Pluggables have becomes mainstream in datacom applications.

EFFECT Photonics works together with TU Delft and partners to create superhighway for digital data

EFFECT Photonics works together with TU Delft and partners to create superhighway for digital data

EFFECT Photonics, a leading developer of high-performance dense wavelength division multiplexing (DWDM) optical components based on its optical System-on-Chip technology, collaborates with TU Delft researchers and 20 more partners to develop reliable and safe wireless broadband connections using light instead of radio waves.

Superhighway for digital data

Optical Wireless Superhighways: Free photons (at home and in space): FREE
Information is the lifeblood of today’s digital society. The amount of data, and the use of that data, has increased exponentially over the last 50 years. However, traditional technologies used to distribute data, from Wi-Fi in our homes to satellite communications, have already reached or will soon be reaching their limit in terms of capacity. There is a growing need for a new and unifying paradigm for wireless connectivity. As part of the FREE consortium, 21 partners have joined forces to develop new solutions that use light instead of radio waves (which is what the 5G network is based on, for example) to create reliable and secure wireless broadband connections.

The consortium will develop the technology that ultimately may enable a ‘network of networks’, in which satellite communications are seamlessly integrated with ground-based networks to provide satellite-to-satellite Network Functions Virtualisation (NFV) and Software Defined Networking (SDN). This simplified integration between terrestrial and satellite networks will open up new opportunities for the Internet of Things (IOT), as well as for more accurate weather forecasting, for example. The consortium anticipates that the huge amount of available bandwidth, the inherent security, the limited latency and license-free operation will result in a 10- to 100-fold increase in wireless connectivity.

Prof. Dr. Henri Werij, Dean of the Faculty of Aerospace Engineering at TU Delft, explains in a video how this technology will allow to securely send and process digital data at high speeds, with low latency.

Programme leader: Prof. Dr. Eberhard Gill (TU Delft)

Consortium partners: Airbus DS, Aircision, Demcon, EFFECT Photonics, Flexible, Hyperion Technologies, ISIS, Lionix, NLR, Phix, Quix, Signify, Single Quantum, S&T, TU Delft, Eindhoven University of Technology, TNO, Leiden University, Twente University, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam, VTEC

Article source: https://www.tudelft.nl/en/2021/tu-delft/tu-delft-and-partners-to-create-superhighway-for-digital-data

– About EFFECT Photonics –

EFFECT Photonics delivers highly integrated optical communications products based on its Dense Wavelength Division Multiplexing (DWDM) optical System-on-Chip technology. The key enabling technology for DWDM systems is full monolithic integration of all photonic components within a single chip and being able to produce these in volume with high yield at low cost. With this capability, EFFECT Photonics is addressing the need for low cost DWDM solutions driven by the soaring demand for high bandwidth connections between datacenters and back from mobile cell towers. Headquartered in Eindhoven, The Netherlands, with additional R&D and manufacturing in South West UK, with sales partners worldwide. www.effectphotonics.com

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