38 research outputs found
Programmable photonics : an opportunity for an accessible large-volume PIC ecosystem
We look at the opportunities presented by the new concepts of generic programmable photonic integrated circuits (PIC) to deploy photonics on a larger scale. Programmable PICs consist of waveguide meshes of tunable couplers and phase shifters that can be reconfigured in software to define diverse functions and arbitrary connectivity between the input and output ports. Off-the-shelf programmable PICs can dramatically shorten the development time and deployment costs of new photonic products, as they bypass the design-fabrication cycle of a custom PIC. These chips, which actually consist of an entire technology stack of photonics, electronics packaging and software, can potentially be manufactured cheaper and in larger volumes than application-specific PICs. We look into the technology requirements of these generic programmable PICs and discuss the economy of scale. Finally, we make a qualitative analysis of the possible application spaces where generic programmable PICs can play an enabling role, especially to companies who do not have an in-depth background in PIC technology
Special Topics in Information Technology
This open access book presents thirteen outstanding doctoral dissertations in Information Technology from the Department of Electronics, Information and Bioengineering, Politecnico di Milano, Italy. Information Technology has always been highly interdisciplinary, as many aspects have to be considered in IT systems. The doctoral studies program in IT at Politecnico di Milano emphasizes this interdisciplinary nature, which is becoming more and more important in recent technological advances, in collaborative projects, and in the education of young researchers. Accordingly, the focus of advanced research is on pursuing a rigorous approach to specific research topics starting from a broad background in various areas of Information Technology, especially Computer Science and Engineering, Electronics, Systems and Control, and Telecommunications. Each year, more than 50 PhDs graduate from the program. This book gathers the outcomes of the thirteen best theses defended in 2020-21 and selected for the IT PhD Award. Each of the authors provides a chapter summarizing his/her findings, including an introduction, description of methods, main achievements and future work on the topic. Hence, the book provides a cutting-edge overview of the latest research trends in Information Technology at Politecnico di Milano, presented in an easy-to-read format that will also appeal to non-specialists
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Hardware-Software Integrated Silicon Photonic Systems
Fabrication of integrated photonic devices and circuits in a CMOS-compatible process or foundry is the essence of the silicon photonic platform. Optical devices in this platform are enabled by the high index contrast between silicon and silicon on insulator. These devices offer potential benefits when integrated with existing and emerging high performance microelectronics. Integration of silicon photonics with small footprints and power-efficient and high-bandwidth operation has long been cited as a solution to existing issues in high performance interconnects for telecommunications and data communication. Stemming from this historic application in communications, new applications in sensing arrays, biochemistry, and even entertainment continue to grow. However, for many technologies to successfully adopt silicon photonics and reap the perceived benefits, the silicon photonic platform must extend toward development of a full ecosystem. Such extension includes implementation of low cost and robust electronic-photonic packaging techniques for all applications. In an ecosystem implemented with services ranging from device fabrication all the way to packaged products, ease-of-use and ease-of-deployment in systems that require many hardware and software components becomes possible.
With the onset of the Internet of Things (IoT), nearly all technologies—sensors, compute, communication devices, etc.—persist in systems with some level of localized or distributed software interaction. These interactions often require a level of networked communications. For silicon photonics to penetrate technologies comprising IoT, it is advantageous to implement such devices in a hardware-software integrated way. Meaning, all functionalities and interactions related to the silicon photonic devices are well defined in terms of the physicality of the hardware. This hardware is then abstracted into various levels of software as needed in the system. The power of hardware-software integration allows many of the piece-wise demonstrated functionalities of silicon photonics to easily translate to commercial implementation.
This work begins by briefly highlighting the challenges and solutions for transforming existing silicon photonic platforms to a full-fledged silicon photonic ecosystem. The highlighted solutions in development consist of tools for fabrication, testing, subsystem packaging, and system validation. Building off the knowledge of a silicon photonic ecosystem in development, this work continues by demonstrating various levels of hardware-software integration. These are primarily focused on silicon photonic interconnects.
The first hardware-software integration-focused portion of this work explores silicon microring-based devices as a key building block for greater silicon photonic subsystems. The microring’s sensitivity to thermal fluctuations is identified not as a flaw, but as a tool for functionalization. A logical control system is implemented to mitigate thermal effects that would normally render a microring resonator inoperable. The mechanism to control the microring is extended and abstracted with software programmability to offer wavelength routing as a network primitive. This functionality, available through hardware-software integration, offers the possibility for ubiquitous deployment of such microring devices in future photonic interconnection networks.
The second hardware-software integration-focused portion of this work explores dynamic silicon photonic switching devices and circuits. Specifically, interactions with and implications of high-speed data propagation and link layer control are demonstrated. The characteristics of photonic link setup include transients due to physical layer optical effects, latencies involved with initializing burst mode links, and optical link quality. The impacts on the functionalities and performance offered by photonic devices are explored. An optical network interface platform is devised using FPGAs to encapsulate hardware and software for controlling these characteristics using custom hardware description language, firmware, and software. A basic version of a silicon photonic network controller using FPGAs is used as a tool to demonstrate a highly scalable switch architecture using microring resonators. This architecture would not be possible without some semblance of this controller, combined with advanced electronic-photonic packaging. A more advanced deployment of the network interface platform is used to demonstrate a method for accelerating photonic links using out-of-band arbitration. A first demonstration of this platform is performed on a silicon photonic microring router network. A second demonstration is used to further explore the feasibility of full hardware-software integrated photonic device actuation, link layer control, and out-of-band arbitration. The demonstration is performed on a complete silicon photonic network with both spatial switching and wavelength routing functionalities.
The aforementioned hardware-software integration mechanisms are rigorously tested for data communications applications. Capabilities are shown for very reliable, low latency, and dynamic high-speed data delivery using silicon photonic devices. Applying these mechanisms to complete electronic-photonic packaged subsystems provides a strong path to commercial manifestations of functional silicon photonic devices
Design and evaluation of the IBL BOC for the ATLAS experiment at CERN
In 2013 during a 20 month long shutdown of the LHC the Pixel Detector of the ATLAS Experiment at CERN will be upgraded by inserting a fourth innermost layer between the beam pipe and the current detector. This so called Insertable B-Layer (IBL) will be constructed with 448 of the new FE-I4 chips to handle the readout of the about 12 million pixels provided by the sensors of this layer. The improved architecture and increased bandwidth of these new readout chips requires new off-detector electronics which were decided to be also backwards compatible to the existing system. Hence the VME card pair establishing the optical interface to front-end and data acquisition (BOC) and managing the data processing and calibration (ROD) have been redesigned for the IBL.
In this thesis the redesign of the BOC card is motivated and presented. At first the ATLAS Experiment is described and the need to upgrade the Pixel Detector with a new layer is explained. As the readout chip architecture of
the current system has flaws preventing its use for the IBL the new FE-I4
is introduced, and with a look at the current off-detector electronics the need for a redesign of it is justified. Starting with the conceptual planning, the redesign process of the BOC card is presented from hard- and
firmware development to testing of the first prototypes. The redesigned BOC is based on modern FPGA technology in conjunction with commercial off-the-shelf optical transceiver modules to provide an integration four
times higher than the current system, including the flexibility to adjust to
different use cases by simply changing the firmware
Special Topics in Information Technology
This open access book presents thirteen outstanding doctoral dissertations in Information Technology from the Department of Electronics, Information and Bioengineering, Politecnico di Milano, Italy. Information Technology has always been highly interdisciplinary, as many aspects have to be considered in IT systems. The doctoral studies program in IT at Politecnico di Milano emphasizes this interdisciplinary nature, which is becoming more and more important in recent technological advances, in collaborative projects, and in the education of young researchers. Accordingly, the focus of advanced research is on pursuing a rigorous approach to specific research topics starting from a broad background in various areas of Information Technology, especially Computer Science and Engineering, Electronics, Systems and Control, and Telecommunications. Each year, more than 50 PhDs graduate from the program. This book gathers the outcomes of the thirteen best theses defended in 2020-21 and selected for the IT PhD Award. Each of the authors provides a chapter summarizing his/her findings, including an introduction, description of methods, main achievements and future work on the topic. Hence, the book provides a cutting-edge overview of the latest research trends in Information Technology at Politecnico di Milano, presented in an easy-to-read format that will also appeal to non-specialists
Recommended from our members
Reconfigurable network systems and software-defined networking
Modern high-speed networks have evolved from relatively static networks to highly adaptive networks facilitating dynamic reconfiguration. This evolution has influenced all levels of network design and management, introducing increased programmability and configuration flexibility. This influence has extended from the lowest level of physical hardware interfaces to the highest level of network management by software. A key representative of this evolution is the emergence of softwaredefined networking (SDN). In this paper, we review the current state of the art in reconfigurable network systems, covering hardware reconfiguration, SDN, and the interplay between them. We take a top-down approach, starting with a tutorial on software-defined networks. We then continue to discuss programming languages as the linking element between different levels of software and hardware in the network. We review electronic switching systems, highlighting programmability and reconfiguration aspects, and describe the trends in reconfigurable network elements. Finally, we describe the state of the art in the integration of photonic transceiver and switching elements with electronic technologies, and consider the implications for SDN and reconfigurable network systems.This work was jointly supported by the UKs Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC) Internet Project EP/H040536/1, an EPSRC Research Fellowship grant to Philip Watts (EP/I004157/2), and DARPA and AFRL under contract FA8750-11-C-0249.This is the final version of the article. It first appeared from IEEE via http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/JPROC.2015.243573
Unified Synchronized Data Acquisition Networks
The permanently evolving technical area of communication technology and the presence of more and more precise sensors and detectors, enable options and solutions to challenges in science and industry. In high-energy physics, for example, it becomes possible with accurate measurements to observe particles almost at the speed of light in small-sized dimensions. Thereby, the enormous amounts of gathered data require modern high performance
communication networks. Potential and efficient implementation of future readout chains will depend on new concepts and mechanisms.
The main goals of this dissertation are to create new efficient synchronization mechanisms and to evolve readout systems for optimization of future sensor and detector systems. This happens in the context of the Compressed Baryonic Matter experiment, which is a part of the Facility for Antiproton and Ion Research, an international accelerator facility. It extends an accelerator complex in Darmstadt at the GSI Helmholtzzentrum fĂĽr Schwerionenforschung GmbH.
Initially, the challenges are specified and an analysis of the state of the art is presented. The resulting constraints and requirements influenced the design and development described within this dissertation. Subsequently, the different design and implementation tasks are discussed. Starting with the basic detector read system requirements and the definition of an efficient communication protocol. This protocol delivers all features needed for building of compact and efficient readout systems. Therefore, it is advantageous to use a single unified connection for processing all communication traffic. This means not only data, control, and synchronization messages, but also clock distribution is handled. Furthermore, all links in this system have a deterministic latency. The deterministic behavior enables establishing a synchronous network. Emerging problems were solved and the concept was successfully implemented and tested during several test beam times.
In addition, the implementation and integration of this communication methodology into different network devices is described. Therefore, a generic modular approach was created. This enhances ASIC development by supporting them with proven hardware IPs, reducing design time, and risk of failure. Furthermore, this approach delivers flexibility concerning data rate and structure for the network system. Additionally, the design and prototyping for a data aggregation and concentrator ASIC is described. In conjunction with a dense electrical to optical conversion, this ASIC enables communication with flexible readout structures for the experiment and delivers the planned capacities and bandwidth.
In the last part of the work, analysis and transfer of the created innovative synchronization mechanism into the area of high performance computing is discussed. Finally, a conclusion of all reached results and an outlook of possible future activities and research tasks within the Compressed Baryonic Matter experiment are presented
Topical Workshop on Electronics for Particle Physics
The purpose of the workshop was to present results and original concepts for electronics research and development relevant to particle physics experiments as well as accelerator and beam instrumentation at future facilities; to review the status of electronics for the LHC experiments; to identify and encourage common efforts for the development of electronics; and to promote information exchange and collaboration in the relevant engineering and physics communities