce cost and uses a fixed laser. ”We are not doing OSNR testing, it is based on a power-limited 40km link,” says Williams.
The OIF standard uses concatenated forward-error correction (CFEC) while Acacia employs its openFEC (oFEC) that enhances the reach somewhat.
Shipment updates
Acacia also reported a significant ramp in the shipment of its pluggables that use its Greylock coherent DSP.
It has shipped over 50,000 such pluggables, 20,000 alone shipped in Cisco’s last (second) fiscal quarter. “This is being driven by the expected early adopters of 400ZR, as well as a range of other applications,” says Williams.
Acacia says it has also shipped over 100,000 Pico DSP ports. Each AC1200 multi-haul module has two such ports.
The AC1200 sends up to 1.2 terabits over two wavelengths using Acacia’s 7nm CMOS Pico DSP. The multi-haul module is being used in over 100 networks while three of the four largest hyperscalers use the technology.
Acacia also demonstrated at OFC its latest multi-haul module announced last year, a 1.2 terabits single-wavelength design that uses its latest 5nm CMOS Jannu DSP and which operates at a symbol rate of up to 140 gigabaud.
Acacia says samples of its latest multi-haul module that uses its own Coherent Interconnect Module 8 (CIM 8) form factor will be available this year while general availability will be in 2023.
Post-deadline
Williams also presented a post-deadline paper at OFC.
The work outlined was the demonstration of the optical transmission of 400 Gigabit Ethernet flows over a 927km link. The trial comprised transmission through several networks and showed the interoperability of 400-gigabit QSFP-DD and CFP2 modules.
The work involved Orange Labs, Lumentum, Neophotonics, EXFO and Acacia.