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Understanding the Full 400G Optical Module Suite & Their Use Cases

Introduction

With increasing demand for higher bandwidth, lower latency, and efficient data center interconnects, 400G optical modules have become essential. Vendors and infrastructure builders now have many options—QSFP‑DD, OSFP, QSFP112 form factors; SR, LR, DR, FR, ZR reach categories; and even breakout and VR types. Understanding what each module does, where it’s best applied, and how to choose between them is key to future‑proof network design.

400G DR4

1. Key Types & What They Mean

Here are the definitions and differences among the types you listed:

Module StandardReach / Fiber TypeConnector TypeTypical Use‑Case / Advantages
QSFP‑DD SR4Short reach (multimode fiber, OM4 / OM5), ~100 m or less depending on fiberMPO‑12Intra‑rack / Top‑of‑rack / High bandwidth short links. 
QSFP‑DD LR4Longer reach (single‑mode fiber), often several km (2‑10 km)Duplex LC or similarBetween racks across rooms or buildings; campus links. 
QSFP112 SR4 / VR4Higher density variants, sometimes same reach as SR4 but with more lanes or different form factorMPO or other high‑density connectorsIn setups demanding more density or infiniBand environments. 
QSFP‑DD DR4 / DR4+“DR” stands for “Data Center Reach” — single‑mode fiber, often ~500 m to 2 km depending on moduleMPO‑12For data center spine‑to‑leaf or leaf‑to‑leaf across longer distances where latency matters. 
QSFP‑DD FR4Fixed Reach, usually 2 km or so, single‑modeDuplex LC or CS‑styleWhen you need moderate reach without the cost/power of LR/ZR. 
QSFP‑DD ZR / ZR+Very long‑haul, coherent optics usually, tens of kilometers (often >10–80 km)Duplex LC, often supports DWDMFor inter‑data center links, metro, or campus wide links where optical loss is significant. 
SR8 / SFP112 FR4 etc.Variants/breakouts (e.g. more lanes, more fiber, etc.)Multiplexed connectors (MPO etc.)Used when you need flexibility: break into smaller ports; support multi‑lane traffic; or use older fiber infrastructure. 

2. Applications & Scenarios

Here are where different 400G module types tend to shine:

  • Intra‑Rack & Top‑of‑Rack Interconnects: SR4 / SR8 / VR4 options are great for connecting servers, switches within same rack or adjacent racks due to low cost, low latency, high density.
  • Leaf‑to‑Spine / Spine‑to‑Spine in Data Center: DR4, FR4, LR4 types when switching or aggregation across rooms / rows of racks.
  • Data Center Interconnect (DCI) / Metro / Campus Links: ZR / ZR+ modules enable much longer fiber paths, often coherent optics, for connecting distant data centers, or large campuses.
  • Breakout and Mixed Environments: Modules supporting breakout (e.g. 400G → 4×100G) are useful when some parts of the network still use 100G or NICs of lower speed.

3. Key Performance & Design Considerations

When selecting among these:

  • Optical Loss and Fiber Type: Multimode (MMF) vs Single‑mode (SMF). SR variants use MMF; LR, DR, ZR use SMF.
  • Connector Type: MPO‑12, MPO‑16, duplex LC, etc. This affects cable management, insertion loss.
  • Lane Count and Modulation Format: E.g., 8×50G PAM4 lanes for SR4; or DR4 uses 4×100G PAM4. Impacts cost, power, complexity.
  • Power Consumption & Heat: Longer reach modules or coherent optics use more power and generate more heat; need to ensure switch / host has adequate cooling.
  • Standards / Protocol Support: IEEE 802.3bs, IEEE 802.3cu, MSA agreements (QSFP‑DD, OSFP, QSFP112) for interoperability.
  • Backward Compatibility / Breakout Usability: Some modules allow splitting into lower‑speed lanes (e.g. 400G → 4x100G) which helps transition periods.

4. How to Choose: Matching Use‑Case to Module

Here’s a simplified decision matrix:

NeedUse This Module Type
Short budget‑sensitive links inside rackSR4 / SR8
Moderate reach (between racks or across rooms)DR4 / FR4
Long reach / campus / data center interconnectLR4 / ZR / coherent optics
Mix of high and lower‑speed clients / legacy NICsBreakout‑capable modules (SR4, DR4 etc.)
High port density / switch‑space constrainedOSFP / QSFP112 / high density versions

5. Why 400G Now Matters

  • Data growth (AI, Big Data, ML) pushing for higher bandwidth.
  • Cloud infrastructure needs aggregating huge I/O per server / NIC.
  • Reduced cost per bit with modul‑lane economies.
  • Future proofing: buying 400G now ensures space for scaling without doubling deployment efforts.

✅ Conclusion

The 400G module ecosystem provides many form factors, reach categories, and breakout options to handle a wide variety of network requirements. For customers, selecting the right module is about matching physical layout (rack, room, building), fiber infrastructure, latency & power budgets, and growth plans.

About Optech

Optech Technology Co. Ltd was founded in 2001 in Taipei, Taiwan. The company was created with a sole purpose, to provide a wide and high quality portfolio of optical products to a very demanding and fast evolving market.

To respond to the permanent increase of IP traffic, Optech portfolio is constantly growing. Since the beginning, the company has always been up to date with the latest innovations on the market. Today, we are proud to deliver a large selection of 25G SFP28, 40G QSFP+, 100G QSFP28, 200G QSFP56, 400G QSFP-DD, 800G QSFP-DD and OSFP optical transceivers and cables.

Optech has a large portfolio of products which include optical transceiversdirect attach cablesactive optical cablesloopback transceiversmedia converters and fiber patch cords.

Through its large selection of optical products, that have a range of data speed from 155 Mbps to 800 Gbps and reach distances up to 120km, Optech products are suitable for various industries such as telecom, data centers as well as public and private networks.

Optech’s compatibility brands are available click here.

For additional information about our 400G Transceivers, or price inquiry, please contact us at sales@optech.com.tw