Author :
Proesel, J. ; Rylyakov, A. ; Schow, Clint
Author_Institution :
IBM Res., Yorktown Heights, NY, USA
Abstract :
Future computing systems will require increasingly high bandwidth to supply data to microprocessors, FPGAs, and other computational blocks [1,2]. Increasing data rate is a common solution, as I/O pad density is not scaling with bandwidth requirements. Copper interconnect has increasingly high loss with frequency, requiring complex, power-hungry equalization to overcome the channel response at high data rates. In contrast, optical interconnect can transport signals over long distances without complex equalization. Chip-to-chip optical interconnect will require sensitive, low-power, clocked receiver (RX) circuits that operate at high data rates. Conventional TIA-based RXs [1,2] require high power to maximize gain and minimize noise while maintaining high BW. A low-noise, low-BW, low-power TIA is combined with a 2-tap DFE to achieve high sensitivity in [3], but the data rate is 4Gb/s and limited dynamic range is demonstrated. Double-sampling architectures eliminate the TIA, replacing it with a large resistor [4] or a capacitive integrator [5], which decreases the front-end BW. The BW is equalized by double sampling, which is equivalent to a 2-tap FFE. However, the use of small sampling capacitors in [4,5] adds kT/C noise, limiting sensitivity. In this work, we demonstrate an optical RX with a large input resistance to maximize gain and sensitivity, while DFE with IIR feedback (DFE-IIR) [6] eliminates the resulting ISI with minimal added noise.
Keywords :
IIR filters; decision feedback equalisers; low-power electronics; optical interconnections; optical receivers; DFE-IIR equalization; FPGA; I/O pad density; IIR feedback; bit rate 4 Gbit/s; capacitive integrator; channel response; chip-to-chip optical interconnect; computing systems; copper interconnect; data rate; double-sampling architectures; low-noise low-BW low-power TIA; low-power clocked receiver circuit; microprocessor chip; optical receivers; power-hungry equalization; small sampling capacitors; two-tap DFE; CMOS integrated circuits; CMOS technology; Latches; Noise; Optical receivers; Sensitivity; Silicon germanium;