Luxtera
Type | Private |
---|---|
Industry | Semiconductor |
Founded | 2001 |
Headquarters | Carlsbad, CA |
Products | Blazar |
Website | www.luxtera.com |
Luxtera Inc., founded in 2001, is based in Carlsbad, California. Luxtera is a fabless semiconductor company that is using silicon photonics [1] technology to build complex electro-optical systems in a production silicon CMOS process. It is the first company on the market with a product that monolithically incorporates active optics for data communications manufactured with low-cost silicon-based chip processing.[2]
This class of technology (also being aggressively developed by large companies such as Intel and IBM) is widely predicted to displace large portions of the existing photonics industry that rely on discrete assemblies of electronic and photonic devices.[3] Luxtera's partners include Freescale Semiconductor (fabricates Luxtera's chips). Luxtera is a Caltech spin-out with funding from venture capital, its business partners, and DARPA.[4] It was founded by a number of members of Prof. Axel Scherer's lab group, including Cary (Lawrence) Gunn, Michael Hochberg, Tom Baehr-Jones, and also Axel Scherer. Other co-founders include Prof. Eli Yablonovitch and John Oxaal.
In 2010, Luxtera was selected as one of MIT Technology Review's 50 Most Innovative Companies.[5]
Blazar
In August 2007, Luxtera announced the availability of Blazar, a 40GB optical active cable for interconnect within high performance computer clusters using single-mode fiber. Blazar is compliant with the SFP+ interface, allowing for the cable to be used in several different applications.[6] Longer term the company is aiming to displace copper cabling in short reach video applications such as DisplayPort and HDMI.
References
- ↑ "Silicon Photonics", RP Photonics.
- ↑ "FIBER OPTICS: Optical transceiver goes where copper cannot". Laser Focus World. 2007-09-01. Retrieved 2008-01-02.
- ↑ "Silicon Photonics Comes to Market", MIT TEchnology Review, August 2007.
- ↑ "Darpa renews Luxtera's transceiver contract", EE Times, November 8 2006.
- ↑ "Technology Review's 50 Most Innovative Companies". MIT Technology Review. 2010. Retrieved 23 February 2010.
- ↑ "Active cables extend reach 3X", EE Times, November 12 2007.