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Performance Evaluation for Passive-Type Optical Network-on-Chip

Research Authors
1. Atef Allam
2. Ian O'Connor
3. Wim Heirman
Research Department
Research Year
2010
Research Journal
IEEE International Symposium on Rapid System Prototyping (RSP)
Research Publisher
NULL
Research Vol
NULL
Research Rank
3
Research_Pages
NULL
Research Website
NULL
Research Abstract

Abstract— Optical networks-on-chip (ONoCs) represent an emerging technology for use as a communication platform for systems-on-chip (SoC). It is a novel on-chip communication system where information is transmitted in the form of light, as opposed to the conventional electrical network-on-chip (ENoC). This work studies the performance of a class of ONoCs that employ a single central passive-type optical router using wavelength division multiplexing (WDM) as a routing mechanism. The ONoC performance analysis has been carried out both at system-level (network latency and throughput) and at the physical level. In physical-level (optical) performance analysis of the ONoC, we study the communication reliability of the ONoC formulated by the signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) and the bit error rate (BER). Optical performance of the ONoC is carried out based on the system parameters, component characteristics and technology. The system-level analysis is carried out through simulation using flit-level-accurate SystemC model. Experimental results prove the scalability of the ONoC and demonstrate that the ONoC is able to deliver a comparable bandwidth or even better (in large network sizes) to the ENoC.