Converge Digest

1600G ZR and ZR+: The Next Frontier in Coherent Pluggables

By Fady Masoud, Senior Director, Solutions Marketing at Nokia

The massive scale of AI model training, inference and data movement between distributed compute clusters is dramatically increasing east-west and data center interconnect traffic. This, combined with surging traffic from telecommunications providers in metro and long-haul links is pushing optical pluggable design to new limits in the pursuit of higher-capacity and lower-power-per-bit. 

While 800G ZR and ZR+ coherent pluggables are rapidly reshaping the market, the next evolutionary milestone is already on the horizon: 1600G (1.6 Tb/s) ZR and ZR+, which promise ultra-high capacity in standardized, interoperable form factors. 

Delivering 1600G isn’t only a matter of “scaling up speed”. It requires evolving every aspect of coherent pluggable, from the use of advanced materials and modulators to digital signal processors (DSPs) and packaging. This article examines the core technologies underpinning 1600G ZR and ZR+ and how technology breakthroughs are enabling this leap.

Challenges scaling to 1600G

The successful design of any coherent pluggable relies on digital and optical components working in concert. To realize 1600 Gb/s throughput in a compact pluggable form factor, designers must address multiple challenges:

These challenges are driving innovation across digital processing, materials use and modulation formats.

Technology innovation enabling 1600G

While 1600G pluggables build on lessons learned from 800G, they require significant advances to succeed.

1600G ZR and ZR+: Modes, tradeoffs and convergence

As with previous generations, the distinction between ZR and ZR+ lies primarily in reach, power and operational flexibility. ZR mode is expected to focus on interoperable, lower-power operation optimized for DCI-class links, typically under 120 km. Beyond interoperability, ZR+ supports higher power envelopes, extended reach enabled by special modes, and greater tunability to operate over more challenging optical paths. Table 1 summarizes the differences between ZR and ZR+.

Table 1: 1600G ZR compared to ZR+
Attribute 1600G ZR (Expected) 1600G ZR+ (Expected)
Primary application Data center interconnect (DCI) point-to-point links Metro, regional, and long-haul networks, including ROADM-based architectures
Maximum reach at 1600 Gb/s (amplified) Up to approximately 120 km Up to approximately 1,000 km at 1600 Gb/s, with longer reaches at lower data rates
Forward error correction (FEC) Interoperable open FEC (oFEC) Interoperable oFEC, with optional high-performance or vendor-specific FEC
Modulation schemes Primarily fixed 16QAM Flexible modulation including QPSK, 8QAM, and 16QAM with PCS, with higher-order options such as 32QAM with PCS
Power consumption (expected) Low 30 W range High 30 W to low 40 W range

A key question is whether a single 1600G pluggable can support both modes. Industry momentum suggests that dual mode operation will be the norm rather than the exception. Software-defined profiles are expected to enable lower power ZR operation for short-reach applications, while allowing higher power ZR+ configurations when extended reach or higher margins are required. This convergence maximizes deployment flexibility and improves return on investment.

Although 1600G pluggables will likely operate in both ZR and ZR+ modes, vendors are expected to align pricing with network requirements. This tiered approach ensures operators do not pay a premium for ZR+ capabilities such as extended reach or advanced modulation when standard point-to-point ZR performance is sufficient. Distinct price points allow operators to optimize capital expenditure based on actual distance and performance needs.

Interoperability and ecosystems

Multi-vendor interoperability remains a cornerstone of the ZR and ZR+ value proposition. With this in mind, the Optical Internetworking Forum (OIF), representing both operators and vendors, initiated the1600ZR and the 1600ZR+ working groups in late 2023 and early 2024, respectively. They build on the work the OIF did for 800G pluggable standardization and aim to define a standardized framework for 1600G and make key technical decisions. They focus on defining parameters such as FEC, electrical interfaces, and reach tiers amongst others, to help ensure 1600G modules from different suppliers can interoperate and fit into broader network architectures. Backward compatibility with 800G ZR/ZR+ is also critical, enabling mixed-rate deployments and smooth network evolution without disruptive upgrades. 

The 1600G transition is underway

Although 1600G ZR and ZR+ modules will not likely be commercially available until mid to late 2027, network operators are already planning for their adoption. Long design cycles for optical systems, routers and line cards, as well as the need to ensure interoperability across multi-vendor ecosystems make this necessary. 

Realizing 1600G coherent pluggables will require coordinated innovation across DSPs, photonics, packaging and thermal management, alongside collaboration across the ecosystem to align on standards, interoperability, and deployment models. As AI traffic continues its relentless growth and network operators push for ever-greater efficiency and scalability, 1600G ZR/ZR+ bring unprecedented capacity, flexibility, and openness to the optical industry.

Fady Masoud is a senior director for solutions marketing at Nokia focusing on next-generation intelligent coherent pluggable optics (ICE-X) and cloud /data center interconnect solutions. His area of expertise is the architecture and requirements of next-generation optical networking infrastructure. During his 30 years in the telecommunications industry, Fady has held various positions in the optical networking domain at Nortel, Ciena, Infinera, and now Nokia. He started as a hardware test engineer on the first OC-192 (10 Gb/s) systems and then was a systems and network engineer on optical transmission products, all combined with hands-on experience. Fady holds a bachelor’s degree in electrical engineering from Laval University (Quebec City, Canada) and a master’s degree in systems technology (software simulation of optical networks) from the Superior School of Technology (Montreal, Canada). He has written numerous industry and technical publications such as for the IEEE, as well as a book on next-generation optical networking, cloud networking, and data center interconnect, as well as on many other key topics.

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