Chung-Sheng Li, Hubertus Franke, et al.
Future Generation Computer Systems
Switching noise is one of the major performance bottlenecks in a dense optical interconnect system. In this paper, we show that differential configuration and balanced operation at both the transmitter and the receiver sides are essential to achieve low switching noise (≤ 5%) with large array size (≥ 16). A fully differential configuration is proposed in this paper to minimize the possible switching noise. Several candidate structures for differential optical interconnects are investigated. Based on these structures, the signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) and the system penalty due to channel mismatch are analyzed and the results are compared to those of a single-ended interconnect with similar driver and receiver structures. From this analysis, we show that (1) The SNR of differential optical interconnects is similar to that of single-ended structures, (2) System penalty due to mismatch is negligible if there exists a slight channel mismatch (≤ 1 dB). However, a power penalty (≃ 1.52 dB) exists when the mismatch between differential channels is significant (≥ 2 dB). A prototype based on this fully differential interconnect concept has been designed and fabricated and its performance is reported in [54]. © 1993 IEEE
Chung-Sheng Li, Hubertus Franke, et al.
Future Generation Computer Systems
Dominique Thiebaut, Joel L. Wolf, et al.
IEEE TC
Gregory E. Glass, Terry L. Yates, et al.
PNAS
Ana B. Benitez, Seungyup Paek, et al.
Signal Processing: Image Communication