Journal Article10.1109/JSSC.2009.2034444
Optical I/O technology for tera-scale computing
Ian A. Young,Edris M. Mohammed,Jason T.-S. Liao,Alexandra M. Kern,Samuel Palermo,Bruce A. Block,Miriam Reshotko,Peter L. D. Chang +7 more
- 22 Dec 2009
- Vol. 45, Iss: 1, pp 235-248
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TL;DR: In this paper, the authors describe both a near term and a long term optical interconnect solution, the first based on a packaging architecture and the second based on monolithic photonic CMOS architecture, which enables higher bandwidth and lower energy per-bit for chip-to-chip optical I/O through integration of electro-optical polymer based modulators, silicon nitride waveguides and polycrystalline germanium (Ge) detectors.
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Abstract: This paper describes both a near term and a long term optical interconnect solution, the first based on a packaging architecture and the second based on a monolithic photonic CMOS architecture. The packaging-based optical I/O architecture implemented with 90 nm CMOS transceiver circuits, 1 × 12 VCSEL/detector arrays and polymer waveguides achieves 10 Gb/s/channel at 11 pJ/b. A simple TX pre-emphasis technique enables a potential 18 Gb/s at 9.6 pJ/b link efficiency. Analysis predicts this architecture to reach less than 1 pJ/b at the 16 nm CMOS technology node. A photonic CMOS process enables higher bandwidth and lower energy-per-bit for chip-to-chip optical I/O through integration of electro-optical polymer based modulators, silicon nitride waveguides and polycrystalline germanium (Ge) detectors into a CMOS logic process. Experimental results for the photonic CMOS ring resonator modulators and Ge detectors demonstrate performance above 20 Gb/s and analysis predicts that photonic CMOS will eventually enable energy efficiency better than 0.3 pJ/b with 16 nm CMOS. Optical interconnect technologies such as these using multi-lane communication or wavelength division multiplexing have the potential to achieve TB/s interconnect and enable platforms suitable for the tera-scale computing era.
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TL;DR: In this article, a 1.1-μm-range high-speed VCSEL based on InGaAs-QWs was developed for high speed and highly reliable optical interconnections.
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