Centralized optical backplane bus using holographic optical elements for high performance computing
Abstract (Summary)
Optical communication is distinguished for its enormous interconnect capacity
over long distance. As the cost of optical components drops, high bandwidth optical
systems were successfully employed into local area network and computer racks
because electrical counterparts are not able to deal with the data rate demands for
these applications. With the popularity of multi-core CPU in High Performance
Computers, the board-to-board interconnects exclusive based on electrical technology
in backplane applications become insufficient because of not only bandwidth crises,
but also wiring congestions. Many researches have projected that the progress of
optical technology will further push down the boundary demarcating electrical and
optical domains in the interconnect hierarchy. Accordingly, backplane or even
board-to-board level interconnects will benefit from the complement of optical
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interconnect. From architecture point of view, an optical bus implementation of the
optical interconnect has the potential advantage of both huge bandwidth and
elimination of wiring congestion. In contrast, optical waveguide and free-space
interconnects although provide high bandwidth capacity, are essentially point-to-point
technology which requires routing to a central switch on the backplane. The
centralized approach that was based on substrate guided optical interconnects is the
only way known that fulfills a uniform fan-out for different nodes in a bus architecture,
which allows medium sharing among nodes. In this dissertation, innovative
bit-interleaved optical backplane bus architecture is created based on centralized
substrate-guide optical interconnect, which allows the tremendous bandwidth
capacity to be shared by retaining the share bus architecture. Therefore, a secure and
reliable high speed transmission channel could be established by distributing copies
of confidential information separately. The feature provided by this innovative design
cannot be fulfilled using electrical interconnects or other optical point-to-point
technology without causing wiring congestions. In this dissertation, the optical
characteristics of the centralized optical bus such as bandwidth and alignment
tolerance are analyzed so that multi-channel implementation are successful on the
fabricated optical interconnect layer. A 3-board-16-channel computer server using
optical backplane board demonstrator using centralized optical bus was built upon the
simulation, design and packaging work.
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Bibliographical Information:
Advisor:
School:The University of Texas at Austin
School Location:USA - Texas
Source Type:Master's Thesis
Keywords:microcomputers optical interconnects motherboards
ISBN:
Date of Publication: