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Active Optical Cables (AOC) Explained: Advantages, Limitations, and Data Center Use Cases

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Network Switches
IT Hardware Experts
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Introduction: Why talk about AOCs?

As data center speeds grow from 10G → 25G → 100G → 400G → 800G, the choices for server-to-switch interconnects become more complex. Today, IT teams typically pick between three options:

  • DAC (Direct Attach Copper) – cheapest, short-distance.
  • AOC (Active Optical Cable) – medium-distance, lightweight.
  • Optical transceivers + patch cords – flexible, long-distance.

Active Optical Cables sit right in the middle. They combine the lightweight nature of fiber optics with the plug-and-play convenience of DAC. AOCs are widely used for rack-to-rack links and AI/HPC clusters, where distances are too long for DAC but too short to justify expensive optical transceivers.

AOC Cables Overview

What is an Active Optical Cable (AOC)?

400G-QSFP56-DD-AOC-Cable

An AOC is a pre-assembled, fixed-length cable that integrates:

  • Optical fiber as the transmission medium.
  • Integrated optical engines in the connectors that convert electrical signals to light and back.
  • Standard connectors (SFP+, SFP28, QSFP+, QSFP28, QSFP-DD, OSFP).

From the outside, an AOC looks similar to a DAC: a cable with transceiver-style ends. The difference is that inside the ends, there are chips that perform electrical-to-optical conversion, and the cable itself is fiber instead of copper.

Speeds supported: 10G, 25G, 40G, 100G, 200G, 400G, and now 800G AOCs are available.

How does an AOC work?

The signal path of an AOC is simple:

  1. Electrical input from the NIC or switch is fed into the AOC connector.
  2. A tiny laser converts the electrical signal to optical signal.
  3. The optical signal travels through the fiber cable inside the AOC.
  4. At the other end, a photodiode converts the optical signal back to electrical signal.

Because the signal travels as light:

  • AOCs are immune to electromagnetic interference (EMI).
  • They can run longer than copper DAC cables.
  • The cable is lighter and thinner, which improves rack airflow.

Advantages of AOCs

Aspect AOC Benefit
Distance Longer reach than DAC (up to 30–100m).
Weight Light and thin → easier routing in racks.
EMI Immunity Fiber transmission is immune to interference.
Power Lower power draw than discrete optical modules.
Flexibility Better bend radius and easier cable management.
Cost Cheaper than separate optics for medium distances.

Limitations of AOCs

Aspect Limitation
Distance Limited to ~100m. Cannot replace long-haul optics.
Fixed Design Integrated → cannot replace just the cable or the ends. Entire AOC must be swapped.
Compatibility Vendor-specific coding may limit interoperability.
Cost vs DAC More expensive than passive DAC copper.
Durability Fiber core is more fragile than copper under stress.

Applications of AOCs in Data Centers

  • Server ↔ ToR switch: When DAC length is insufficient (>7m).
  • Leaf ↔ Spine (row-to-row): 25–100m interconnects.
  • High-density racks: Thin AOCs improve airflow and reduce cable bulk.
  • AI/HPC clusters: AOCs provide low-latency interconnects at 100G/400G speeds where medium distances are common.

AOC vs DAC vs Optical Modules

Aspect DAC (Copper) AOC (Fiber) Optical Modules + Patch
Reach ≤7m (passive), ≤15m (active) 30–100m 100m–10km+
Weight Heavy copper Light fiber Light fiber
Cost Lowest Medium Highest
EMI Immunity Good (shielded) Excellent (immune) Excellent (immune)
Power 0–2W ~1–2W 2–5W per module
Flexibility Thick, stiff cables Thin, flexible Flexible (fiber patch cords)
Typical Use In-rack, short runs Rack-to-rack, pod-to-pod Leaf–spine, long-haul, DCI

👉 In practice:

  • DAC = in-rack, cheapest.
  • AOC = row-to-row, mid-range.
  • Optics = long-reach, most flexible but costly.

Deployment Considerations

When selecting an AOC, consider:

  1. Connector type: Match your NIC/switch ports (SFP28, QSFP28, QSFP-DD, OSFP).
  2. Length: If >15m and <100m, AOC is usually best.
  3. Vendor compatibility: Some switches require coded AOCs (Cisco, Arista, Mellanox).
  4. Power budget: AOCs draw ~1–2W, check switch/NIC specs.
  5. Cabling strategy: Mix DAC (short), AOC (medium), and optics (long).

Future Outlook

  • 400G/800G AOCs are already shipping for AI/HPC clusters.
  • As data rates rise, copper DAC reach gets shorter, making AOC even more valuable.
  • New form factors like QSFP-DD800 and OSFP are enabling next-gen AOCs.
  • In high-density AI training pods, expect a mix: DAC inside racks, AOC between racks, optics for leaf–spine.

FAQs

Q1: How is an AOC different from optics + patch cords?
A: AOCs are pre-assembled, fixed cables. Optics + patch cords are modular and flexible but cost more.

Q2: What’s the maximum reach of AOCs?
A: Typically 30–100m, depending on the data rate and vendor.

Q3: Can AOCs support 400G/800G?
A: Yes. QSFP-DD and OSFP AOCs are already available at 400G, and 800G OSFP AOCs are emerging.

Q4: Are AOCs hot-pluggable?
A: Yes. They function like transceivers with fixed fiber attached.

Q5: Which vendors support AOCs?
A: Most major switch and NIC vendors (Cisco, Arista, Mellanox/NVIDIA, Juniper) offer AOC-compatible ports.

Q6: Why are AOCs better than DAC for dense racks?
A: They are thinner, lighter, and improve airflow.

Q7: How much power do AOCs save vs optics?
A: Typically 1–2W vs 3–5W per end for optics. Savings add up across thousands of ports.

Q8: Should SMBs use AOCs?
A: Often no. SMBs typically use DACs (cheaper, shorter). AOCs are more relevant in enterprise and hyperscale DCs.

Conclusion

Active Optical Cables (AOCs) are the middle ground interconnect in data centers:

  • Longer reach than DAC (30–100m).
  • Cheaper and lower power than separate optical modules.
  • Lightweight and immune to EMI, making them great for dense racks and AI clusters.

The right deployment strategy uses all three:

  • DAC for in-rack,
  • AOC for row-to-row,
  • Optics for leaf–spine and DCI.

👉 To ensure consistent performance, always source end-to-end solutions (switches, NICs, cables) from trusted vendors like network-switch.com, where DACs, AOCs, and optics are tested for compatibility.

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