Architecting Optically-Controlled Phase Change Memory
Aditya Narayan, Yvain Thonnart, Pascal Vivet, Ayse K. Coskun, Ajay, Joshi

TL;DR
This paper introduces COSMOS, a novel architecture combining optically-controlled phase change memory with silicon photonics, achieving higher throughput and lower energy consumption than traditional electrically-controlled PCM.
Contribution
It presents a complete memory architecture redesign tailored for OPCM technology, including a hierarchical array and novel access protocols, enabling significant performance improvements.
Findings
2.14x average speedup over EPCM
3.8x lower read energy-per-bit
5.97x lower write energy-per-bit
Abstract
Phase Change Memory (PCM) is an attractive candidate for main memory as it offers non-volatility and zero leakage power, while providing higher cell densities, longer data retention time, and higher capacity scaling compared to DRAM. In PCM, data is stored in the crystalline or amorphous state of the phase change material. The typical electrically-controlled PCM (EPCM), however, suffers from longer write latency and higher write energy compared to DRAM and limited multi-level cell (MLC) capacities. These challenges limit the performance of data-intensive applications running on computing systems with EPCMs. Recently, researchers demonstrated optically-controlled PCM (OPCM) cells, with support for 5 bits/cell in contrast to 2 bits/cell in EPCM. These OPCM cells can be accessed directly with optical signals that are multiplexed in high-bandwidth-density silicon-photonic links. The…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPhase-change materials and chalcogenides · Neural Networks and Reservoir Computing · Optical Network Technologies
