In AI infrastructure, every electron matters.
That is the underlying principle behind Marvell® Ara T, the industry’s first 1.6T transmit-only (TRO) optical digital signal processor (DSP) for AI and cloud interconnects. Designed for high-bandwidth, mid-length links spanning 5 to 500 meters, Ara T can reduce optical power module power consumption by more than 35%, delivering meaningful savings at scale.
Ara T extends Marvell leadership in 1.6T optics and interconnect technology and advances the company's strategy to raise infrastructure ROI and efficiency through optimized silicon.
Marvell will showcase Ara T at OFC 2026 in Los Angeles, March 17–19.
Signal, Noise and DSPs
A core component of optical modules, optical DSPs remove noise and errors from network traffic and retime signals to maintain data integrity. Certain optical DSPs—such as Marvell Ara and Ara T—also integrate drivers that prepare electrical signals for optical networks on the same silicon die, reducing power consumption and simplifying module design.
TRO optical DSPs differ from the more widely used transmit-receive optical DSPs in that they process only outgoing data signals. Incoming data is managed by the transimpedance amplifier (TIA), another component within optical modules.
TRO DSP adoption has grown significantly, with many demonstrations showcased at major industry events. At ECOC in October 2025, for example, Lumentum demonstrated a 1.6T Marvell DSP operating in TRO mode at ~16 watts. Marvell helped pioneer TRO DSPs with Spica Gen2-T, the industry’s first 5nm 800G TRO optical DSP.
TROs in action: Lumentum shows two 1.6T Ara optical DSPs operating in TRO mode at ECOC. “People are always looking for ways to save power,” said Matt Sysak, CTO of Lumentum.
While transmit-receive optical DSPs remain essential for longer links inside data centers, TRO optical DSPs like Ara T provide an optimized balance of power, performance, and signal integrity for shorter rack- or row-level links.
Interconnects, Infrastructure and Power
Do six watts matter? At the scale of AI, absolutely. Interconnect revenue is projected to more than triple to over $60 billion by 2030, according to research firm LightCounting,1 as hyperscalers and others expand infrastructures to meet the escalating demand for increasingly sophisticated AI services.

Optical module revenue (blue) will grow by ~2x by 2030 and constitute over 50% of the interconnect market, says LightCounting.
Bandwidth transitions are also accelerating, with Marvell enabling new networking generations every two years instead of every three. The ratio of interconnects to XPUs continues to rise, increasing the number of optical modules inside systems—some high-end XPUs now rely on up to 18 modules to operate at full bandwidth.2
More modules operating at higher bandwidths, however, can also translate into higher power consumption. Electricity consumption for data center networking in the U.S. alone is projected to nearly triple to 23 terawatt-hours by 2028,3 or enough to power close to 2 million homes.4 TRO-based designs can help curb this rise, providing a path to lower operating costs and higher ROI. Reduced power can also alleviate strain on local power grids and simplify site approval processes.
Efficiency gains as measured by picojoules per bit (pj/bit) will play a critical role. Since 2000, pj/bit has improved by 100x while total bandwidth has increased by 1000x.5
Interconnect Diversity
Optimizing interconnects for AI requires a diverse and evolving technology portfolio. This includes advancing existing solutions such as ZR/ZR+ coherent modules for long-distance connections, as well as developing new product categories like TRO optical DSPs, co-packaged copper, coherent-lite DSPs, active electrical cables and active copper cables.
Interconnects will also become more intelligent. Recently, Marvell unveiled RELIANT, a telemetry suite providing real-time visibility into bit error rates, signal performance, power consumption and other critical metrics to enhance uptime and network health.
Collectively, these technologies, in conjunction with a broad ecosystem of partners, give data center operators the ability to manage costs, fine-tune their networks and build an infrastructure foundation capable of delivering on the promise of AI.
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Tags: AI infrastructure, Optical Interconnect, Optical DSPs, DSP, data center interconnect, AI
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