Fujitsu Demonstrates First ADC in Family of Low-Power, High-Speed, 28nm CMOS Converters


Power-efficient, Scalable Solutions Ready for Single to Multi-channel SoCs; Ideal for Short-range Interconnect and Long-haul Optical Networking; First Demo at OFC in Anaheim March 18-21



SUNNYVALE, Calif.- Fujitsu, the market-leading provider of high-speed data converters, today announced the first in a new family of 8-bit, power-efficient, 28nm CMOS converters. The analog-to-digital converter (ADC) addresses the need for large-scale global deployment of single-wavelength, 100Gbps optical transport systems, and provides a solution for future short-range optical and backplane interconnects. Now in its third generation of process technology, the 28nm ADC supports sampling rates from 55 to 70 GSa/s (billions of samples per second) with scalable analog bandwidth. The new ADC, which is based on Fujitsu's proven CHAIS architecture, will be shown for the first time at the OFC/NFOEC conference, March 18-21, in Anaheim, California.



Fujitsu will expand the new 8-bit family this year with the release of a digital-to-analog converter (DAC) with the same sampling range. Subsequent ADC and DAC devices, all of which will be available for system design in 2013, will support sampling rates ranging from 28 GSa/s to more than 90 GSa/s. The converters, which can be used in a variety of different channel-count configurations, offer significantly lower power based on sampling rate when compared to previous 40nm CHAIS converters from Fujitsu.



Ever-increasing bandwidth and traffic demands are shifting the requirement for 100Gbps lambdas from the long-haul network (where they run over a few thousand kilometers) to the mid-haul or Metropolitan Area Network (MAN). While distances are shorter in Metro networks (up to a few hundred kilometers), port densities are higher, resulting in mechanical and thermal constraints that require more power-efficient 100Gbps SoC designs.



In addition to their use in 100Gbps long-haul and metro optical transport networks, solutions based on advanced modulation techniques-combined with high-speed, high-resolution low-power converters-can address the increasing bandwidth demands of a number of other sectors. These include inter- and intra-datacenter optical links for 100Gbps Ethernet, as well as high-speed electrical interconnects across PCB or backplane channels. As in the Metro transport market, increasing bandwidth and traffic demands are pushing high-speed converter designs to be more flexible and power-efficient.



Building on years of design experience spanning multiple process generations, Fujitsu continues to be at the forefront of analog design. Fujitsu brings its expertise in mixed-signal, thermal, power-optimization and high-performance package design to ensure successful implementation of high-speed SoC ASIC designs to meet these new and growing market challenges.



About Fujitsu Semiconductor America



Fujitsu Semiconductor America, Inc. (FSA) is a leading designer and developer of innovative semiconductor products and solutions for new generations of consumer, communications, automotive and industrial products. FSA provides a comprehensive portfolio of high-quality, reliable semiconductor products and services throughout North and South America. Founded in 1979 and headquartered in Sunnyvale, California, Fujitsu Semiconductor America (formerly Fujitsu Microelectronics America) is a wholly owned subsidiary of Fujitsu Semiconductor Limited (FSL), Japan.



For product information, visit the company's website at http://us.fujitsu.com/semi, e-mail FSA_inquiry@us.fujitsu.com or call 1-800-866-8608. For company news and updates, connect with FSA on Twitter (http://twitter.com/FujitsuSemiUS), Facebook (https://www.facebook.com/FujitsuSemiconductorAmerica),



SOURCE  Fujitsu Semiconductor America, Inc.



CONTACT:

Steven Wolpern

Fujitsu Semiconductor America, Inc.

+1-408-737-5625

FSA_PR@us.fujitsu.com



Dick Davies

IPRA

+1-415-652-7515

ipra@mindspring.com



Web Site: http://us.fujitsu.com/semi

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