IBM scientists took another significant advance towards sending
information inside a computer chip by using light pulses instead of
electrons by building the world’s tiniest nanophotonic switch
with a footprint about 100X smaller than the cross section of a human
hair.
The switch is an important building block to control the flow of
information inside future chips and can significantly speed up the chip
performance while using much less energy.
Today’s announcement is a continuation of a series of IBM developments towards an on-chip optical network:
- In November 2005, IBM scientists demonstrated a silicon
nanophotonic device that can significantly slow down and actively
control the speed of light.
- In December 2006 an analogous tiny
silicon device was used to demonstrate buffering of over a byte of
information encoded in optical pulses a requirement for building
optical buffers for on-chip optical networks.
- In December 2007,
IBM scientists announced the development of an ultra-compact silicon
electro-optic modulator, which performs the job of converting
electrical signals into the light pulses, a prerequisite for enabling
on-chip optical communications.
“This new development is a critical addition in the quest to
build an on-chip optical network,” said Yurii Vlasov,
manager of silicon nanophotonics at IBM’s TJ Watson Research
Center. “In view of all the progress that this field has seen for
the last few years it looks that our vision for on-chip optical
networks is becoming more and more realistic”.
Today’s announcement is another significant advance in their
quest to develop next generation high-performance multi-core computer
chips which transmit information internally using pulses of light
traveling through silicon instead of electrical signals on copper wires.
In a paper published in the journal Nature Photonics, IBM unveils the
development of a silicon broadband optical switch, another key
component required to enable on-chip optical interconnects. Once the
electrical signals have been converted into pulses of light, this
switching device performs the key role of “directing
traffic” within the network, ensuring that optical messages from
one processor core can efficiently get to any of the other cores on the
chip.
The IBM team demonstrated that their switch has several critical
characteristics which make it ideally suited to on-chip applications.
First, the switch is extremely compact. As many as 2000 would fit
side-by-side in an area of one square millimeter, easily meeting
integration requirements for future multi-core processors.
Second, the device is able to route a huge amount of data since many
different wavelengths or “colors” of light can be switched
simultaneously. With each wavelength carrying data at up to 40 Gb/s, it
is possible to switch an aggregate bandwidth exceeding 1 Tb/s -- a
requirement for routing large messages between distant cores. Last but
not least, IBM scientists showed for the first time that their optical
switch is capable of operating within a realistic on-chip environment,
where the temperature of the chip itself can change dramatically in the
vicinity of “hot-spots,” which move around depending upon
the way the processors are functioning at any given moment. The IBM
scientists believe this temperature-drift tolerant operation to be one
of the most critical requirements for on-chip optical networks.
An important trend in the microelectronics industry is to increase the
parallelism in computation by multi-threading, by building large scale
multi-chip systems and, more recently, by increasing the number of
cores on a single chip. For example the IBM Cell processor which powers
Sony’s PlayStation 3 gaming console consists of nine
“brains,” or cores, on a single chip. As users continue to
demand greater computing performance, chip designers plan to increase
this number to tens or even hundreds of cores.
This approach, however, only makes sense if each core can receive and
transmit large messages from all other cores on the chip
simultaneously. The individual cores located on today’s
multi-core microprocessors communicate with one another over millions
of tiny copper wires. However, this copper wiring would simply use up
too much power and be incapable of transmitting the enormous amount of
information required to enable massively multi-core processors.
IBM researches are exploring an alternative solution to this problem by
connecting cores using pulses of light in an on-chip optical network
based on silicon nanophotonic integrated circuits. Like a long-haul
fiber-optic network, such an extremely miniature on-chip network will
transmit, receive, and route messages between individual cores that are
encoded as a pulses of light. It is envisioned that using light instead
of wires, as much as 100 times more information can be sent between
cores, while using 10 times less power and consequently generating less
heat.
The report on this work, entitled “High-throughput silicon
nanophotonic wavelength-insensitive switch for on-chip optical
networks” by Yurii Vlasov, William M. J. Green, and Fengnian Xia
of IBM’s T.J.WatsonResearchCenter in Yorktown Heights, N.Y. is
published in the April 2008 issue of the journal Nature Photonics. This
work was partially supported by the Defense Advanced Research Projects
Agency (DARPA) through the Defense Sciences Office program
“Slowing, Storing and Processing Light”.
Additional information on this development as well as on the IBM’s nanophotonics project can be found at the website http://www.research.ibm.com/photonics.