4 research outputs found
Evolution of system embedded optical interconnect in sub-top of rack data center systems
This research was funded by the EU FP7 project “PhoxTrot”, for which it has received funding from the European Union Seventh Framework Programme (FP7/2007–2013) under grant agreement No. 318240, the Horizon2020 Nephele project (Grant No. 645212), the Horizon2020 COSMICC project (Grant No. 688516).In this paper we review key technological milestones in system embedded optical interconnects in data centers that have been achieved between 2014 and 2020 on major European Union research and development projects. This includes the development of proprietary optically enabled data storage and switch systems and optically enabled data storage and compute subsystems. We report on four optically enabled data center system demonstrators: LightningValley, ThunderValley2, Pegasus and Aurora, which include advanced optical circuits based on polymer waveguides and fibers and proprietary electro-optical connectors. We also report on optically enabled subsystems including Ethernet-connected hard disk drives and microservers. Both are designed in the same pluggable carrier form factor and with embedded optical transceiver and connector interfaces, thus allowing, for the first time, both compute and storage nodes to be optically interchangeable and directly interconnectable over long distances. Finally, we present the Nexus platform, which allows different optically enabled data center test systems and subsystems to be interconnected and comparatively characterized within a data center test environment.Publisher PDFPeer reviewe
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Silicon photonic switching: from building block design to intelligent control
The rapid growth in data communication technologies is at the heart of enriching the digital experiences for people around the world. Encoding high bandwidth data to the optical domain has drastically changed the bandwidth-distance trade-off imposed by electrical media. Silicon photonics, sharing the technological maturity of the semiconductor industry, is a platform poised to make optical interconnect components more robust, manufacturable, and ubiquitous. One of the most prominent device classes enabled by the silicon photonics platform is photonic switching, which describes the direct routing of optical signal carriers without the optical-electrical-optical conversions. While theoretical designs and prototypes of monolithic silicon photonic switch devices have been studied, realizing high-performance and feasible switch systems requires explorations of all design aspects from basic building blocks to control systems. This thesis provides a holistic collection of studies on silicon photonic switching in topics of novel switching element designs, multi-stage switch architectures, device calibration, topology scalability, smart routing strategies, and performance-aware control plane.
First, component designs for assembling a silicon photonic switch device are presented. Structures that perform 2×2 optical switching functions are introduced. To realize switching granularities in both spatial and spectral domains, a resonator-assisted Mach-Zehnder interferometer design is demonstrated with high performance and design robustness. Next, multi-stage monolithic switching devices with microring resonator-based switching elements are investigated. An 8×8 switch device with dual-microring switching elements is presented with a well-balanced set of performance metrics in extinction ratio, crosstalk suppression, and optical bandwidth. Continued scaling in the switch port count requires both an economic increase in the number of switching elements integrated in a device and the preservation of signal quality through the switch fabric. A highly scalable switch architecture based on Clos network with microring switch-and-select sub-switches is presented as a solution to reach high switch radices while addressing key factors of insertion loss, crosstalk, and optical passband to ensure end-to-end switching performance.
The thesis then explores calibration techniques to acquire and optimize system-wide control points for integrated silicon switch devices. Applicable to common rearrangeably non-blocking switch topologies, automated procedures are developed to calibrate entire switch devices without the need for built-in power monitors. Using Mach-Zehnder interferometer-based switching elements as a demonstration, calibration techniques for optimal control points are introduced to achieve balanced push-pull drive scheme and reduced crosstalk in switching operations. Furthermore, smart routing strategies are developed based on optical penalty estimations enabled by expedited lightpath characterization procedures. Leveraging configuration redundancies in the switch fabric, the routing strategies are capable of avoiding the worst penalty optical paths and effectively elevate the bottom-line performance of the switch device.
Additional works are also presented on enhancing optical system control planes with machine learning techniques to accurately characterize complex systems and identify critical control parameters. Using flexgrid networks as a case study, light-weight machine learning workflows are tailored to devise control strategies for improving spectral power stability during wavelength assignment and defragmentation. This work affirms the efficacy of intelligent control planes to predict system dynamics and drive performance optimizations for optical interconnect systems
Heterogeneously integrated DBR laser
Department of Electrical EngineeringThe importance of data is increasing day by day. The whole world is communicating using data as optical link. More and more people are using data. So, data traffic also increases rapidly. Therefore, there is a need to develop faster and more efficient lasers used for long-distance data communication. And this laser can be used in data centers for long-distance optical communication and can be applied to future technologies such as 5G mobile network, artificial intelligence, cloud computing and storage and Internet, which are services we will use.
What are the requirements that we need to satisfy? First, a laser having a wavelength band of 1310 nm or 1550 nm is required. Second, high power efficiency is required for sufficient output power for data transmission. For better long-distance communication, single mode and narrow linewidth are required. Finally, it must be integrated on silicon in order to use for the silicon photonic chip.
Through this study, we designed a structure that reduces optical loss and increases transition efficiency so that it can be used in high power lasers. By designing the taper structure through BPM and Lumerical commercial simulation, we proposed a structure to reduce scattering loss when transitioning from epitaxy to silicon waveguide, and to reduce optical loss by adjusting the thickness of each layer of epitaxy. In addition, when the light emitting device generates a lot of heat, the output power is reduced. In order to solve the problem, an experimental method for efficient heat dissipation was applied. By applying this, it will be possible to achieve a high-output device.
We have demonstrated the light emitting device. Our target is the laser, but fabricated device is not lasing, just operating like LED. The reasons were the problem of heat caused by resistance and the problem of epitaxy dislocation. We considered the problem and suggested a solution. Further work will allow us to make lasers with better properties than we currently have.ope
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Graphene Modulators for Silicon Photonic Optical Links
The backbone of today’s society is the transfer of information. Next-generation data network infrastructures need to support Tb/s data rates. Existing optical fibre communication networks cannot support Tb/s data transmission without consuming an unsustainable amount of power. Optical transceivers send and receive information encoded in light, relying on electro-optic modulators to convert the electrical data signal into the optical domain, and photodetectors to convert the optical signal back into the electrical domain. Power consumption can be reduced by using efficient and compact modulators and photodetectors to integrate the optics closer to the electronics and thus minimise the losses of electrical interconnect at high frequencies. Si photonics technology offers a cost-effective solution for fabricating integrated photonic circuits by combining electronic and photonic components in the same circuit by using existing CMOS technology. This thesis focuses on the development of a scalable graphene-based platform for integrated photonics, and specifically on the electrooptic modulator. I have focused on a double single-layer graphene modulator design in three different configurations that can be used for different types of optical links. This includes a graphene-based electro-absorption modulator, ring resonator modulator, and Mach-Zehnder modulator. The double-layer structure enables the absorption and phase of an optical carrier signal to be electrostatically controlled without the need for doped waveguides. This is the most efficient graphene-based phase modulator to-date with an extracted VπL ∼ 0.12 V·cm, which is ∼ 2 times better than the lowest reported graphene phase modulator. As well as showing very efficient phase modulation, the graphene phase modulator is capable of being operated in the transparency regime where graphene becomes transparent to absorption via interband transitions. Operating in the transparency regime means that the graphene phase modulator is capable of pure phase modulation which is a desirable property for complex modulation formats. Benefiting from efficient phase modulation, the graphene ring resonator modulator has demonstrated an FOM(EA) ∼ 4.48, ∼ 2 times better than the highest currently reported for graphene-based modulators. These results represent a step towards the development of a future graphene-based platform for efficient and compact modulators and photodetectors needed for next-generation optical links