Optical modules for communication equipment in the computer room

Home / Optical modules for communication equipment in the computer room

They mainly consist of optoelectronic components (such as optical transmitters and receivers), functional circuits, and optical interfaces, aiming to achieve the functionalities of optical-to-electrical and electrical-to-optical signal conversion in optical fiber. Integrated circuits and reference designs help you create a smaller and faster optical module design used in high-bandwidth data communication applications. Whether you are creating a 100-Gbps or 400-Gbps, small form-factor pluggable (SFP) module, SFP+ transceiver, XFP module, CFP, X2/XENPAK module. As we all know, the construction of the data center computer room is a system project. The optical module is one of the core devices of the optical communication system, and its development has a vital impact on its related industrial chain, from the upstream industry chip substrate, PCB to the downstream telecom market and data communication market, and the field of lidar driverless.

Optical Communication System

Optical communication systems are defined as communication systems that use light waves to transmit information through mediums such as glass fibers, enabling the conversion of sound or video signals

Read More

Optical module

An optical module is a typically hot-pluggable optical transceiver used in high-bandwidth data communications applications. Optical modules typically have an electrical interface on the side that

Read More

Optical module design resources | TI

Integrated circuits and reference designs help you create a smaller and faster optical module design used in high-bandwidth data communication applications. Whether you are creating a 100-Gbps or

Read More

People also like:

Get In Touch

Connect With Us

📱

South Africa (Sales & Engineering HQ)

+27 10 247 8396

🇪🇺

Germany (EU Technical Support)

+49 69 975 331 42

📍

Headquarters & Manufacturing

Unit 7, Summit Place, 21 Summit Rd, Midrand, Johannesburg, 1685, South Africa