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Design, Performance (2008)

Abstract
Interconnect has become a primary bottleneck in integrated circuit design. As CMOS technology is scaled, it will become increasingly difficult for conventional copper interconnect to satisfy the design requirements of delay, power, bandwidth, and noise. On-chip optical interconnect has been considered as a potential substitute for electrical interconnect in the past two decades. In this paper, predictions of the performance of CMOS compatible optical devices are made based on current state-of-art optical technologies. Electrical and optical interconnects are compared for various design criteria based on these predictions. The critical dimensions beyond which optical interconnect becomes advantageous over electrical interconnect are shown to be approximately one tenth of the chip edge length at the 22 nm technology node.

Publication details
Download http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/summary?doi=10.1.1.78.4180
Source http://www.ece.rochester.edu/users/friedman/papers/SLIP_05.pdf
Contributors CiteSeerX
Repository CiteSeerX - Scientific Literature Digital Library and Search Engine (United States)
Keywords On-chip, CMOS compatible, Trends
Type text
Language English
Relation 10.1.1.25.9729, 10.1.1.25.7896, 10.1.1.26.4342