Presentation + Paper
3 March 2022 Global insights into the co-packaged technology platforms enabling transceivers with capacities of 1.6 Tbps and higher
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
For the past 50 years, mobile bandwidth requirements have evolved from voice calls and texting to ultra-high-definition video and a variety of augmented reality/virtual reality applications. Expanding machine-to-machine applications, such as smart meters, video surveillance, healthcare monitoring, connected drives, and automated logistics, contribute in a major way to device and connection growth and push the expansion of data center infrastructure. The popularity of pluggable modules will continue as they take advantage of 100G single-wavelength optics already proven in 400GbE systems and thus can be technically and cost-effectively implemented in new form factors for 800G modules. However, current form factors will be limited in their ability to support 1.6T and higher capacities in terms of the required electrical and optical densities, thermal issues, and power consumption. As a result of discrete electrical device implementation, power dissipation and thermal management are becoming limiting factors for future pluggable optics. Co-Packaged Optics (CPO) is a new approach that brings the optics and the switch ASIC close together and aims to overcome the challenges. Furthermore, CPO technology is considered a new deployment model of the whole ecosystem and an alternative to pluggable optics. The industry is working on heterogeneous integration of InP lasers directly onto silicon chips enabling scalable integration and elimination of the cost and complexity. Revenue generated by the CPO market reached around $6M in 2020 and is expected to reach $366M in 2026 at a 101% Compound Annual Growth Rate for 2020-2026. This growth is driven by substantial energy (<30%) and capital expenditure ($/Gbps) savings over pluggable optics.
Conference Presentation
© (2022) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
M. Vallo and P. Mukish "Global insights into the co-packaged technology platforms enabling transceivers with capacities of 1.6 Tbps and higher", Proc. SPIE 12027, Metro and Data Center Optical Networks and Short-Reach Links V, 120270R (3 March 2022); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2608690
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KEYWORDS
Switches

Integrated optics

Video surveillance

Optics manufacturing

Video

Transceivers

Data centers

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