7,297 research outputs found
Optical Interconnection Networks Based on Microring Resonators
Abstract — Interconnection networks must transport an always increasing information density and connect a rising number of processing units. Electronic technologies have been able to sustain the traffic growth rate, but are getting close to their physical limits. In this context, optical interconnection networks are becoming progressively more attractive, especially because new photonic devices can be directly integrated in CMOS technology. Indeed, interest in microring resonators as switching components is rising, but their usability in full optical interconnection architectures is still limited by their physical characteristics. Indeed, differently from classical devices used for switching, switching elements based on microring resonators exhibit asymmetric power losses depending on the output ports input signals are directed to. In this paper, we study classical interconnection architectures such as crossbar, Benes and Clos networks exploiting microring resonators as building blocks. Since classical interconnection networks lack either scalability or complexity, we propose two new architectures to improve performance of microring based interconnection networks while keeping a reasonable complexity. I
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Lowest common ancestor interconnection networks
Lowest Common Ancestor (LCA) networks are built using switches capable of connecting u + d inputs/outputs in a permutation pattern. For n source nodes and I stages of switches, n/d switches are used in stage l - n/d - u/d in stage l - 2, and in general , n-u^l-i-l/d^l-i switches in stage i. The resulting hierarchical structure possesses interesting connectivity and permutational properties. A full characterization of LCA networks is presented together with a permutation routing algorithm for a family of LCA networks. The algorithm uses the network itself to collect and disseminate information about the permutation. A schedule of O(dp log_d/u n) passes is obtained with a switch set-up cost factor of O(log_d/u n) (p is the minimum number of passes that an algorithm with global knowledge schedules)
Interconnection network architectures based on integrated orbital angular momentum emitters
Novel architectures for two-layer interconnection networks based on concentric OAM emitters are presented. A scalability analysis is done in terms of devices characteristics, power budget and optical signal to noise ratio by exploiting experimentally measured parameters. The analysis shows that by exploiting optical amplifications, the proposed interconnection networks can support a number of ports higher than 100. The OAM crosstalk induced-penalty, evaluated through an experimental characterization, do not significantly affect the interconnection network performance
Interconnection Networks for Scalable Quantum Computers
We show that the problem of communication in a quantum computer reduces to
constructing reliable quantum channels by distributing high-fidelity EPR pairs.
We develop analytical models of the latency, bandwidth, error rate and resource
utilization of such channels, and show that 100s of qubits must be distributed
to accommodate a single data communication. Next, we show that a grid of
teleportation nodes forms a good substrate on which to distribute EPR pairs. We
also explore the control requirements for such a network. Finally, we propose a
specific routing architecture and simulate the communication patterns of the
Quantum Fourier Transform to demonstrate the impact of resource contention.Comment: To appear in International Symposium on Computer Architecture 2006
(ISCA 2006
Symmetric Interconnection Networks from Cubic Crystal Lattices
Torus networks of moderate degree have been widely used in the supercomputer
industry. Tori are superb when used for executing applications that require
near-neighbor communications. Nevertheless, they are not so good when dealing
with global communications. Hence, typical 3D implementations have evolved to
5D networks, among other reasons, to reduce network distances. Most of these
big systems are mixed-radix tori which are not the best option for minimizing
distances and efficiently using network resources. This paper is focused on
improving the topological properties of these networks.
By using integral matrices to deal with Cayley graphs over Abelian groups, we
have been able to propose and analyze a family of high-dimensional grid-based
interconnection networks. As they are built over -dimensional grids that
induce a regular tiling of the space, these topologies have been denoted
\textsl{lattice graphs}. We will focus on cubic crystal lattices for modeling
symmetric 3D networks. Other higher dimensional networks can be composed over
these graphs, as illustrated in this research. Easy network partitioning can
also take advantage of this network composition operation. Minimal routing
algorithms are also provided for these new topologies. Finally, some practical
issues such as implementability and preliminary performance evaluations have
been addressed
Optical interconnection networks based on microring resonators
Optical microring resonators can be integrated on a chip to perform switching operations directly in the optical domain. Thus they become a building block to create switching elements in on-chip optical interconnection networks, which promise to overcome some of the limitations of current electronic networks. However, the peculiar asymmetric power losses of microring resonators impose new constraints on the design and control of on-chip optical networks. In this work, we study the design of multistage interconnection networks optimized for a particular metric that we name the degradation index, which characterizes the asymmetric behavior of microrings. We also propose a routing control algorithm to maximize the overall throughput, considering the maximum allowed degradation index as a constrain
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