Acronyms and Terminology for the Fiber Optics Novice
Gbit/s or Gbps – Gigabits per second indicates bandwidth. The guiding principle is the higher the bandwidth, the more data the link can transmit.
MSA: Multi-source agreement
EOL: End of life, i.e. when a product is being phased out and vendors no longer carry it.
Hot pluggable: Hot-pluggable devices are devices you can remove and install while the server is running without disruption.
Hot-swappable: A transceiver that can be easily inserted into the port to connect with its motherboard. A hardware component that can be changed in this manner, without disrupting operations, is known as hot-swappable.
SFP: Small form-factor pluggable. These devices use hot-swappable interfaces and can be found in network and storage switches. The SFP ports on a switch and SFP modules enable the switch to connect to fiber and Ethernet cables of different types and speeds.
Quad: Means four. When part of the name of a transceiver, it means four bidirectional optical paths. The presence of four paths optimizes the speed of data transmission.
QSFP: Quad small form factor pluggables
QSFP-DD: Quad small form factor double density
CSFP: Compact small form-factor pluggable or compact SFP
WDM: Wavelength Division Multiplexing. A communications technology that transmits several wavelengths of light (lambdas) simultaneously over a single optical fiber. WDM has dramatically increased the carrying capacity of the fiber infrastructure of telephone companies and other carriers.
DWDM: Dense wavelength division multiplexing
CWDM: Coarse wave division multiplexing
For a more detailed explanation, read this article, CWDM or DWDM, which is best for you?
NRZ: non-return to zero, a two-level binary modulation format
PAM4: four-level pulse amplitude modulation. PAM4 contains twice the amount of data without requiring significant increase in the speed of the optical components.
Single Lambda: An innovation developed by fiber optics engineering to accommodate faster data transmission and higher bandwidth mostly for 100G transceiver speeds. The single-lambda approach uses PAM4 (four-level pulse amplitude modulation). Prior to this, nearly all 100G optical specifications incorporated NRZ (non-return to zero), which is a two-level binary modulation format. The full 100G data stream is transmitted by a single laser. That means no WDM or parallel fiber.
Talk to a Vitex product expert about your next project. Our technical team can guide you to the right connectivity solution.
Related Products