Coherent expands Texas optics plant for AI data centers

Coherent’s Sherman expansion will increase production of indium phosphide wafers used in lasers, transceivers and optical modules for large AI data centers. NVIDIA CEO Jensen Huang framed the site as part of a broader push to rebuild U.S. semiconductor manufacturing.

Coherent broke ground on an expanded manufacturing building in Sherman, Texas, to increase production of indium phosphide wafers used in lasers, optical components and compound semiconductors for AI data centers. The company says the site operates the world’s first 6-inch indium phosphide fab, a line aimed at producing the optical components that move data between chips, servers and racks.

NVIDIA CEO Jensen Huang and Coherent CEO Jim Anderson attended the ceremony with local and state officials. Coherent announced CHIPS Act grant support for the project, adding to backing from the Texas CHIPS program and the Sherman Economic Development Corporation, while NVIDIA’s partnership with Coherent includes investment, R&D support and purchase commitments for advanced laser and optical networking products.

The expansion targets a bottleneck in large AI systems, where copper becomes less efficient as distances and signaling rates increase. Huang pointed to NVIDIA Vera Rubin Ultra NVL576, which links eight NVLink racks of 72 NVIDIA Rubin Ultra GPUs into one 576-GPU domain, as an example of why silicon photonics and optical interconnects are becoming central to data center design.

Anderson said the Sherman site will support more than 550 direct jobs at full capacity. The factory will ship lasers, transceivers and pluggable optical modules used across NVIDIA networking, including external laser modules for NVIDIA Spectrum-X Photonics and Quantum-X Photonics switches with co-packaged optics.

67

Impact Score

Shadow Artificial Intelligence creates growing business risk

Unauthorized Artificial Intelligence tools are emerging as a compliance, security, and litigation concern for employers. Companies face pressure to set clear governance rules before workers expose sensitive data through unapproved platforms.

Anthropic attack exposes Claude Fable 5 jailbreak risks

A coordinated jailbreak against Claude Fable 5 bypassed Anthropic’s safety filters and produced prohibited outputs, including drug chemistry, cyberattack code and psychological manipulation techniques. The incident underscores why companies integrating Artificial Intelligence models should not treat vendor safeguards as a complete security boundary.

Contact Us

Got questions? Use the form to contact us.

Contact Form

Clicking next sends a verification code to your email. After verifying, you can enter your message.