Originally introduced for use with multi-fiber ribbon cable, MPO connectors feature a linear array of fibers in a single ferrule. They are defined as an array connector with more than 2 fibers; they are available with 8, 12, 16, or 24 fibers for co. Originally introduced for use with multi-fiber ribbon cable, MPO connectors feature a linear array of fibers in a single ferrule. They are defined as an array connector with more than 2 fibers; they are available with 8, 12, 16, or 24 fibers for common data center applications. Higher fiber counts are available, such as 32, 48, 60, or even 72 fiber. As with other standards-based connector interfaces, manufacturers of MPO connectors must comply with intermateability standards. For MPO connectors, these include IEC 61754-7 and EIA/TIA-604-5 (FOCIS 5)standards that specify the physical attributes of the connector, such as pin and guide hole dimensions for male and female interfaces. These standar. MPO connectors are used in duplex fiber applications throughout the data center as a way to deploy pre-terminated plug-and-play backbone trunk cables between active equipment. MPO-terminated trunk cables used in duplex backbone links take up less pathway space, ease cable management, and offer faster deployment compared to using individual duplex c. With the first iteration of 800 Gig parallel fiber optic applications (and future 1.6 Terabit applications) set to use 16-fiber MPOs, leading connector manufacturers have introduced very small 16-fiber MPOs that offer nearly three times the density of traditional 16-fiber MPOs. This is critical for enabling higher switch port and patch panel densit. Every fiber end face should be inspected and, if necessary, cleaned before connection, and MPO connectors are no different. In fact, cleaning and inspecting can be even more of a concern for MPO connectors due to their larger surface area. When cleaning these larger surface areas, contaminants can move from one fiber to another within the same arra.