Oclaro showcases 400GbE CFP8 PAM4-enabled optical transceiver

March 21, 2017
Oclaro Inc. announced sampling of its 400 Gigabit Ethernet (400GbE) CFP8 optical transceiver for core router/transport applications. The 400GbE CFP8 optical module leverages Oclaro's EML laser and receiver technology to deliver high data rates between high-end routers and optical transport systems. This week at OFC 2017 in Los Angeles, Oclaro is demonstrating the CFP8 operating with eight lasers at 50 Gbps via PAM4 modulation.

Oclaro Inc. (NASDAQ: OCLR) announced sampling of its 400 Gigabit Ethernet (400GbE) CFP8 optical transceiver for core router/transport applications. The 400GbE CFP8 optical module leverages Oclaro's EML laser and receiver technology to deliver high data rates between high-end routers and optical transport systems. This week at OFC 2017 in Los Angeles, Oclaro is demonstrating the CFP8 operating with eight lasers at 50 Gbps via PAM4 modulation. It complies with the 400GBASE-LR8 optical and 400GAUI-16 electrical interface specifications under final standardization by the IEEE 802.3bs Task Force.

The optical module features Oclaro's cooled 1310-nm 28-Gbps EA-DFB laser technology, integrated TOSA and ROSA, and 28-Gbps four-channel integrated PIN-PD array.

"By leveraging our PAM4-compatible laser technology with our wide-receiver bandwidth capability, we've been able to quadruple bandwidth in the CFP8, while still maintaining the same size as a 100G CFP2 solution," says Yves LeMaitre, president of Oclaro's optical connectivity business unit. "This is a significant achievement that will trigger the widespread deployment of high-bandwidth 400 Gbits/sec optical interfaces based on PAM4 that can address the bandwidth constraints faced by data centers globally today."

Oclaro's CFP8 is compatible with the newly released CFP8 Hardware Specification by the CFP MSA Group for reaches up to 2 km and 10 km, respectively. The company says it is sampling the optical transceiver now, with volume production expected in the second half of 2017.

For related articles, visit the Optical Technologies Topic Center.

For more information on optical modules and suppliers, visit the Lightwave Buyer's Guide.

Sponsored Recommendations

Scaling Moore’s Law and The Role of Integrated Photonics

April 8, 2024
Intel presents its perspective on how photonic integration can enable similar performance scaling as Moore’s Law for package I/O with higher data throughput and lower energy consumption...

AI’s magic networking moment

March 6, 2024
Dive into the forefront of technological evolution with our exclusive webinar, where industry giants discuss the transformative impact of AI on the optical and networking sector...

Supporting 5G with Fiber

April 12, 2023
Network operators continue their 5G coverage expansion – which means they also continue to roll out fiber to support such initiatives. The articles in this Lightwave On ...

From 100G to 1.6T: Navigating Timing in the New Era of High-Speed Optical Networks

Feb. 19, 2024
Discover the dynamic landscape of hyperscale data centers as they embrace accelerated AI/ML growth, propelling a transition from 100G to 400G and even 800G optical connectivity...