At the Optical Fiber Communications Conference in Los Angeles last month, Dayou Qian, also of NEC, reported a total data-sending rate of 101.7 terabits per second through 165 kilometres of fibre. He did this by squeezing light pulses from 370 separate lasers into the pulse received by the receiver. Each laser emitted its own narrow sliver of the infrared spectrum, and each contained several polarities, phases and amplitudes of light waves to code each packet of information.
At the same conference, Jun Sakaguchi of Japan's National Institute of Information and Communications Technology in Tokyo also reported reaching the 100-terabit benchmark, this time using a different method. Instead of using a fibre with only one light-guiding core, as happens now, Sakaguchi's team developed a fibre with seven. Each core carried 15.6 terabits per second, yielding a total of 109 terabits per second. "We introduced a new dimension, spatial multiplication, to increasing transmission capacity," Sakaguchi says.
Multi-core fibres are complex to make, as is amplifying signals for long-distance transmission in either technique. For this reason, Wang thinks the first application of 100-terabit transmission will be inside the giant data centres that power Google, Facebook and Amazon.
The ANSI/TIA/EIA-568-A standard recommends that optical fiber be installed in groups of six or twelve fibers for backbone cables.
Fiber Optic Cable report (5 pages)
Fiber trunkline cable (FTC) 72 SM fibers Fiber backbone cable (FBC) 12 SM fibers Fiber pigtail cable (FPC) 12 SM fibers
If each fiber could transmit 100 terabits per second then trunklines could handle 7.2 petabits per second and fiber backbone cables could handle 1.2 petabits per second.
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