The Traditional Transceiver — One Dimension of Information

A traditional transceiver, such as a standard SFP or SFP+, operates on the principle of “on or off”. The laser emits two states of light, which the other end of the link receives as ‘1’ or ‘0’. This solution is elegant in its simplicity and genuinely ubiquitous. Such modules work today in billions of devices around the world.
It has, however, one fundamental problem. When you want to send more data, you have only two options: either switch the laser on and off faster, or lay more fibre. There is no third option. Brightness is one dimension of information, and one dimension of information means one dimension of possibility.

The Coherent Module — Reading Images Instead of Flickering

A coherent module takes a completely different approach. Instead of asking “is it lit?”, it asks “how is it lit?” — and exploits several properties of light simultaneously. Coherent modulation encodes information in the amplitude, phase, and polarisation of the carrier signal. These are three independent dimensions that can be combined in any way.
Traditional Transceiver
On/Off modulation
NRZ, PAM4
Information dimensions1
Bits per symbol1
Typical rangeup to a few km
Throughputup to 400G
DSP compensationNone
Eliminates transpondersNo
Coherent Module
Amplitude, phase, polarisation
DP-16QAM, OpenZR+
Information dimensions3
Bits per symbol8 (DP-16QAM)
Typical rangeover 1,000 km
Throughput100G to 800G+
DSP compensationActive
Eliminates transpondersYes
The result is symbols composed of many points — in practice, images in which an entire set of bits is encoded. How many bits exactly depends on the modulation format. QPSK gives two bits per symbol, 8QAM gives three, and 16QAM gives four. With dual polarisation, each of these figures is multiplied by two. DP-16QAM therefore delivers eight bits per symbol — eight times more information than the simplest “lit, not lit” scheme.
There is one more thing that is truly impressive. The sensitivity of a coherent receiver is so high that reading a single bit of information requires an average of just nine photons. That is not a misprint. Nine particles of light are enough to reliably read a bit of data.

DSP — The Brain That Makes It All Work

Behind this precision is a digital signal processor, the DSP. It is the DSP that in real time encodes outgoing data into complex symbols and decodes incoming ones. It handles FEC error correction, compensates for signal distortions in the fibre, and manages polarisation.
The DSP consumes on average half the energy used by the entire coherent module. That is precisely why coherent modules were for years large and hot. Their designers had to pack enormous computing power into the smallest possible housing. The first coherent solutions were built as line cards mounted in large transmission devices. Pluggable modules — which you slide into a router port like a regular transceiver — only became possible once DSP chips became small enough and energy-efficient enough.
Today, the GBC Photonics 400G OpenZR+ module operates at under 22 W. This is the result of using indium phosphide (InP) as the semiconductor material and integrating multiple functions — the laser, optical amplifier, and modulator — into a single piece of that material.

Where Does the Difference in Range Come From?

A traditional transceiver has a limited range because the signal weakens and distorts over long distances. Coherent modules handle this much better, for two reasons. First, the DSP actively compensates for signal distortions in the fibre — chromatic dispersion and polarisation mode dispersion. In classic transceivers these phenomena must be neutralised by separate devices or simply accepted as a range limitation.
Second, coherent modules work together with EDFA optical amplifiers, which regenerate the signal without converting it to electrical form. This opens the way to hundreds of kilometres of transmission without a regenerator — and with modern coherent modules, even over a thousand kilometres.

IPoDWDM — Where These Differences Matter in Practice

Traditional architecture
Router, transponder, DWDM, transponder, router
Separate power and cooling for transponders
Additional management of the transponder layer
More rack space required
Higher CAPEX and OPEX
IPoDWDM architecture
Router, coherent module, DWDM, module, router
Transponders eliminated
Single management layer
Up to 80% less space in the DC
65% lower backbone network CAPEX
65%lower backbone network CAPEX
80%less space in the data centre
90%lower power draw in the network core
Traditional transceivers connect a router to a transponder. The transponder converts the signal to a DWDM wavelength and sends it onward, with another transponder waiting at the far end. A coherent module eliminates this intermediary. You slide it directly into the router’s QSFP port, configure the DWDM wavelength, and the module communicates directly with the optical system. No more separate transponders, their power supplies, cooling, and management.
That is the idea behind IPoDWDM, and the resulting savings are very concrete. Companies deploying such architectures report a 65% reduction in backbone network capital expenditure compared with traditional structures, up to 80% reduction in data centre floor space, and a drop in power consumption from 70% at the network edge to 90% in the core.

Compatibility — One Module for Everything

Historically, coherent modules could be problematic, as every hardware vendor required modules from their own product line. The standardisation of QSFP and the CMIS protocol changed that. GBC Photonics modules work in routers and switches from all leading network hardware vendors compliant with the OpenZR+ standard. Compatibility is confirmed in the laboratory before every delivery.
Additionally, the SRD (Smart Recode Device) environment allows you to program the module yourself to work with a specific vendor’s hardware — from a computer or smartphone, without sending the module to a service centre. You keep one type of module in stock instead of several versions for different vendors.

When to Choose a Traditional Transceiver and When a Coherent Module?

Traditional transceiver — short distances
Connections within a building or campus
Distances up to a few kilometres
Priority is simplicity and low cost
Access networks: SFP, SFP+, QSFP28
Coherent module — long distances and high throughput
Distances above several tens of kilometres
High throughput on a single fibre
DCI between data centres
Operator backbone networks
Eliminating transponders from the architecture

The traditional transceiver still has its place. Connections within a building, on a campus, short distances up to a few kilometres — wherever simplicity and the cost of classic modules win without question.

A coherent module makes sense when distances exceed several tens of kilometres, when you need high throughput on a single fibre, when you are building DCI between data centres, designing an operator backbone, or want to eliminate transponders from the architecture.

The boundary between these two worlds is constantly shifting, as coherent modules are becoming cheaper and easier to deploy. GBC Photonics already offers a coherent 100G module in a QSFP28 housing drawing under 5 W, designed for access networks — a category that until recently belonged exclusively to classic transceivers.

FAQ

FAQ — Coherent Module and Transceiver

A traditional transceiver — SFP or SFP+ — operates on the principle of “lit or not lit”. It encodes information in one dimension, brightness, giving one bit per symbol. A coherent module encodes data simultaneously in the amplitude, phase, and polarisation of light — three independent dimensions. In DP-16QAM format this yields eight bits per symbol, eight times more information than the simplest classic scheme. This is a fundamentally different technology, not just a faster version of the same thing.
For two reasons. First, the DSP digital signal processor actively compensates for signal distortions in the fibre — chromatic dispersion and polarisation mode dispersion. In classic transceivers these phenomena must be neutralised by separate devices or simply accepted as a range limitation. Second, coherent modules work together with EDFA optical amplifiers, which regenerate the signal without converting it to electrical form. This enables transmission over hundreds — and with modern modules, over a thousand — kilometres without a regenerator along the way.
The DSP is a digital signal processor that in real time encodes outgoing data into complex symbols and decodes incoming ones. It also handles FEC error correction, compensates for distortions in the fibre, and manages polarisation. It is the heart of a coherent module. It consumes on average half the energy of the entire module, which is why coherent modules were for years large and hot. Only once DSP chips became small and energy-efficient enough did pluggable modules become possible — the kind you slide into a router port like a regular transceiver.
In a traditional architecture the router connects to a transponder, which converts the signal to a DWDM wavelength. IPoDWDM eliminates this intermediary — you slide the coherent module directly into the router port and it communicates directly with the optical system. No more separate transponders, their power supplies, cooling, and management. Companies deploying such architectures report a 65% reduction in backbone network capital expenditure, up to 80% reduction in data centre floor space, and a drop in power consumption from 70% at the network edge to 90% in the core.
Historically this was hit-and-miss, as every hardware vendor required modules from their own product line. The standardisation of QSFP and the CMIS protocol changed that. GBC Photonics modules work in routers and switches from all leading network hardware vendors compliant with the OpenZR+ standard, and compatibility is confirmed in the laboratory before every delivery. Additionally, the SRD environment lets you program the module yourself to work with a specific vendor’s hardware — from a computer or smartphone, without sending it to a service centre. You keep one type of module in stock instead of several versions for different vendors.
A traditional transceiver still wins on short distances — within a building or campus, up to a few kilometres, where simplicity and low cost are paramount. A coherent module makes sense when distances exceed several tens of kilometres, when you need high throughput on a single fibre, when you are building DCI between data centres, designing an operator backbone, or want to eliminate transponders from the architecture. The boundary between these two worlds keeps shifting as coherent modules get cheaper. GBC Photonics already offers a coherent 100G module in a QSFP28 housing drawing under 5 W, designed for access networks.
The GBC Photonics 400G OpenZR+ module operates at under 22 W, and the coherent 100G module in a QSFP28 housing draws under 5 W. This is the result of using indium phosphide as the semiconductor material and integrating multiple functions — the laser, optical amplifier, and modulator — into a single piece of that material. For comparison, just a few years ago coherent solutions were built as large, power-hungry line cards. Today’s energy efficiency is precisely what made it possible to fit full coherent capability into a standard router port.
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