Terabit Ethernet
Terabit Ethernet is Ethernet with speeds above 100 Gigabit Ethernet. The 400 Gigabit Ethernet and 200 Gigabit Ethernet standard developed by the IEEE P802.3bs Task Force using broadly similar technology to 100 Gigabit Ethernet was approved on December 6, 2017. On February 16, 2024 the '''800 Gigabit Ethernet standard developed by the IEEE P802.3df Task Force was approved.
The Optical Internetworking Forum has already announced five new projects at 112 Gbit/s which would also make 4th generation 100 GbE links possible. The IEEE P802.3df Task Force started work in January 2022 to standardize and Ethernet. In November 2022 the IEEE 802.3df project objectives were split in two, with 1.6T and 200G/lane work being moved to the new IEEE 802.3dj project. The timeline for the 802.3dj project indicates completion in July 2026.
History
and Google, among other companies, have expressed a need for TbE. While a speed of is achievable with existing technology, would require different technology. Accordingly, at the IEEE Industry Connections Higher Speed Ethernet Consensus group meeting in September 2012, 400 GbE was chosen as the next generation goal. Additional 200 GbE objectives were added in January 2016.The University of California, Santa Barbara attracted help from Agilent Technologies, Google, Intel, Rockwell Collins, and Verizon Communications to help with research into next generation Ethernet.
In early 2016, core router platforms from Cisco, Juniper and other major manufacturers supported full duplex data rates per slot. One, two and four-port 100 GbE and one port 400 GbE line cards were available. In early 2019, 200 GbE line cards became available after 802.3cd standard ratification. In 2020 the Ethernet Technology Consortium announced a specification for 800 Gigabit Ethernet.
200G Ethernet uses PAM4 signaling, which allows 2 bits to be transmitted per clock cycle, but at a higher implementation cost. Cisco introduced an 800G Ethernet switch in 2022. In 2024, Nokia routers with 800G Ethernet were deployed.
Standards development
The IEEE formed the "IEEE 802.3 Industry Connections Ethernet Bandwidth Assessment Ad Hoc", to investigate the business needs for short and long term bandwidth requirements.IEEE 802.3's "400 Gb/s Ethernet Study Group" started working on the generation standard in March 2013. Results from the study group were published and approved on March 27, 2014. Subsequently, the IEEE 802.3bs Task Force started working to provide physical layer specifications for several link distances.
The IEEE 802.3bs standard was approved on December 6, 2017.
The IEEE 802.3cd standard was approved on December 5, 2018.
The IEEE 802.3cn standard was approved on December 20, 2019.
The IEEE 802.3cm standard was approved on January 30, 2020.
The IEEE 802.3cu standard was approved on February 11, 2021.
The IEEE 802.3ck and 802.3db standards were approved on September 21, 2022.
In November 2022 the IEEE 802.3df project objectives were split in two, with 1.6T and 200G/lane work being moved to the new IEEE 802.3dj project
IEEE project objectives
Like all speeds since 10 Gigabit Ethernet, the standards support only full-duplex operation. Other objectives include:- Preserve the Ethernet frame format utilizing the Ethernet MAC
- Preserve minimum and maximum frame size of current Ethernet standard
- Support a bit error ratio of 10−13, which is an improvement over the 10−12 BER that was specified for 10GbE, 40GbE, and 100GbE.
- Support for OTN, and optional support for Energy-Efficient Ethernet.
802.3bs project
- Ethernet
- * at least 100 m over multi-mode fiber using 16 parallel strands of fiber each at
- * at least 500 m over single-mode fiber using 4 parallel strands of fiber each at
- * at least 2 km over single-mode fiber using 8 parallel wavelengths each at
- * at least 10 km over single-mode fiber using 8 parallel wavelengths each at
- * 8 and 16 lane chip-to-chip/chip-to-module electrical interfaces
- Ethernet
- * at least 500 m over single-mode fiber using 4 parallel strands of fiber each at
- * at least 2 km over single-mode fiber using 4 parallel wavelengths each at
- * at least 10 km over single-mode fiber using 4 parallel wavelengths each at
- * 4 or 8 lane chip-to-chip/chip-to-module electrical interfaces
802.3cd project
- Define four-lane PHYs for operation over:
- * copper twin-axial cables with lengths up to at least 3 m.
- * printed circuit board backplane with a total channel insertion loss of ≤ 30 dB at 13.28125 GHz.
- Define PHYs for operation over MMF with lengths up to at least 100 m.
802.3ck project
- Ethernet
- * Define a two-lane Attachment Unit interface for chip-to-module applications, compatible with PMDs based on per lane optical signaling
- * Define a two-lane Attachment Unit Interface for chip-to-chip applications
- * Define a two-lane PHY for operation over electrical backplanes an insertion loss ≤ 28 dB at 26.56 GHz
- * Define a two-lane PHY for operation over twin axial copper cables with lengths up to at least 2 m
- Ethernet
- * Define a four-lane Attachment Unit interface for chip-to-module applications, compatible with PMDs based on per lane optical signaling
- * Define a four-lane Attachment Unit Interface for chip-to-chip applications
- * Define a four-lane PHY for operation over electrical backplanes an insertion loss ≤ 28 dB at 26.56 GHz
- * Define a four-lane PHY for operation over twin axial copper cables with lengths up to at least 2 m
802.3cm project
- Ethernet
- * Define a physical layer specification supporting operation over 8 pairs of MMF with lengths up to at least 100 m
- *Define a physical layer specification supporting operation over 4 pairs of MMF with lengths up to at least 100 m
802.3cn project
- Ethernet
- * Provide a physical layer specification supporting operation over four wavelengths capable of at least 40 km of SMF
- Ethernet
- * Provide a physical layer specification supporting operation over eight wavelengths capable of at least 40 km of SMF
802.3cu project
- Define a four-wavelength PHY for operation over SMF with lengths up to at least 2 km
- Define a four-wavelength PHY for operation over SMF with lengths up to at least 6 km
802.3cw project
- Provide a physical layer specification supporting operation on a single wavelength capable of at least 80 km over a DWDM system Dual polarization 16-state quadrature amplitude modulation with coherent detection is proposed. The project was canceled in 2024.
802.3db project
- Ethernet
- * Define a physical layer specification that supports operation over 2 pairs of MMF with lengths up to at least 50 m
- * Define a physical layer specification that supports operation over 2 pairs of MMF with lengths up to at least 100 m
- Ethernet
- * Define a physical layer specification that supports operation over 4 pairs of MMF with lengths up to at least 50 m
- * Define a physical layer specification that supports operation over 4 pairs of MMF with lengths up to at least 100 m
802.3df project
- Adds 800G Ethernet rate and specifies port types using existing 100G per lane technology
802.3dj project
- Adds Ethernet rate and specifies port types using new per lane technology.
802.3ds project
- Adds 200, 400, 800 Gbit/s and 1.6 Tbit/s MMF PHYs with 30m and 50m reach.