학술논문

Design of a terabit free-space photonic backplane for parallel computing
Document Type
Conference
Source
Proceedings of Second International Workshop on Massively Parallel Processing Using Optical Interconnections Massively parallel processing using optical interconnections Massively Parallel Processing Using Optical Interconnections, 1995., Proceedings of the Second International Conference on. :16-27 1995
Subject
Computing and Processing
Backplanes
Smart pixels
Optical arrays
Broadcasting
Optical devices
Optical interconnections
Integrated circuit interconnections
Bandwidth
Parallel processing
Access protocols
Language
Abstract
The design of a terabit free-space photonic backplane for parallel computing and communications is described. The backplane consists of a large number of parallel reconfigurable optical channels spaced a few hundred microns apart. The parallel channels are organized as a unidirectional ring and the channel access protocols are implemented by smart pixel arrays. Smart pixel arrays are integrated optoelectronic devices with optical I/O and with electronic processing capabilities. The design of a 32/spl times/32 smart pixel array which supports multiple reconfigurable broadcast channels and interfaces between tens of Gb/s of electrical data and hundreds of Gb/s of optical data is proposed. The photonic backplane interconnects 32 printed circuit boards (PCBs) and has a bisection bandwidth of 1 terabit/sec (Tb/s), with each PCB receiving a bandwidth of 32 Gb/s. The backplane can be dynamically reconfigured to support 1024 broadcast channels at 1 Gb/s, 32 broadcast channels at 32 Gb/s, or many intermediate values. The backplane can also embed arbitrary graphs, including meshes, hypercubes, shuffles, etc. Smart pixel arrays are currently being fabricated using AT&T's Hybrid SEED process, and a demonstration of the architecture interconnecting 4 PCBs is planned for the fall of 1995.