Loading...
News Article

POET enters Telecom Market

News

POET to focus on CWDM4 and LR4 designs based on its capability to integrate 4-channel multiplexing and demultiplexing directly into its waveguide

POET Technologies, a developer of the POET Optical Interposer and Photonic Integrated Circuits (PICs) for data centre and telecomms, announced that it has completed design of a 100G LR4 (4 channel Long Reach) optical engine with a reach of 10km for client-side interconnects to data centers, enterprises and edge computing networks.

Of the five common types of 100G transceiver modules found within the data center, two types - CWDM4 and PSM4 are targeted at data communications up to 2km. SR4 (500m), LR4 (10km) and ER4 (40km) are the other types typically specified for 100G data communications.

POET’s focus on CWDM4 and LR4 designs is based on its capability to integrate a fully monolithic 4-channel multiplexing and demultiplexing functionality directly into its waveguides, avoiding the costly requirement to align and couple additional devices into a transceiver module. POET’s LR4 design converts 4 input channels of 25Gb/s electrical data into 4 LAN WDM (wavelength division multiplexing) optical signals and then multiplexes them into a single channel for 100Gb/s optical transmission along a single fibre. PSM4 and SR4 transceivers are not multiplexed and so require 4 parallel fibres, which are especially costly over distances of 2km to 10km. Although completing separate designs for TX (transmit), RX (receive) and combination TX-RX optical engines (see accompanying link to TX-only graphic), POET intends to focus first on the TX design, which offers significant cost and performance advantages, and represents a fast go-to-market approach for the company.

Commenting on the new POET design for 100G LR4, Vivek Rajgarhia, the company’s president and general manager said: “A 100G LR4 transceiver sells for about 2X to 3X the price of a 100G CWDM4 module, due to its higher complexity and performance requirements. POET’s integrated monolithic multiplexer significantly reduces the cost of the optical engine allowing us to provide a savings to customers in the range of 25 percent.

"By flip-chipping 4 DML lasers onto an Optical Interposer with inherently superior thermal management and the ability to tune the waveguides to specific center wavelengths, we are able to design an optical engine that uses 10 percent to 15 percent less power to deliver data at the same speed and over the same distance as comparable modules.

"Further, because of the small size of the optical engine, we anticipate seeing potential novel applications of this technology from customers. Since we have had the LR4 Optical Interposer wafers in fabrication since December, we expect to be able to deliver Alpha samples to customers in the third quarter of 2021. Deploying an LR4 design in a short time after the CWDM design exemplifies the power of our platform approach as major elements of the CWDM interposer design are reused in the LR4 derivative.”

As the standard for interconnects to long-haul networks, 100G LR4 transceivers are purchased in high volumes by telecom equipment providers and are not being replaced by 400G transceivers even as speeds in long-haul networks increase. In an April 2021 client webinar by LightCounting, shipments in 100G LR4 modules were forecasted to be essentially stable at approximately 4 million units annually from 2021 through 2026, with prices having stabilized as a result of there being no room left for cost reductions using the traditional manufacturing approach for these devices. This cost barrier and the high power consumption of current transceiver designs allows POET to provide competitive designs for this segment which represents a second large market opportunity for POET, complementing its previously announced 100G CWDM designs.

Powering these optical engines will be 25Gb/s Directly Modulated Lasers (DML) from Sanan Integrated Circuits (SAIC), which has incorporated POET’s interposer compatibility requirements into their line of LR4 DML lasers.

Lightwave Logic receives ECOC Innovation Award for Hybrid PIC/Optical Integration Platform
Coherent wins ECOC award for datacentre innovation
HyperLight announces $37 million funding round
Jabil expands silicon photonics capabilities
Ephos raises $8.5 million for glass-based photonic chips
Designing for manufacture: PAM-4 transmitters using segmented-electrode Mach-Zehnder modulators
OpenLight and Epiphany partner on PIC ecosystem
NewPhotonics and SoftBank team up on advanced photonics
POET and Mitsubishi collaborate on 3.2T optical engines
Integrated photonic platforms: The case for SiC
Integrating high-speed germanium modulators with silicon photonics and fast electronics
Lightium Secures $7 Million Seed Funding
Revolutionising optoelectronics with high-precision bonding
Fraunhofer IMS invites participation in PIC engineering runs
Advances in active alignment engines for efficient photonics device test and assembly
Aeva announces participation at IAA Transportation 2024
Sumitomo Electric announces participation in ECOC 2024
Quside receives NIST certification for quantum entropy source
DustPhotonics launches industry-first merchant 1.6T silicon photonics engine
Arelion and Ciena announce live 1.6T wave data transmission
DGIST leads joint original semiconductor research with the EU
POET Technologies reorganises engineering team
A silicon chip for 6G communications
South Dakota Mines wins $5 million from NSF for Quantum Materials Institute
HieFo indium phosphide fab resumes production
Coherent launches new lasers for silicon photonics transceivers
AlixLabs wins funding from PhotonHub Europe
Sandia National Labs and Arizona State University join forces
Perovskite waveguides for nonlinear photonics
A graphene-based infrared emitter
Atom interferometry performed with silicon photonics
A step towards combining the conventional and quantum internet

×
Search the news archive

To close this popup you can press escape or click the close icon.
Logo
x
Logo
×
Register - Step 1

You may choose to subscribe to the PIC Magazine, the PIC Newsletter, or both. You may also request additional information if required, before submitting your application.


Please subscribe me to:

 

You chose the industry type of "Other"

Please enter the industry that you work in:
Please enter the industry that you work in: