Integrated Silicon Photonics – An Overview Aniruddha N. Udipi.

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Integrated Silicon Photonics – An Overview

Aniruddha N. Udipi

What’s wrong with electrical signaling?

• Power and delay fundamentally increase with length– Repeaters can help with delay, but further increase power –

cannot afford this

• Signal integrity issues– Limits on the number of “drops” (DIMMs, say)– Long, fast, wide – pick any two

• Very slow growth of pin count and per pin bandwidth– Chip-edge and socket-edge bandwidth severely limited– Increasing pressure due to increasing communication

requirements with multi-thread, multi-core, multi-socket

• We need a disruptive new technology

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3

Say Hello to Silicon Photonics

• Simply put, replace wires and electrons with waveguides and photons• Advantages

– Lower energy consumption, distance independent

– Higher bandwidth, Dense Wavelength Division Multiplexing (DWDM)

– Better scalability, no pin limits

– In some cases, you simply cannot use electrical connections to satisfy the

projected requirements

• Where?

– Started with large distances (Atlantic ocean large)

– Increased viability over smaller distances as technology improves and

matures

– Next, interconnect inside datacenters - between racks

– Eventually, intra-rack, intra-board, intra-chip…

Photonic Interconnect Basics

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Laser

Modulator

ChannelDetector

010100011101

101110001010

Design Space – Laser, modulation, channel, detection

Photonic Components

On-chip Laser

• Vertical Cavity Surface Emitting Laser (VCSEL)– One of the largest volume (and hence, cheapest) lasers

currently in use

– Is often integrated on-chip

– Enables “direct modulation”• You directly turn the laser on or off in accordance with the

data being transmitted

– Not fully CMOS compatible

– Also, does not support DWDM

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Off-chip Laser

• Distinct component, actual construction not important• A single laser source can feed multiple channels

– You just have a power splitter with the laser

– Potential to be cost-effective in systems with multiple transmission channels (multiple memory channels, say)

• Needs “external modulation”– Laser is on continuously, but you either block the light or

not, depending on the data being transmitted

• Supports DWDM• Under active consideration

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Modulator

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“OFF” STATE “ON” STATE

input input

output outputW

aveg

uid

e

Courtesy: D. Fattal and R. Beausoleil, HP Labs

Modulator Operation

• How do you go between “ON” and “OFF”?

– Charge injection (HP Labs)

– Charge depletion (Sun)

• These rings can be made “wavelength selective” with proper sizing during fabrication

• There are also “disc” modulators; similar operational principle, only the physical implementation is different

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Courtesy: Xu et al. Optical Express 16(6), 4309–4315 (2008)

Channel

• Silicon waveguide– Used on-chip– Moderate loss, crossover issues

• Hollow metal waveguide– Used for slightly longer distances, at the board level– Low loss, ease of fabrication

• Free space– Just use air! – Bunch of micro-mirrors and micro-lenses guide the light around– On-chip use

• Fiber optic cable– Off-chip interconnect

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Miscellaneous Components

• Power splitters – Y splitter – divides the total power among several channels

– 1:2, 1:4, and 1:8 splitters available

– Other than drop in strength, signal is unaffected

• Detectors – Seem to be simple photodetectors, I haven’t seen much variation or focus on this component

• Power guides– Mux/Demux

• Couplers

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Courtesy: Beamer et al.ISCA 2010

Features / Design Considerations

Dense Wavelength Division Multiplexing

• One of the primary advantages of photonics: excellent bandwidth density

• Each wavelength of light transmits one bit, supported by a bunch of “wavelength selective” ring resonators

– Each wavelength can operate independently

• Total number of supported wavelengths limited by increasing coupling losses between rings as spacing is tightened

• Up to 67 wavelengths theoretically possible• Each wavelength can run at ~10Gbps, giving a total of 80 GB/s of bandwidth per channel

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Laser Power Considerations

• The detectors need to receive some minimum amount of photonic power in order to reliably determine 0/1

– Depends on their “sensitivity”

• Going from source to destination, there are several points of power loss – the waveguide, the rings, splitters, couplers, etc.

• Work backwards to determine total input laser power required

• Also some concerns about “non-linearity”, when total path loss exceeds a certain amount

– Rule of thumb ~20dB

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Static Power Considerations

• Modulating rings are sized at fabrication time to be tuned to a particular wavelength

• However, this tends to drift during operation• Not only will this hurt this specific wavelength, but may also drift into adjacent wavelengths in DWDM systems, causing interference

• This drift can be controlled by heating, called “trimming”

• These heaters consume non-trivial amounts of power• Large static power, cannot under-utilize or leave idle

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Applications

My personal research focus

• Application to the processor-memory interface– Ideal candidate in many respects

• Scalability, bandwidth, energy

• The questions we’re trying to answer:– how can we best apply photonics to the memory subsystem?– Should we replace all interconnects with photonics?– what would the role of electrical signaling be?– how invasive would the required memory (DRAM)

modifications be?

• Off-chip laser, external ring-based modulation, off-chip fiber and on-chip silicon waveguides

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Interconnects in the Memory system

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DRAM Array – I/OOn-chip Interconnect

DRAM I/O – ProcessorOff-chip Interconnect

Photonics vs. electronics

• Photonics– Lower dynamic energy

– Higher static energy

– Cannot be over-provisioned or left idle

– Perfect for the shared off-chip interconnect, helps break the pin barrier

• Electronics– Higher dynamic energy

– Lower static energy

– Can be over-provisioned or left idle

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How deep should photonics go on die?

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Pho

toni

c E

nerg

y

Single-die system (Prior work)

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Argues for specialized memory dies with photonics deep inside – in this case, one stop for each quarter of the chip

But..

• Realistic systems cannot have a single die per channel• You simply need more capacity

– 3D stacking

– Daisy-chaining of these 3D stacks

• Many more rings• The effect of photonics’ static energy much more pronounced

• Argues for reducing photonic use• How?

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Proposed design

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Proposed Design

• Introduce a 3D Stacked “Interface Die”• This die contains all photonic components• All further traversal is electrical

– TSVs to move between dies vertically

– Efficient low-swing wires on-die

• Helps break the pin-barrier• Uses photonics on the heavily used shared off-chip interconnect, amortizes static energy

• Uses electrical signaling locally, where activity is low

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An analogy

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Can you really run the METRO to every house?

Realistic System

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Use a single stop per stack, on the interface die

Advantages of the proposed system

• Energy consumption– Fewer photonic resources, without loss in performance

– Rings, couplers, trimming

• Industry considerations– Does not affect design of commodity memory dies

– Same memory die can be used with both photonic and electrical systems

– Same interface die can be used with different kinds of memory dies – DRAM, PCM, STT-RAM, Memristors

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Final System

• Compared to the best fully-optical extension of the state-of-the-art photonic DRAM design

– 23% reduced energy consumption

– 4X capacity per channel

– Potential for performance improvements due to increased bank count

– Non-disruptive to commodity memory design

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High-radix Datacenter Routers (HP Labs)

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Simplify!

• Need high dimension network to reduce hop count• Bandwidth per port has to scale over time• Photonics are perfect..

– Switch size unconstrained by device IO limits

– Port bandwidth scalable by increasing number of wavelengths

– Optical link ports can directly connect to anywhere within the data centre

– Greatly increased connector density, reduced cable bulk

– 64-128 DWDM port router possible

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Macro-chips (Sun Labs, Oracle)

• Die sizes are limited by process yield

• For a given compute power requirement, therefore, you need several smaller chips

• Large bandwidth requirement between these chips

• With photonics, such a macro-chip design can approach a large chip performance

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On-chip Interconnect (Rochester)

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Ok, but when will all of this see light of day?

• Adoption will be gradual, over smaller distances– km scale – it’s already happened – Under-sea cables– 100m scale – in progress– m scale – just starting– cm scale – in the lab but relatively ready– mm scale – also in the lab but not ready for prime time

• Technology exists, constantly being improved by smart people in labs all over the world

• Maturity, manufacturing infrastructure and cost are the big barriers– Catch 22!

• First products expected in ~1year (Intel Light Peak) – USB replacement– Optical backplane for server racks ~2 years– Fancier applications will likely take ~5-8 years

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