dispersion studies on multimode polymer spiral waveguides for board-level optical interconnects
TRANSCRIPT
Dispersion Studies on Multimode Polymer Spiral
Waveguides for Board-Level Optical Interconnects
Jian Chen, Nikos Bamiedakis, Richard V. Penty, Ian H. White
Electrical Engineering Division, University of Cambridge, UK
e-mail: [email protected]
Tom J. Edwards, Christian T.A. Brown
School of Physics & Astronomy, University of St Andrews, UK
Acknowledgement:
The authors would like to acknowledge Dow Corning for providing the waveguide samples and EPSRC for supporting the work.
OPTICAL INTERCONNECTS CONFERENCE 2015
20 April 2015
Outline
• Introduction to Optical Interconnects
• Board-level Optical Interconnects
• Bandwidth Studies
• Conclusions
Outline
• Introduction to Optical Interconnects
• Board-level Optical Interconnects
• Bandwidth Studies
• Conclusions
Why Optical Interconnects?
Electrical Interconnects:
• Limited bandwidths;
• Increasing losses;
• Higher crosstalk;
Optical Interconnects:
• Lower losses at high data rates;
• Lower electromagnetic interference;
• Higher power efficiency;
• Density advantages.
Growing demand for data communications link capacity in:
- data centres
- supercomputers
need for high-capacity short-reach interconnects operating at > 10 Gb/s
Evolution of Optical Interconnects
• Optical interconnects will be employed in shorter and shorter links to
meet the bandwidth and power efficiency requirements.
Board Level
[1] A.F. Benner et al, Exploitation of optical interconnects in future server architectures, IBM Journal of Research and
Development, vol 49, Issue 4.5, 2005.
[1]1980’s 1990’s 2000’s > 2012
Outline
• Introduction to Optical Interconnects
• Board-level Optical Interconnects
• Bandwidth Studies
• Conclusions
Board-level Optical interconnects
Optics is gradually working in conjunction with electronics for future
communication technologies, however it needs to meet the key
technological requirements at board-level interconnects:
• Cost effectiveness;
• Ability to be integrated into existing architectures;
• Compatibility with existing manufacturing processes of conventional electronic
circuitry.
Polymer Multimode Waveguides
1. Polymer Materials
• Sufficiently low-cost;
• Very low intrinsic attenuation (0.03–0.05 dB/cm at 850 nm);
• Good thermal and mechanical properties (up to 350 °C);
• Fabricated on FR4, glass or silicon using standard techniques such as photolithography
and embossing.
2. Multimode Waveguide
• Cost-efficiency: relaxed alignment tolerances (> ± 10 µm).
Outline
• Introduction to Optical Interconnects
• Board-level Optical Interconnects
• Bandwidth Studies
• Conclusions
VCSEL Performance
Continuous improvement in bandwidth performance of VCSELs:
850 nm VCSELs:
44 Gb/s (2012), 57 Gb/s (2013) and 64 Gb/s (OFC 2014, Chalmers - IBM)
performance in longer wavelengths follows same trend
- un-cooled operation up to 90°C: (50 Gb/s Chalmers-IBM, 2014)
- VCSEL arrays with very good uniformity and similarly high bandwidth
[2] P. Westbergh, et al., IEEE PTL, vol. 27, pp. 296-299, 2015
Why do we study the bandwidth of multimode polymer waveguides?
their highly-multimoded nature raises important concerns about their bandwidth
limitations and their potential to support very high on-board data rates.
Frequency Response Measurements
quasi-overfilled 50/125 µm MMF input “overfilled” 100/140 µm MMF input
-3 dB frequency response >35 GHz for all inputs and input positions
suitable for high-speed transmission of ≥ 40 Gb/s data
- results from more overfilled launches into the 1 m long spiral waveguide
50 µm
100 µm
BW > 35 GHz x m
[3] N. Bamiedakis, et al., IEEE JLT, vol. 33, pp. 1-7, 2015
So, what are the bandwidth limits of these particular waveguides ?
time domain measurements
Time Domain Measurements
Back-to-back link
Link with the waveguide
• Different launch conditions (50 μm MMF with and without mode mixer): different mode power distributions at the waveguide input different levels of multimode
dispersion.
• Different input positions: different mode power distributions inside the waveguide different amount of induced
multimode dispersion.
Short pulse laser
Autocorrelatorx10 x16Cleaved 50 μm MMF
MM
Mode mixer
Short pulse laser
Autocorrelatorx10 x16Cleaved 50 μm MMF
MM
Mode mixer
Bandwidth Estimation
1. Ti:Sapphire laser emitting at 850 nm
input pulse width ~ 250 fs (autocorrelation trace)
2. Autocorrelator to record output pulse
3. Convert autocorrelation traces back to pulse traces:
Curve fitting is needed to determine the shapes of the original pulses, i.e. Gaussian, sech^2 or Lorentzian.
4. Bandwidth calculation:
(a) Calculate the frequency response of the waveguide
Frequency response|WG (dB) = frequency response|system (dB) – frequency response|b2b (dB)
(b) Find the 3dB bandwidth of the WG frequency response.
13
1 m Long Spiral Multimode Waveguide
Our studies show that multimode large waveguides can operate at
higher speed than what people conventionally thought.
(a) the 1 m long spiral waveguide illuminated with red light and facet of the
(b) SI and (c) GI waveguide illuminated with 850 nm light.
32 μm
32μ
m
32 μm
35μ
m
(a) (b)
Experimental Bandwidth Results
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SI WG
GI WG
50 μm MMF: no MM 50 μm MMF: with MM
Estimated bandwidth:
SI: 30 – 60 GHz
GI: 50 – 90 GHz
mode mixer:
lower bandwidth
smaller variation
across offsets
Bandwidth Discussion
16
- Why such a good bandwidth performance ?
some explanations (more quantitative details to be reported soon)
1. fabrication effects:
- “SI”-index waveguides might not be strictly-speaking “SI”
some variation in index profile across waveguide cross section
reduced multimode dispersion
2. waveguide layout:
- long bends in spiral structure suppress higher order modes
reduced multimode dispersion
3. mode mixing
power redistribution inside the waveguides
BW independent of launch conditions if mode mixing is strong
ongoing studies to quantify these effects in particular polymer waveguide technology
dispersion engineering
using layout
dispersion engineering
using fabrication
effect important in MMFs
Outline
• Introduction to Optical Interconnects
• Board-level Optical Interconnects
• Bandwidth Studies
• Conclusions
Conclusions
• Multimode polymer waveguides constitute an attractive technology for
use in board-level optical interconnects
• Bandwidth estimation of multimode WGs can be challenging
depends on launch conditions, WG parameters, fabrication and layout
• Time domain measurements on 1 m long spiral waveguides
worst-case BW > 30 GHz for “SI” waveguides (± 10 μm)
worst-case BW > 50 GHz for “GI” waveguides (± 10 μm)
suitable for very high-speed transmission !
References
[1] N. Bamiedakis, J. Chen, R. Penty, and I. White, "Bandwidth Studies on Multimode
Polymer Waveguides for ≥ 25 Gb/s Optical Interconnects," in IEEE Photonics Technology
Letters, vol. 26, no. 20, pp. 2004–2007, 2014.
[2] J. Chen, N. Bamiedakis, R. V. Penty, I. H. White, P. Westbergh, and A. Larsson,
“Bandwidth and Offset Launch Investigations on a 1.4 m Multimode Polymer Spiral
Waveguide,” in European Conference on Integrated Optics, p. P027, 2014.
[3] D. Kuchta, et al., "64 Gb/s Transmission over 57m MMF using an NRZ Modulated 850nm
VCSEL," in Optical Fiber Communication Conference (OFC), pp. 1-3, 2014.
[4] N. Bamiedakis, J. Chen, P. Westbergh, J. Gustavsson, A. Larsson, R. Penty, and I.
White, "40 Gb/s Data Transmission Over a 1 m Long Multimode Polymer Spiral Waveguide
for Board-Level Optical Interconnects," in Journal of Lightwave Technology, vol. 33, no. 4,
pp. 882–888, 2014.
[5] B. W. Swatowski, C. M. Amb, M. G. Hyer, R. S. John, and W. K. Weidner, "Graded Index
Silicone Waveguides for High Performance Computing," in IEEE Optical Interconnects
Conference (OIC), pp. 1-3, 2014.
Thank you !