ECI Telecom targets metro 100-Gbps via 4x28G with MultiPhy
Optical transport systems vendor ECI Telecom says it has begun development of a 4x28G approach for 100-Gbps transmission in metro applications. The design, which is now in the proof of concept phase, uses DSP-based CMOS semiconductors from MultiPhy Ltd.
The development work was at least partially funded by the Israeli Office of the Chief Scientist (OCS) through its Magneton program and based on a Ben-Gurion University research project. However, ECI’s CTO Shai Stein told Lightwave that, despite the recent announcement by Oclaro that it has developed a 4x28G transponder (see “Oclaro unveils tunable 100G DWDM CFP transceiver”),ECI preferred the in-house approach because it will produce a design that is more cost-effective because it leverages 10-Gbps optics. It also will have a standard MSA footprint, which will enable ECI to use the same board layout regardless of whether the line card will use the new 4x28G approach or coherent-based transmission. Stein also allowed that the Oclaro transponder was not yet available for inspection at the time they began working on this effort.
MultiPhy’s MP1100Q receiver, a cornerstone of the design, features a high-performance A/D front end and “fastest in class” MLSE DSP architecture, according to the company. The technology enables the transport of 100G signals for hundreds of kilometers in metro WDM networks over 4 lanes, 28Gbps each, using 4x10G optical transceivers. Each lane is transmitted over an independent WDM wavelength or over 25-GHz subwavelength, allocated in a single 100GHz wavelength or a dual 50-GHz wavelength.
"While attention today is focused on 100G long haul deployments, the metro WDM/packet-optical market is still the fastest growing market. 100G non-coherent will be key for large metro upgrades starting next year," suggests Eve Griliches, principle analyst at ACG Research.
Stephen Hardy | Editorial Director and Associate Publisher
Stephen Hardy has covered fiber optics for more than 15 years, and communications and technology for more than 30 years. He is responsible for establishing and executing Lightwave's editorial strategy across its digital magazine, website, newsletters, research and other information products. He has won multiple awards for his writing.
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