Title: A 10GHz Hybrid OpticalElectrical Clock
1A 10GHz Hybrid Optical/Electrical Clock
Distribution Network for Gigascale Integration
Anthony V. Mule, Stephen M. Schultz Thomas K.
Gaylord , and James D. Meindl
Wednesday, Nov. 10th, 1999
2Outline
- 1) Proposed system concept
- System constraints for GHz ?P clock network
- Proposed solution Optical Clock Distribution
Network (OCDN) - System schematic / Optical properties
- Key component Focusing grating coupler
- 2) Components of optical power budget
- Minimum fanout of distribution
- Optical power required by receivers
- Optical power available for detection
- 3) Conclusions
3System Constraints
- Given
- 1) ITRS projections for 50nm generation
- Area of 750mm2 (ASIC)
- 1.4 billion transistors
- flocal 10GHz
- Vdd 0.55 V
- Maximum power density of 50 W/cm2
- 2) Architectural projections of single chip
multiprocessor for generations beyond 100nm
Question How to clock the system?
4Proposed Solution
Optical Clock Distribution Network (OCDN)
- No on-chip photonic sources
- Monolithic silicon-based detection
- Board-level, guided-wave, global propagation
of local clock frequency - Surface-relief focusing grating couplers to
overcome misalignment of flip-chip assembly
? Design for Manufacturability
5System Concept
GSI Chip
Detector
twiring
Package
tPackage
Waveguide
Focusing Grating Coupler
tg
tsolder
tw
Printed Wiring Board
6Key Optical System Properties
7Focusing Grating Couplers
Focal spot size under non-ideal wavelength,
spatial variations
Grating-to-chip optical path trace to
estimate total output coupling into preferential
order
8Optical Power Budget
Three components 1) Minimum fanout of
distribution to reach all nodes operating at
local clock frequency, flocal,and maximum
power density of 50 W/cm2 FOmin 2)
Incident optical power required by receivers
to operate at BER of 10E-15, bit rate of
flocal (Gb/s ) Prec 3) Amount of optical power
available at the output of an m-level H-tree
distribution Pout
9Minimum Fanout of Distribution FOmin
Given
Ngatesx106 (total) 177.5 Ngatesx103 (node)
106.3 Nodes, total 1024
a) Model for ave. wire length, Lavg
b)
c)
d) Asymptotic limit Cw .4CL
10Receiver Sensitivity1 Prec
BER 10-15RZ Bit Rate 10 Gb/s 50nm
Technology ? Prec 16.5?W
(1)
(2)
1 J.J. Morikuni et. al, Improvements to the
standard theory for photoreceiver noise. J.
Lightwave Tech., vol.12, pp.1174-1183, July 1994.
11Output Power Pout
a) b) c) d) e) f)
a) Y-junction TE b) Laser-waveguide CE c) Grating
CE d) Air/package TE e) Arc bending loss f)
Propagation loss
TE Transmission Efficiency CE Coupling
Efficiency
12Receiver Sensitivity1 (Prec) and Output Power
(Pout)
13Conclusions
- Approximately 1W of optical input power will
be required to clock 10GHz system - Main sources of optical loss
- Y-junction scattering loss
- Grating coupler loss
- Laser-waveguide coupling loss
- Overcome bandwidth limitations of global
electrical interconnects at cost of high optical
input power
14Related Research Efforts
- J.W. Goodman et. al. (Stanford), Optical
interconnections for VLSI systems. Proceedings
of the IEEE vol.72, no.7, p.850-66, 1984. - L.C. Kimerling, et al. (MIT), Materials for
monolithic silicon microphotonics. Materials
and Devices for Silicon- Based Optoelectronics
Symposium pp.45-56, 1998. - R.T.Chen et.al (UT Austin), Optical clock
distribution in supercomputers using
polyimide-based waveguides. Proceedings of
the SPIE - The International Society for
Optical Engineering vol.3632 p.123-33, 1999.
15Focusing Grating Couplers