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Weekend Deep Dive: Analyzing the Position, Boundaries, and Endgame of Independent Laser Players from the Trends in CPO + ELS Light Sources
AI computing power bottlenecks are shifting from computation to bandwidth. As GPU scale expands, inter-node communication approaches an N² growth pattern, with electrical interconnects reaching power and distance limits, turning optical interconnects from an "option" into a "necessity."
In this process, CPO (Co-Packaged Optics) and ELS (External Laser Source) are beginning to reshape the industry chain: lasers are being separated from module internals and becoming system-level resources.
Independent laser player SIVEF is at a critical node in this change.
1. What does SIVEF do?
The company's core product is a WDM DFB laser array based on the InP platform.
Simply put:
DFB: Stable single-wavelength laser
WDM: Multi-wavelength multiplexing
Array: Integrated multiple lasers
Essentially, it’s not just selling “lasers,” but providing multi-channel optical bandwidth capability.
Under the CPO + ELS architecture:
Traditional: one laser per module
New architecture: one light source for multiple channels
Lasers shift from “distributed components” to “centralized resources,” marking the start of value reallocation.
2. Why WDM DFB array?
The constraints of AI data centers are clear: single-channel data rates are nearing their limits, electrical interconnect power consumption cannot scale, and bandwidth must be achieved through “parallelization.”
The only scalable path is:
Multi-wavelength (WDM)
And the prerequisite for WDM is: stable, controllable single-wavelength light sources (DFB).
Therefore, WDM DFB arrays are currently the optimal engineering solution. Although not the most advanced theoretical approach, they are the only scalable, implementable solution.
3. The essence of SIVEF’s advantages
SIVEF’s advantages are not about “technological exclusivity,” but three points:
1) No legacy baggage
No module business, allowing full focus on designing products around CPO + ELS.
2) System-level adaptation
Products are designed from the start for SiPho/CPO, not generic lasers.
3) Early entry into the ecosystem
Already integrated into the Ayar Labs ecosystem, making it a “chosen player.” This means current advantages = first-mover + architecture fit, not barriers.
4. Competitive landscape
First tier: Traditional laser giants
Lumentum Holdings
Coherent Corp.
Advantages: capacity, customers, full-stack capabilities
Disadvantages: path dependence
Second tier: System companies
Broadcom Inc.
Ayar Labs
Advantages: defining architecture
Risks: upward integration of light sources
Third tier: Focused laser source players
SIVEF
Features: flexible, adaptable to new architectures
Issues: no scale, no capacity control
5. The essence of power consumption advantages
SIVEF’s advantage isn’t higher laser efficiency per device, but system-level efficiency improvements driven by architecture changes:
Core changes: fewer lasers, shorter optical paths, optimized thermal environment
Result: system power consumption drops multiple times (not just point optimization).
6. Complexity and calibration barriers in SiPho
The difficulty of SiPho systems isn’t in individual devices but in multi-layer coupling: wavelength matching, optical coupling, thermal management.
Calibration is an ongoing process, not a one-time design. This requires engineering experience and data accumulation, with long validation cycles (12–24 months). Therefore, it leads to engineering lock-in + time lock-in, but not technological monopoly.
Potential flywheel effect:
design-in → calibration data → performance improvement → more orders → further optimization
But this is a “conditional flywheel,” dependent on:
1) ELS becoming mainstream architecture
2) Customers developing switching costs
3) The company’s capacity expansion ability
All are necessary.
The real barrier in this track is in system validation + customer onboarding, not the device itself.
7. Technological evolution
WDM DFB light sources will ultimately face three physical constraints: linewidth and noise, spectral density, and energy efficiency limits.
Currently, there is still:
Power consumption: 3–10x optimization space; wavelength density: 2–4x improvement space.
But the limits are system-level, not device-level. System-level players like avgo and alab are more likely to become industry chain leaders.
Long-term, WDM DFB will face threats from frequency combs:
Frequency combs are essentially lasers that generate all wavelengths, theoretically replacing DFB arrays.
But they are still in the lab stage, with engineering challenges, and may only have marginal impact in 5–10 years. Due to space constraints, this is not elaborated here.
8. Conclusion
SIVEF is in a typical “architecture switching dividend period”: current advantages come from first-mover and adaptation; mid-term depends on whether design-in translates into orders; long-term is constrained by scale, capacity, and system integration.
This is a dynamic competitive track driven by time lag and learning curves. The key is to secure customer orders needed to move from technology validation to mass production.
Disclaimer: I hold the securities mentioned in this article. Views are biased and not investment advice. Investment risks are significant; entry should be extremely cautious.