LECS
Laboratoire pour les systèmes informatiques émergents
Université Concordia · Montréal
Journal

Non-Volatile Phase Change Material based Nanophotonic Interconnect

Parya Zolfaghari, Joel Ortiz, C. Killian, S. L. Beux
Design, Automation and Test in Europe · 2022 · DOI: 10.23919/DATE54114.2022.9774648
Interconnexions photoniques sur silicium
Design, Automation and Test in Europe 2022 Parya Zolfaghari, Joel Ortiz, C. Killian, S. L. Beux
Résumé

Integrated optics is a promising technology to take advantage of light propagation for high throughput chip-scale interconnects in many core architectures. A key challenge for the deployment of nanophotonic interconnects is their high static power, which is induced by signal losses and devices calibration. To tackle this challenge, we propose to use Phase Change Material (PCM) to configure optical paths between writers and readers. The non-volatility of PCM elements and the high contrast between crystalline and amorphous phase states allow to bypass unused readers, thus reducing losses and calibration requirements. We evaluate the efficiency of the proposed PCM-based interconnects using system level simulations carried out with SNIPER manycore simulator. For this purpose, we have modified the simulator to partition clusters according to executed applications. Simulation results show that bypassing readers using PCM leads up to 52% communication power saving.

Citation

Si vous citez ces travaux, merci d'utiliser l'entrée ci-dessous. Vous pouvez copier le BibTeX dans le presse-papier via le bouton en haut de page.

@article{parya20224d8023d3f75e2266c0b6be7658cd96c62641e075,
  title  = {Non-Volatile Phase Change Material based Nanophotonic Interconnect},
  author = {Parya Zolfaghari and Joel Ortiz and C. Killian and S. L. Beux},
  journal = {Design, Automation and Test in Europe},
  year   = {2022},
  doi    = {10.23919/DATE54114.2022.9774648}
}

Remerciements

Ces travaux ont été soutenus en partie par le Conseil de recherches en sciences naturelles et en génie du Canada (CRSNG) et par le Fonds de recherche du Québec — Nature et technologies (FRQNT).