Google’s High-Speed Interconnect Architecture to Push 800G+ Optical Transceiver Share Past 60% by 2026
February 10, 2026 | TrendForceEstimated reading time: 1 minute
Google’s next-generation TPU, Ironwood, integrates a 3D Torus network topology with the Apollo optical circuit switch (OCS) all-optical network, marking a major step forward in AI data-center interconnect design. TrendForce’s latest research on the high-speed interconnect market indicates that this architecture will directly address the surging compute and bandwidth demands driven by large-scale AI workloads.
TrendForce estimates that the global shipment share of 800G and above optical transceiver modules will climb from 19.5% in 2024 to over 60% by 2026, positioning these modules to become standard components in AI-focused data centers.
In an OCS-enabled architecture, Ironwood TPUs rely on high-speed copper for short-reach connections, while the all-optical network handles inter-rack data transmission. As a result, AI clusters are designed from the outset to deploy sufficient 800G/1.6T optical modules. Based on TrendForce’s projection that nearly 4 million Google TPUs will be shipped in 2026, demand for 800G-plus optical modules is expected to exceed 6 million units.
Beyond architectural leadership for AI clusters, energy efficiency and cost savings are the standout advantages of Google’s design. TrendForce notes that the core of Apollo OCS lies in its use of micro-electromechanical systems (MEMS) micro-mirrors to enable direct fiber-to-fiber connections and avoid repeated optical-electrical-optical conversions that typically add power consumption and latency.
A single OCS switch consumes only around 100 watts, representing roughly a 95% reduction in power consumption compared with traditional switches that draw about 3,000 watts. Furthermore, upgrading bandwidth from 800G to 1.6T requires only swapping in higher-speed optical modules, rather than rebuilding the entire system, significantly lowering long-term upgrade costs.
From a supply-chain perspective, TrendForce expects Innolight, leveraging its close collaboration with Google on silicon photonics and 1.6T platforms, together with second-tier supplier Eoptolink, to capture nearly 80% of Google’s orders for 800G-plus optical modules. Meanwhile, Lumentum plays a pivotal role in supplying OCS systems and MEMS components, with its capacity planning set to directly influence the rollout pace of Apollo OCS deployments.
TrendForce concludes that data traffic between racks and across clusters will rise as compute density continues to scale. Consequently, advances in—and supply of—high-speed optical modules, lasers, and other optical components will become a decisive factor, alongside GPUs and memory, in determining the pace and cost of future compute expansion.
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