76 research outputs found

    A Review of Optical Routers in Photonic Networks-on-Chip: A Literature Survey

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    Due to the increasing growth of processing cores in complex computational systems, all the connection converted bottleneck for all systems. With the protection of progressing and constructing complex photonic connection on chip, optical data transmission is the best choice for replacing with electrical interconnection for the reason of gathering connection with a high bandwidth and insertion loss on chip was mentioned. Optical routers play an important role in the Optical Network-on-Chip (ONoC), which are responsible for selecting the path between optical signal source and the destination. In recent years, silicon optical routers based on Micro-Ring Resonators (MRRs) and Mach-Zehnder Interferometers (MZIs) have been proposed. The design of optical switches is desirable by using of Mach-Zehnder Interferometer. This is while that Micro Ring Resonator Switches have low bandwidth, whereas Mach-Zehnder Interferometer switches have wide bandwidth inherently. Mach-Zehnder Interferometer switches are able to routing with high speed for data transmission with Nano second switching time. This is while, that MRR switches in compare to MZIs has the less power consumption and area consumption. On the other hand we can divide optical routers into parts, A. general router and B. specific- router, so that in specific routers, some of I/O paths for the reason of avoiding deadlock had be omitted. In continue, several kinds of optical router based on MZI and MRR along with researching a series of parameters was mentioned

    Principles, fundamentals, and applications of programmable integrated photonics

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    [EN] Programmable integrated photonics is an emerging new paradigm that aims at designing common integrated optical hardware resource configurations, capable of implementing an unconstrained variety of functionalities by suitable programming, following a parallel but not identical path to that of integrated electronics in the past two decades of the last century. Programmable integrated photonics is raising considerable interest, as it is driven by the surge of a considerable number of new applications in the fields of telecommunications, quantum information processing, sensing, and neurophotonics, calling for flexible, reconfigurable, low-cost, compact, and low-power-consuming devices that can cooperate with integrated electronic devices to overcome the limitation expected by the demise of Moore¿s Law. Integrated photonic devices exploiting full programmability are expected to scale from application-specific photonic chips (featuring a relatively low number of functionalities) up to very complex application-agnostic complex subsystems much in the same way as field programmable gate arrays and microprocessors operate in electronics. Two main differences need to be considered. First, as opposed to integrated electronics, programmable integrated photonics will carry analog operations over the signals to be processed. Second, the scale of integration density will be several orders of magnitude smaller due to the physical limitations imposed by the wavelength ratio of electrons and light wave photons. The success of programmable integrated photonics will depend on leveraging the properties of integrated photonic devices and, in particular, on research into suitable interconnection hardware architectures that can offer a very high spatial regularity as well as the possibility of independently setting (with a very low power consumption) the interconnection state of each connecting element. Integrated multiport interferometers and waveguide meshes provide regular and periodic geometries, formed by replicating unit elements and cells, respectively. In the case of waveguide meshes, the cells can take the form of a square, hexagon, or triangle, among other configurations. Each side of the cell is formed by two integrated waveguides connected by means of a Mach¿Zehnder interferometer or a tunable directional coupler that can be operated by means of an output control signal as a crossbar switch or as a variable coupler with independent power division ratio and phase shift. In this paper, we provide the basic foundations and principles behind the construction of these complex programmable circuits. We also review some practical aspects that limit the programming and scalability of programmable integrated photonics and provide an overview of some of the most salient applications demonstrated so far.European Research Council; Conselleria d'Educació, Investigació, Cultura i Esport; Ministerio de Ciencia, Innovación y Universidades; European Cooperation in Science and Technology; Horizon 2020 Framework Programme.Pérez-López, D.; Gasulla Mestre, I.; Dasmahapatra, P.; Capmany Francoy, J. (2020). Principles, fundamentals, and applications of programmable integrated photonics. Advances in Optics and Photonics. 12(3):709-786. https://doi.org/10.1364/AOP.387155709786123Lyke, J. C., Christodoulou, C. G., Vera, G. A., & Edwards, A. H. (2015). An Introduction to Reconfigurable Systems. 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    Full System Simulation of Optically Interconnected Chip Multiprocessors Using gem5

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    High-speed 4 ×{\times} 4 silicon photonic electro-optic switch, operating at the 2 {\mu}m waveband

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    The escalating need for expansive data bandwidth, and the resulting capacity constraints of the single mode fiber (SMF) have positioned the 2-μ{\mu}m waveband as a prospective window for emerging applications in optical communication. This has initiated an ecosystem of silicon photonic components in the region driven by CMOS compatibility, low cost, high efficiency and potential for large-scale integration. In this study, we demonstrate a plasma dispersive, 4 ×{\times} 4 electro-optic switch operating at the 2-μ{\mu}m waveband with the shortest switching times. The demonstrated switch operates across a 45-nm bandwidth, with 10-90% rise and 90-10% fall time of 1.78 ns and 3.02 ns respectively. In a 4 ×{\times} 4 implementation, crosstalk below -15 dB and power consumption below 19.15 mW across all 16 ports are indicated. The result brings high-speed optical switching to the portfolio of devices at the promising waveband

    High-Performance, Scalable Optical Network-On-Chip Architectures

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    The rapid advance of technology enables a large number of processing cores to be integrated into a single chip which is called a Chip Multiprocessor (CMP) or a Multiprocessor System-on-Chip (MPSoC) design. The on-chip interconnection network, which is the communication infrastructure for these processing cores, plays a central role in a many-core system. With the continuously increasing complexity of many-core systems, traditional metallic wired electronic networks-on-chip (NoC) became a bottleneck because of the unbearable latency in data transmission and extremely high energy consumption on chip. Optical networks-on-chip (ONoC) has been proposed as a promising alternative paradigm for electronic NoC with the benefits of optical signaling communication such as extremely high bandwidth, negligible latency, and low power consumption. This dissertation focus on the design of high-performance and scalable ONoC architectures and the contributions are highlighted as follow: 1. A micro-ring resonator (MRR)-based Generic Wavelength-routed Optical Router (GWOR) is proposed. A method for developing any sized GWOR is introduced. GWOR is a scalable non-blocking ONoC architecture with simple structure, low cost and high power efficiency compared to existing ONoC designs. 2. To expand the bandwidth and improve the fault tolerance of the GWOR, a redundant GWOR architecture is designed by cascading different type of GWORs into one network. 3. The redundant GWOR built with MRR-based comb switches is proposed. Comb switches can expand the bandwidth while keep the topology of GWOR unchanged by replacing the general MRRs with comb switches. 4. A butterfly fat tree (BFT)-based hybrid optoelectronic NoC (HONoC) architecture is developed in which GWORs are used for global communication and electronic routers are used for local communication. The proposed HONoC uses less numbers of electronic routers and links than its counterpart of electronic BFT-based NoC. It takes the advantages of GWOR in optical communication and BFT in non-uniform traffic communication and three-dimension (3D) implementation. 5. A cycle-accurate NoC simulator is developed to evaluate the performance of proposed HONoC architectures. It is a comprehensive platform that can simulate both electronic and optical NoCs. Different size HONoC architectures are evaluated in terms of throughput, latency and energy dissipation. Simulation results confirm that HONoC achieves good network performance with lower power consumption

    Microring-Resonator-Based Switch Architectures for Optical Networks

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    Integrated silicon photonics provides a promising platform for chip-based, high-speed optical signal processing due to its compatibility with complementary metal-oxide semiconductor (CMOS) fabrication processes. They are attracting significant research and development interest globally and making a huge impact on green information and communication technologies, and high-performance computing systems. Microring resonators (MRRs) show the versatility to implement a variety of network functions, compact footprint, and complementary metal-oxide semiconductor compatibility, and demonstrate the viability applied in photonic integrated technologies for both chip level and board-to-board interconnects. Furthermore, MRRs have excellent wavelength selection properties and can be used to design tunable filters, modulators, wavelength converters, and switches that are critical components for optical interconnects. The research work of this dissertation is focused on investigating how to develop MRR-based switches and switch architectures for possible applications not only in optical interconnection networks but also in flexible-grid on-chip networks for optical communication systems. The basic properties and performances of the MRR switches and the MRR switch architectures related to their applications in the networks are examined. In particular, how to design and how to configure high performance, bandwidth variable, low insertion loss, and weak crosstalk MRR-based switches and switch architectures are investigated for applications in optical interconnection networks and in flexible-grid on-chip networks for optical communication systems. The works include several parts as follows. The physical characteristics of microring resonator switching devices are thoroughly analyzed using a model based on the field coupling matrix theory. The spectral response and insertion loss properties of these switching elements are simulated using the developed model. Then we investigate the optimal design of high-order MRR-based switch devices. Spectral shaping of the passbands of microring resonator switches is studied. Multistage high-order microring resonator-based optical switch structures are proposed to achieve steep-edge flat-top spectral passband. Using the transfer matrix analysis model, the spectral response behaviors of the switch structures are simulated. The performances of the proposed multistage high-order microring resonator-based optical switch structures and the high-order microring-resonator-based optical switch structures without stages are studied and compared. Two types of MRR-based switch architectures are proposed to realize variable output bandwidths varying from 0 to 4 THz. One consists of 320, 160, and 80 third-order MRR switches with -3 dB passband widths of 12.5, 25, and 50 GHz, respectively. Another one is two-stage switch structure. In the first stage there are 4 third-order MRR switches with the passband widths of 1 THz. In second stage, there are 80, 40, 20 third-order MRR switches with the passband widths of 12.5, 25, and 50 GHz, respectively. Their insertion losses and crosstalks in the worst cases are numerically analyzed and compared in order to show the feasibility for the architectures to be applied in flexible optical networks. MRR-based bandwidth-variable wavelength selective switch architectures with multiple input and output ports are proposed for flexible optical networks. The light transmission behaviors of a 1 by N MRR-based WSS are analyzed in detail based on numerical simulation using transfer matrix theory. Two types of N by N MRR-based WSS architectures consisting of MRR-based WSSs and MRR-based WSSs, and MRR-based WSSs and optical couplers are proposed. The performances of the proposed architectures are studied. Scalable optical interconnections based on MRRs are proposed, which consist mainly of microring resonator devices: microring lasers, microring switches, microring de-multiplexers, and integrated photo-dectors. Their throughput capacities, end-to-end time latencies, and transmission packet loss rates are evaluated using OMNet++. In summary, the research of the dissertation contributes to develop high performance, variable bandwidth, low insertion loss, and low crosstalk MRR-based optical switches and switch architectures to adapt to dynamic source allocation of flexible-grid optical networks

    Multipurpose silicon photonics signal processor core

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    [EN] Integrated photonics changes the scaling laws of information and communication systems offering architectural choices that combine photonics with electronics to optimize performance, power, footprint, and cost. Application-specific photonic integrated circuits, where particular circuits/chips are designed to optimally perform particular functionalities, require a considerable number of design and fabrication iterations leading to long development times. A different approach inspired by electronic Field Programmable Gate Arrays is the programmable photonic processor, where a common hardware implemented by a two-dimensional photonic waveguide mesh realizes different functionalities through programming. Here, we report the demonstration of such reconfigurable waveguide mesh in silicon. We demonstrate over 20 different functionalities with a simple seven hexagonal cell structure, which can be applied to different fields including communications, chemical and biomedical sensing, signal processing, multiprocessor networks, and quantum information systems. Our work is an important step toward this paradigm.J.C. acknowledges funding from the ERC Advanced Grant ERC-ADG-2016-741415 UMWP-Chip, I.G. acknowledges the funding through the Spanish MINECO Ramon y Cajal program. D.P. acknowledges financial support from the UPV through the FPI predoctoral funding scheme. D.J.T. acknowledges funding from the Royal Society for his University Research Fellowship.Pérez-López, D.; Gasulla Mestre, I.; Crudgington, L.; Thomson, DJ.; Khokhar, AZ.; Li, K.; Cao, W.... (2017). Multipurpose silicon photonics signal processor core. Nature Communications. 8(1925):1-9. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-017-00714-1S1981925Doerr, C. R. & Okamoto, K. Advances in silica planar lightwave circuits. J. 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    Reconfigurable integrated optoelectronics

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