Coherent has unveiled a next-generation wire grid polarizer (WGP) designed for optical isolators in high-speed datacom transceivers. Announced today, the device is the first WGP with dual-sided anti-reflective coating to achieve a 50 dB extinction ratio alongside 98.5% efficiency, setting a new benchmark for isolator performance. The company is positioning the technology as critical for meeting the demands of AI-driven data center networks where stability, efficiency, and high-density integration are required.
The new non-absorptive WGP leverages Coherent’s expertise in engineered metamaterials and introduces non-oxidizing gold meta-wires with optimized meta-optic designs. This approach improves performance while reducing costs, supporting higher power levels in smaller footprints compared to traditional absorptive polarizers. The design enables seamless integration with polarization diversity and garnet-based optical components, addressing the growing need for scalable, reliable, and compact transceiver architectures.
Coherent is currently conducting reliability testing on the WGPs, which will be highlighted at ECOC 2025 in booth C3124. The company expects the technology to play a key role in enabling next-generation datacom transceivers optimized for AI workloads.
• Dual-sided AR-coated WGP achieves 50 dB extinction ratio and 98.5% efficiency
• Non-absorptive design supports higher power levels in compact transceiver formats
• Incorporates gold meta-wires and advanced metamaterial designs for resilience and cost reduction
• Optimized for isolators in high-speed datacom transceivers and AI-driven optical networks
• To be showcased at ECOC 2025, booth C3124
“Our new wire grid polarizer sets a benchmark by guaranteeing the best absorptive polarizer performances at lower cost,” said Steve Rummel, Senior Vice President, Engineered Materials at Coherent. “With non-oxidizing gold meta-wires and optimized meta-optic designs, we deliver unprecedented performance in this class, with the added benefit of high-power resilience for future applications.”
🌐 Analysis: Coherent’s announcement underscores the critical role of engineered metamaterials in advancing optical components for AI-ready networks. As hyperscalers push toward higher power, higher density transceivers, isolator performance becomes a limiting factor. Coherent’s WGPs directly target this need, competing with advances from companies like Lumentum, II-VI (now part of Coherent itself), and Sumitomo in high-performance photonic integration. The timing aligns with broader industry efforts to harden transceiver components for AI infrastructure buildouts.
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