Photonic Networks-on-Chip Employing Multilevel Signaling: A Cross-Layer Comparative Study
Venkata Sai Praneeth Karempudi, Febin Sunny, Ishan G Thakkar, Sai, Vineel Reddy Chittamuru, Mahdi Nikdast, Sudeep Pasricha

TL;DR
This paper compares different 4-PAM modulation schemes for photonic networks-on-chip, demonstrating that EDAC-based designs offer superior performance and energy efficiency over traditional OOK and other 4-PAM variants.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive analysis of SS, EDAC, and ODAC 4-PAM modulators for DWDM photonic links and PNoCs, highlighting the advantages of EDAC-based designs.
Findings
EDAC-based 4-PAM links outperform OOK in energy efficiency.
System-level evaluation shows improved throughput with 4-PAM EDAC.
Hardware overhead is reduced using 4-PAM modulation schemes.
Abstract
Photonic network-on-chip (PNoC) architectures employ photonic links with dense wavelength-division multiplexing (DWDM) to enable high throughput on-chip transfers. Unfortunately, increasing the DWDM degree (i.e., using a larger number of wavelengths) to achieve higher aggregated datarate in photonic links, and hence higher throughput in PNoCs, requires sophisticated and costly laser sources along with extra photonic hardware. This extra hardware can introduce undesired noise to the photonic link and increase the bit-error-rate (BER), power, and area consumption of PNoCs. To mitigate these issues, the use of 4-pulse amplitude modulation (4-PAM) signaling, instead of the conventional on-off keying (OOK) signaling, can halve the wavelength signals utilized in photonic links for achieving the target aggregate datarate while reducing the overhead of crosstalk noise, BER, and photonic…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPhotonic and Optical Devices · Optical Network Technologies · Advanced Photonic Communication Systems
