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Home » Microsoft Adopts 3M Expanded Beam Optical Technology for Azure AI Data Centers

Microsoft Adopts 3M Expanded Beam Optical Technology for Azure AI Data Centers

July 15, 2026
in Optical, Optical I/O
A A

Microsoft will become the first announced hyperscale cloud provider to deploy 3M’s Expanded Beam Optical (EBO) technology in Azure data centers as part of a broader strategic partnership that also includes enterprise AI transformation initiatives at 3M. The agreement combines Microsoft’s AI infrastructure capabilities with 3M’s optical connectivity and materials science technologies to address the increasing infrastructure demands created by large-scale AI workloads.

The infrastructure component centers on 3M’s proprietary Expanded Beam Optical connector technology, which replaces traditional physical-contact fiber interfaces with expanded beam optics designed to improve contamination tolerance and simplify deployment. According to the companies, the technology reduces the need for routine connector cleaning and inspection while maintaining optical performance in dense AI data center environments. Microsoft said early deployments demonstrated the potential to shorten network installation timelines while delivering reliable performance under real-world operating conditions. 3M is expanding manufacturing capacity for the technology and continues to support industry standardization through its participation in the Expanded Beam Optical Multi-Source Agreement (MSA).

Beyond infrastructure, 3M will deploy Microsoft AI technologies across customer service, finance, sales, marketing, and other business operations. One of the first initiatives involves Microsoft’s Frontier Company engineering team working with 3M Global Business Services to automate customer order management using AI agents that assist with credit checks, delinquency assessments, and system updates while maintaining human oversight through approval workflows and monitoring dashboards.

• Microsoft becomes the first announced hyperscale cloud provider to deploy 3M Expanded Beam Optical (EBO) technology.
• EBO replaces physical-contact optical interfaces with expanded beam optics that are more tolerant of dust and contamination.
• Microsoft reported early deployments showed potential for faster network installation and simplified maintenance.
• 3M is increasing manufacturing capacity to support growing hyperscale AI infrastructure demand.
• 3M helped establish the Expanded Beam Optical Multi-Source Agreement (MSA) to encourage ecosystem standardization.
• 3M will deploy Microsoft AI technologies across finance, customer service, sales, marketing, and other enterprise functions.
• Initial enterprise AI projects include AI agent-assisted customer order processing with human-in-the-loop controls.

“At Microsoft, we’re redefining the foundation of cloud and AI infrastructure — combining our own innovations with advances from partners like 3M to build datacenters that are faster to deploy, more resilient and ready for the scale of AI,” said Cliff Henson, corporate vice president, Cloud Supply Chain, Microsoft.

🌐 Analysis: Expanded Beam Optical technology has emerged as one of the most closely watched developments in AI data center networking because hyperscale deployments increasingly require faster installation, simplified maintenance, and improved operational reliability as fiber counts continue to grow. Microsoft’s decision represents one of the first publicly announced hyperscale deployments of EBO technology and could accelerate ecosystem support alongside conventional MPO-based optical connectivity.

The announcement also illustrates how AI partnerships increasingly combine physical infrastructure with enterprise AI transformation. While Microsoft expands Azure’s AI infrastructure using new optical technologies, 3M is simultaneously adopting Microsoft’s AI platforms to automate internal business processes, reflecting a broader trend in which infrastructure suppliers are becoming major enterprise AI adopters themselves.

Expanded Beam Optics (EBO)
Optical Connectivity for AI Data Centers
Technology Expanded Beam Optical (EBO) connectors use precision micro-optics to expand and collimate the light beam before transmission, eliminating direct physical contact between fiber end faces.
Primary Benefit Greatly improves contamination tolerance, reduces connector cleaning requirements, simplifies installation, and improves operational reliability in hyperscale AI clusters.
Target Applications AI factories • GPU clusters • Cloud data centers • HPC systems • Optical patch panels • High-density fiber interconnects
Compared with MPO Traditional MPO connectors require direct fiber contact and frequent inspection/cleaning. EBO uses a non-contact optical interface that is inherently more tolerant of dust, handling, and repeated mating cycles.
Key Industry Drivers AI networking scale, faster deployment, lower operational costs, increasing fiber density, higher connector reliability, and reduced maintenance labor.
Major Supporters 3M (technology pioneer), Microsoft (first announced hyperscale deployment), US Conec, Senko, T&S Communications, Sumitomo Electric, and other connector ecosystem participants.
Recent Standardization The Expanded Beam Optical Multi-Source Agreement (EBO MSA) was established to define interoperable mechanical and optical specifications, enabling multi-vendor compatibility and accelerating ecosystem adoption for hyperscale data centers.
EBO MSA Objectives • Common connector interfaces
• Vendor interoperability
• Qualification and performance specifications
• Manufacturing consistency
• Ecosystem growth for AI infrastructure
Hyperscale Milestone July 2026: Microsoft became the first publicly announced hyperscale cloud provider to deploy 3M Expanded Beam Optical technology within Azure AI data centers.
Industry Outlook As AI clusters scale toward hundreds of thousands—and eventually millions—of optical links, EBO is emerging as a promising alternative to conventional MPO connectivity for reducing operational complexity while supporting faster deployment of next-generation AI infrastructure.
Tags: 3MMicrosoft
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