Alexander Thomasian, Vittorio Castelli, et al.
CIKM 1998
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
Alexander Thomasian, Vittorio Castelli, et al.
CIKM 1998
Karen Liu, Chung-Sheng Li, et al.
SPIE Photonics West 1995
Chung-Sheng Li, Franklin Fuk-Kay Tong, et al.
Journal of Lightwave Technology
Yuan-Chi Chang, Lawrence Bergman, et al.
SIGMOD 2000