1,109 research outputs found
Photonic integration enabling new multiplexing concepts in optical board-to-board and rack-to-rack interconnects
New broadband applications are causing the datacenters to proliferate, raising the bar for higher interconnection speeds. So far, optical board-to-board and rack-to-rack interconnects relied primarily on low-cost commodity optical components assembled in a single package. Although this concept proved successful in the first generations of optical-interconnect modules, scalability is a daunting issue as signaling rates extend beyond 25 Gb/s. In this paper we present our work towards the development of two technology platforms for migration beyond Infiniband enhanced data rate (EDR), introducing new concepts in board-to-board and rack-to-rack interconnects.
The first platform is developed in the framework of MIRAGE European project and relies on proven VCSEL technology, exploiting the inherent cost, yield, reliability and power consumption advantages of VCSELs. Wavelength multiplexing, PAM-4 modulation and multi-core fiber (MCF) multiplexing are introduced by combining VCSELs with integrated Si and glass photonics as well as BiCMOS electronics. An in-plane MCF-to-SOI interface is demonstrated, allowing coupling from the MCF cores to 340x400 nm Si waveguides. Development of a low-power VCSEL driver with integrated feed-forward equalizer is reported, allowing PAM-4 modulation of a bandwidth-limited VCSEL beyond 25 Gbaud.
The second platform, developed within the frames of the European project PHOXTROT, considers the use of modulation formats of increased complexity in the context of optical interconnects. Powered by the evolution of DSP technology and towards an integration path between inter and intra datacenter traffic, this platform investigates optical interconnection system concepts capable to support 16QAM 40GBd data traffic, exploiting the advancements of silicon and polymer technologies
A Survey Addressing on High Performance On-Chip VLSI Interconnect
With the rapid increase in transmission speeds of communication systems, the demand for very high-speed lowpower VLSI circuits is on the rise. Although the performance of CMOS technologies improves notably with scaling, conventional CMOS circuits cannot simultaneously satisfy the speed and power requirements of these applications. In this paper we survey the state of the art of on-chip interconnect techniques for improving performance, power and delay optimization and also comparative analysis of various techniques for high speed design have been discussed
On-chip signaling techniques for high-speed Serdes transceivers
The general goal of the VLSI technology is to produce very fast chips with very low power consumption. The technology scaling along with increasing the working frequency had been the perfect solution, which enabled the evolution of electronic devices in the 20th century. However, in deep sub-micron technologies, the on-chip power density limited the continuous increment in frequency, which led to another trend for designing higher performance chips without increasing the working speed. Parallelism was the optimum solution, and the VLSI manufacturers began the era of multi-core chips. These multi-core chips require a full inter-core network for the required communication. These on-chip links were conventionally parallel. However, due to reverse scaling in modern technologies, parallel signaling is becoming a burden due to the very large area of needed interconnects. Also, due to the very high power due to the tremendous number of repeaters, in addition to cross talk issues. As a solution, on-chip serial communication was suggested. It will solve all the previous issues, but it will require very high speed circuits to achieve the same data rates. This thesis presents two full SerDes transceiver designs for on-chip high speed serial communication. Both designs use long lossy on-chip differential interconnects with capacitive termination. The first design uses a 3-level self-timed signaling technique. This signaling technique is totally jitter-insensitive, since both of the data and clock are extracted at the receiver from the same signal. A new encoding and driving technique is designed to enable the transmitter to work at a frequency equal to the data rate, which is half of the frequency of the previous designs, along with achieving the same data rate. Also, this design generates the third voltage level without the need of an external supply. This design is very tolerant to any possible variations, such as PVT variations or the input clock\u27s duty cycle variations. This transceiver is prepared for tape-out in UMC 0.13ĆŽĆĀ¼m CMOS technology in June 2014. The second design uses a new 3-level signaling technique; the proposed technique uses a frequency of only half the data rate, which totally relaxes the full transceiver design. The new technique is also self-timed enabling the extraction of both the data, and the clock from the same signal. New encoders and decoders are designed, and a new architecture for a 3-level inverter is presented. This transceiver achieves very high data rates. This new design is expected to be taped-out using the GF 65nm CMOS technology in August 2014
Experimental Evaluation and Comparison of Time-Multiplexed Multi-FPGA Routing Architectures
Emulating large complex designs require multi-FPGA systems (MFS). However, inter-FPGA communication is confronted by the challenge of lack of interconnect capacity due to limited number of FPGA input/output (I/O) pins. Serializing parallel signals onto a single trace effectively addresses the limited I/O pin obstacle. Besides the multiplexing scheme and multiplexing ratio (number of inter-FPGA signals per trace), the choice of the MFS routing architecture also affect the critical path latency. The routing architecture of an MFS is the interconnection pattern of FPGAs, fixed wires and/or programmable interconnect chips. Performance of existing MFS routing architectures is also limited by off-chip interface selection. In this dissertation we proposed novel 2D and 3D latency-optimized time-multiplexed MFS routing architectures. We used rigorous experimental approach and real sequential benchmark circuits to evaluate and compare the proposed and existing MFS routing architectures. This research provides a new insight into the encouraging effects of using off-chip optical interface and three dimensional MFS routing architectures. The vertical stacking results in shorter off-chip links improving the overall system frequency with the additional advantage of smaller footprint area. The proposed 3D architectures employed serialized interconnect between intra-plane and inter-plane FPGAs to address the pin limitation problem. Additionally, all off-chip links are replaced by optical fibers that exhibited latency improvement and resulted in faster MFS. Results indicated that exploiting third dimension provided latency and area improvements as compared to 2D MFS. We also proposed latency-optimized planar 2D MFS architectures in which electrical interconnections are replaced by optical interface in same spatial distribution. Performance evaluation and comparison showed that the proposed architectures have reduced critical path delay and system frequency improvement as compared to conventional MFS. We also experimentally evaluated and compared the system performance of three inter-FPGA communication schemes i.e. Logic Multiplexing, SERDES and MGT in conjunction with two routing architectures i.e. Completely Connected Graph (CCG) and TORUS. Experimental results showed that SERDES attained maximum frequency than the other two schemes. However, for very high multiplexing ratios, the performance of SERDES & MGT became comparable
Compressed Passive Macromodeling
This paper presents an approach for the extraction of passive macromodels of large-scale interconnects from their frequency-domain scattering responses. Here, large scale is intended both in terms of number of electrical ports and required dynamic model order. For such structures, standard approaches based on rational approximation via vector fitting and passivity enforcement via model perturbation may fail because of excessive computational requirements, both in terms of memory size and runtime. Our approach addresses this complexity by first reducing the redundancy in the raw scattering responses through a projection and approximation process based on a truncated singular value decomposition. Then we formulate a compressed rational fitting and passivity enforcement framework which is able to obtain speedup factors up to 2 and 3 orders of magnitude with respect to standard approaches, with full control over the approximation errors. Numerical results on a large set of benchmark cases demonstrate the effectiveness of the proposed techniqu
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Heterogeneous Integration on Silicon-Interconnect Fabric using fine-pitch interconnects (ā¤10 ļæ½m)
Today, the ever-growing data-bandwidth demand is pushing the boundaries of the traditional printed circuit board (PCB) based integration schemes. Moreover, with the apparent saturation of semiconductor scaling, commonly called Moore's law, system scaling warrants a paradigm shift in packaging technologies, assembly techniques, and integration methodologies. In this work, a superior alternative to PCBs called the Silicon-Interconnect Fabric (Si-IF) is investigated. The Si-IF is a silicon-based, package-less, fine-pitch, highly scalable, heterogeneous integration platform for wafer-scale systems. In this technology, unpackaged dielets are assembled on the Si-IF at small inter-dielet spacings (ā¤100 ļæ½m) using fine-pitch (ā¤10 ļæ½m) die-to-substrate interconnects. A novel assembly process using a solder-less direct metal-metal (gold-gold and copper-copper) thermal compression bonding was developed. Using this process, sub-10 ļæ½m pitch interconnects with a low specific contact resistance of ā¤0.7 ā¦-ļæ½m2 were successfully demonstrated. Because of the tightly packed Si-IF assembly, the communication links between the neighboring dies are short (ā¤500 ļæ½m) with low loss (ā¤2 dB), comparable to on-chip connections. Consequently, simple buffers can transfer data between dies using a Simple Universal Parallel intERface for chips (SuperCHIPS) at low latency (<30 ps), low energy per bit (ā¤0.03 pJ/b), and high data-rates (up to 10 Gbps/link), corresponding to an aggregate bandwidth up to 8 Tbps/mm. The benefits of the SuperCHIPS protocol were experimentally demonstrated to provide 5-90X higher data-bandwidth, 8-30X lower latency, and 5-40X lower energy per bit compared to existing integration schemes. This dissertation addresses the assembly technology and communication protocols of the Si-IF technology
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