Zibb

Margery Conner Technical Editor Margery Conner's PowerSource streams the latest developments in electronic power design and related technologies. Follow Margery on Twitter at: http://twitter.com/margeryc.



   Advertisement

Profile

RSS Feed

  • Add this blog to your RSS newsreader!

Recent Posts

Recent Comments

Most Commented On

Archives

By Category

Power Management Articles

Blog

Monday, March 19, 2007

Cheap optocouplers will bring optical fibers to the consumer market

Mar 19 2007 3:48PM | Permalink |Comments (0) |


Luxtera's announcement of its ability to combine germanium with a garden-variety SOI-SMOS process may have far-reaching implications for optical communications. The ability to deposit germanium on the wafer gives Luxtera the ability to cheaply integrate photodetectors directly onto the receiver electronics, simplifying assembly and test, and dropping the cost of the photodetector from about $1 to less than a penny. But the drop in BOM costs is equaled by the drop – or virtual elimination – of assembly and testing of the optocoupler assembly. Luxtera's goal is to drive the cost of a 10 GHz opto-coupler transmission scheme equivalent in price to a 100 MHz copper connection.

It's easy to see where the demand for cheap, high-speed interconnects comes from in our data-hungry world. One particularly attractive application is in the cabling between HDTV screens and their media drives. Luxtera CEO Alex Dickinson pointed out to me that current copper cable configurations limit the distance separating the drive from the big screen display to a 6m cable run. Going to optical fiber cabling removes the 6m restriction, giving big screen owners more freedom over how and where they position the screen – and opening up another large market for optocouplers.


Related entries in: Components, Hardware, Interconnect | Power Sources/Controllers | 


Post a comment



Display Name

Change Image
Before submitting this form, please type the characters displayed above.
Note the letters are NOT case sensitive.


ADVERTISEMENT

©1997-2009 Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Use of this Web site is subject to its Terms of Use | Privacy Policy

Please visit these other Reed Business sites