4.7 Article Proceedings Paper

Attojoule Optoelectronics for Low-Energy Information Processing and Communications

Journal

JOURNAL OF LIGHTWAVE TECHNOLOGY
Volume 35, Issue 3, Pages 346-396

Publisher

IEEE-INST ELECTRICAL ELECTRONICS ENGINEERS INC
DOI: 10.1109/JLT.2017.2647779

Keywords

Integrated optoelectronics; optical arrays; optical communications; optical computing; optical interconnections; optical resonators; optoelectronic devices; quantum-confined; Stark effect; space-division multiplexing; wavelength-division multiplexing

Funding

  1. Multidisciplinary University Research Initiative Grant (Air Force Office of Scientific Research) [FA9550-12-1-0024]

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Optics offers unique opportunities for reducing energy in information processing and communications while simultaneously resolving the problem of interconnect bandwidth density inside machines. Such energy dissipation overall is now at environmentally significant levels; the source of that dissipation is progressively shifting from logic operations to interconnect energies. Without the prospect of substantial reduction in energy per bit communicated, we cannot continue the exponential growth of our use of information. The physics of optics and optoelectronics fundamentally addresses both interconnect energy and bandwidth density, and optics may be the only scalable solution to such problems. Here we summarize the corresponding background, status, opportunities, and research directions for optoelectronic technology and novel optics, including subfemtojoule devices in waveguide and novel two-dimensional (2-D) array optical systems. We compare different approaches to low-energy optoelectronic output devices and their scaling, including lasers, modulators and LEDs, optical confinement approaches (such as resonators) to enhance effects, and the benefits of different material choices, including 2-D materials and other quantum-confined structures. With such optoelectronic energy reductions, and the elimination of line charging dissipation by the use optical connections, the next major interconnect dissipations are in the electronic circuits for receiver amplifiers, timing recovery, and multiplexing. We show we can address these through the integration of photodetectors to reduce or eliminate receiver circuit energies, free-space optics to eliminate the need for timing and multiplexing circuits (while also solving bandwidth density problems), and using optics generally to save power by running large synchronous systems. One target concept is interconnects from similar to 1 cm to similar to 10 m that have the same energy (similar to 10 fJ/bit) and simplicity as local electrical wires on chip.

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