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D. A. B. Miller, "Rationale and Challenges for
Optical Interconnects to Electronic Chips," Proc. IEEE 88, 728-749 (2000) The various arguments for introducing optical interconnections to
silicon CMOS chips are summarized, and the challenges for optical, optoelectronic, and
integration technologies are discussed. Optics could solve many physical problems of
interconnects, including precise clock distribution, system synchronization (allowing
larger synchronous zones, both on-chip and between chips), bandwidth and density of long
interconnections, and reduction of power dissipation. Optics may relieve a broad range of
design problems, such as cross-talk, voltage isolation, wave reflection, impedance
matching, and pin inductance. It may allow continued scaling of existing architectures,
and enable novel highly-interconnected or high-bandwidth architectures. No physical
breakthrough is required to implement dense optical interconnects to silicon chips, though
substantial technological work remains. Cost is a significant barrier to practical
introduction, though revolutionary approaches exist that might achieve economies of scale.
An appendix analyses scaling of on-chip global electrical interconnects, including line
inductance and the skin effect, both of which impose significant additional constraints on
future interconnects.
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