3 research outputs found

    Design of energy-efficient high-speed wireline transceiver

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    Energy efficiency has become the most important performance metric of integrated circuits used in many applications ranging from mobile devices to high-performance processors. The power problem permeates both computing and communication systems alike. Especially in the era of Big Data, continuously growing demand for higher communication bandwidth is driving the need for energy-efficient high-speed I/O serial links. However, the rate at which the energy efficiency of serial links is improving is much slower than the rate at which the required data transfer bandwidth is increasing. This dissertation explores two design approaches for energy-efficient communication systems. The first design approach maximizes the energy efficiency of a transceiver without any performance loss, and as a prototype, a source-synchronous multi-Gb/s transceiver that achieves excellent energy efficiency lower than 0.3pJ/bit is presented. To this end, the proposed transceiver employs aggressive supply voltage scaling, and multiplexed transmitter and receiver synchronized by low-rate multi-phase clocks are adopted to achieve high data rate even at a supply voltage close to the device threshold voltage. Phase spacing errors resulting from device mismatches are corrected using a self-calibration scheme. The proposed phase calibration method uses a single digital delay-locked loop (DLL) for calibrating all the phases, which makes the calibration process insensitive to the supply voltage level. Thanks to this technique, the proposed multi-Gb/s transceiver operates robustly and energy-efficiently at a very low supply voltage. Fabricated in a 65nm CMOS process, the energy efficiency and data rate of the prototype transceiver vary from 0.29pJ/bit to 0.58pJ/bit and 1Gb/s to 6Gb/s, respectively, as the supply voltage is varied from 0.45V to 0.7V. In the second approach, observing that the data traffic in a real system is bursty, a full-rate burst-mode transceiver that achieves rapid on/off operation needed for energy-proportional systems is presented. By injecting input data edges into the oscillator embedded in a classical type-II digital clock and data recovery (CDR) circuit, the proposed receiver achieves instantaneous phase-locking and input jitter filtering simultaneously. In other words, the proposed CDR combines the advantages of conventional feed-forward and feedback architectures to achieve energy-proportional operation. By controlling the number of data edges injected into the oscillator, both the jitter transfer bandwidth and the jitter tolerance corner are accurately controlled. The feedback loop also corrects for any frequency error and helps improve the CDR's immunity to oscillator frequency drift during the power-on and -off states. This also improves the CDR's tolerance to consecutive identical digits present in the input data. Fabricated in a 90nm CMOS process, the prototype receiver instantaneously locks onto the very first data edge and consumes 6.1mW at 2.2Gb/s. Owing to its short power-on time, the overall transceiver's energy efficiency varies only from 5.4pJ/bit to 10.7pJ/bit when the effective data rate is varied from 2.2Gb/s to 0.22Gb/s

    Design of energy efficient high speed I/O interfaces

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    Energy efficiency has become a key performance metric for wireline high speed I/O interfaces. Consequently, design of low power I/O interfaces has garnered large interest that has mostly been focused on active power reduction techniques at peak data rate. In practice, most systems exhibit a wide range of data transfer patterns. As a result, low energy per bit operation at peak data rate does not necessarily translate to overall low energy operation. Therefore, I/O interfaces that can scale their power consumption with data rate requirement are desirable. Rapid on-off I/O interfaces have a potential to scale power with data rate requirements without severely affecting either latency or the throughput of the I/O interface. In this work, we explore circuit techniques for designing rapid on-off high speed wireline I/O interfaces and digital fractional-N PLLs. A burst-mode transmitter suitable for rapid on-off I/O interfaces is presented that achieves 6 ns turn-on time by utilizing a fast frequency settling ring oscillator in digital multiplying delay-locked loop and a rapid on-off biasing scheme for current mode output driver. Fabricated in 90 nm CMOS process, the prototype achieves 2.29 mW/Gb/s energy efficiency at peak data rate of 8 Gb/s. A 125X (8 Gb/s to 64 Mb/s) change in effective data rate results in 67X (18.29 mW to 0.27 mW) change in transmitter power consumption corresponding to only 2X (2.29 mW/Gb/s to 4.24 mW/Gb/s) degradation in energy efficiency for 32-byte long data bursts. We also present an analytical bit error rate (BER) computation technique for this transmitter under rapid on-off operation, which uses MDLL settling measurement data in conjunction with always-on transmitter measurements. This technique indicates that the BER bathtub width for 10^(βˆ’12) BER is 0.65 UI and 0.72 UI during rapid on-off operation and always-on operation, respectively. Next, a pulse response estimation-based technique is proposed enabling burst-mode operation for baud-rate sampling receivers that operate over high loss channels. Such receivers typically employ discrete time equalization to combat inter-symbol interference. Implementation details are provided for a receiver chip, fabricated in 65nm CMOS technology, that demonstrates efficacy of the proposed technique. A low complexity pulse response estimation technique is also presented for low power receivers that do not employ discrete time equalizers. We also present techniques for implementation of highly digital fractional-N PLL employing a phase interpolator based fractional divider to improve the quantization noise shaping properties of a 1-bit βˆ†Ξ£ frequency-to-digital converter. Fabricated in 65nm CMOS process, the prototype calibration-free fractional-N Type-II PLL employs the proposed frequency-to-digital converter in place of a high resolution time-to-digital converter and achieves 848 fs rms integrated jitter (1 kHz-30 MHz) and -101 dBc/Hz in-band phase noise while generating 5.054 GHz output from 31.25 MHz input

    Clock Synchronisation Assisted Clock and Data Recovery for Sub-Nanosecond Data Centre Optical Switching

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    In current `Cloud' data centres, switching of data between servers is performed using deep hierarchies of interconnected electronic packet switches. Demand for network bandwidth from emerging data centre workloads, combined with the slowing of silicon transistor scaling, is leading to a widening gap between data centre traffic demand and electronically-switched data centre network capacity. All-optical switches could offer a future-proof alternative, with potentially under a third of the power consumption and cost of electronically-switched networks. However, the effective bandwidth of optical switches depends on their overall switching time. This is dominated by the clock and data recovery (CDR) locking time, which takes hundreds of nanoseconds in commercial receivers. Current data centre traffic is dominated by small packets that transmit in tens of nanoseconds, leading to low effective bandwidth, as a high proportion of receiver time is spent performing CDR locking instead of receiving data, removing the benefits of optical switching. High-performance optical switching requires sub-nanosecond CDR locking time to overcome this limitation. This thesis proposes, models, and demonstrates clock synchronisation assisted CDR, which can achieve this. This approach uses clock synchronisation to simplify the complexity of CDR versus previous asynchronous approaches. An analytical model of the technique is first derived that establishes its potential viability. Following this, two approaches to clock synchronisation assisted CDR are investigated: 1. Clock phase caching, which uses clock phase storage and regular updates in a 2km intra-building scale data centre network interconnected by single-mode optical fibre. 2. Single calibration clock synchronisation assisted CDR}, which leverages the 20 times lower thermal sensitivity of hollow core optical fibre versus single-mode fibre to synchronise a 100m cluster scale data centre network, with a single initial phase calibration step. Using a real-time FPGA-based optical switch testbed, sub-nanosecond CDR locking time was demonstrated for both approaches
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