Connector diversity with a system: Why MMC is not a replacement but the perfect complement for hyperscale data centers

  

1. How will the projected threefold growth of hyperscale data centers shape the future of the digital infrastructure industry?

Hyperscale data centers form the backbone of the digital world and are expanding more rapidly than traditional hosting or enterprise data-center infrastructures. Analysts forecast that the share of hyperscaler capacity in the global data-center footprint will rise significantly by the end of this decadeโ€”driven by cloud computing, SaaS, AI and data-intensive applications.

This development is driven by three key requirements:

  • Exponentially growing data and traffic volumes
  • Migration to 400G, 800G, 1.6T and, in the near future, 3.2T
  • Extremely high port and fiber density in cabling and patching fields

Market analyses also show that the fiber-optic market for data centers is growing strongly: global market value is expected to increase by more than two-and-a-half times between 2024 and 2032. Hyperscale data-center architectures typically follow a spine-leaf topology, which requires enormous bandwidth between server clusters, consequently driving fiber-optic cabling expansion and connector innovation.

  

2. Why is technology openness important as a planning principle to avoid technological monocultures?

Hyperscalers strive for maximum flexibility, as incorrect standardisation decisions can be costlyโ€”both technically and economically. Studies on structured cabling indicate that modular, high-density fiber-optic architectures are increasingly dominating global data centers, with high single-digit annual growth rates expected through 2032.

In practice, this means:
No single connector technology can meet all requirements; instead, the optimal combination of density, performance and handling must be selected for each use case.

  

3. In what ways do MMC connectors complement existing connector systems instead of replacing them?

With the Miniature Multi-Fibre Connector (MMC), a new generation of connectors is available that is specifically designed for extremely high port densities and compact panel layoutsโ€”key requirements for hyperscale architectures supporting 800G and beyond.

Why MMC is relevant

  • Miniaturized form factor โ†’ up to three times higher port density than conventional MPO port layouts
  • Push-pull mechanism โ†’ simplifies handling in densely populated patch fields

MMC is therefore not intended as a universal replacement, but as an additional option for scenarios with particularly high density and performance requirements.

  

4. โ€œWill MMC now replace all existing connectors?โ€ โ€“ clear answer

In short: No.

Market observers instead expect existing connector families to remain remain relevant, with new form factors complementing them.

Each connector family continues to make senseโ€”depending on the use case:

  • LC Duplex โ€“ the duplex connector with the highest market penetration
  • SN/MDC โ€“ potential successors to LC Duplex due to higher port density
  • MTP®/MPO/MPE โ€“ particularly relevant for backbone cabling due to high fiber counts
  • MMC โ€“ for high-density scenarios beyond conventional port layouts

In addition, test and maintenance reports indicate that Very Small Form Factor connectors (including MMC), due to their high packing density, impose particular requirements on cleaning, testing and quality assurance relevant, with new form factors complementing them.

  

5. Connector comparison โ€“ the hyperscale perspective

 

  

This comparison shows: no technology is universal; the choice depends on data-rate requirements, panel specifications and lifecycle strategies.

  

6. Conclusion: diversity instead of monoculture โ€“ even for hyperscalers

Hyperscale data centers place the highest demands on bandwidth, density and flexibility. Technology openness in connector systems is not a nice-to-have but a strategic necessity in order to:

  • Protect investments
  • Simplify migrations
  • Avoid performance silos

New connectors such as MMC are therefore not a disruptive one-size-fits-all solution, but complementary building blocks within a scalable fiber-optic ecosystem capable of meeting the demands of hyperscale performance applications.

  

Author:
Harald Jungbรคck, Product Manager FO cabling systems

Harald Jungbรคck draws his fiber optic expertise from his many years of work at Rosenberger OSI. In 1993 he started his career in product and manufacturing process development. Today he is responsible for the consistent expansion of the product range and the technological innovation process in this area.

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