60 GHz optisk sampling-oscilloskop bryder grænser

60 GHz optisk sampling-oscilloskop bryder grænser

Anritsu præsenterer nyt 60 GHz optisk sampling-oscilloskop til måling af optiske parametre i forbindelse med 200G/Lane 1.6T transmission. Oscilloskopet vises på den kommende ECOC 2025-udstilling i Bella Center.

Anritsu Corporation has launched the MP2110A-080, a 60 GHz optical sampling oscilloscope option for the BERTWave MP2110A. This solution enables accurate measurement of key optical signal parameters as defined by industry standards, supporting the development and manufacturing of 200G/Lane and 1.6T optical transceivers for high-capacity data centers and AI infrastructure.

As AI data centers push transmission rates from 50 Gbaud to 100 Gbaud, engineers require test solutions capable of accurate evaluation of optical transceiver signals according to standard requirements.

The transition to 200G/Lane transmission introduces fundamental measurement challenges. Traditional test equipment lacks sufficient bandwidth to capture the harmonic content and high-frequency distortions that become increasingly critical at 100 Gbaud PAM4 signaling rates. This bandwidth limitation makes it difficult to accurately measure key optical parameters required by industry standards, potentially allowing important characteristics to escape detection during development and manufacturing validation.

The shift from 800G to 1.6T aggregate data rates compounds this challenge, as multiple high-speed lanes must be simultaneously evaluated without compromising measurement accuracy or throughput requirements. The technology will be demonstrated at Anritsu’ stand at ECOC 2025 in Bella Center in Copenhagen, September 29-October 1 showcasing real-world applications in 1.6T transceiver validation and AI data center infrastructure testing.

ECOC is one of the world’s two largest and Europe’s most prestigious conference/exhibition in the field of optical communications, bringing together scientists, engineers and business leaders from across the globe.

24/9 2025