By
Michael Kanellos
Monday, March 01 2004 09:31 AM
URL:
http://www.zdnetasia.com/news/hardware/0,39042972,39170127,00.htm
It's going to take a number of years, but optical fiber is going to get
inside your PC.
Intel's Components Research Lab is working on ways to replace copper wiring
between motherboards and chips inside computers with faster, more
energy-efficient optical fiber.
The lab has created a prototype system with chips connected to each other
through eight optical channels transferring data at more than 1 gigabit of data
per second for an aggregate bandwidth of over 8gbps (gigabits per second). The
individual channels, called waveguides, can transfer data at up to 3gbps.
That's slower than conventional optical technology--and even some standard
connections in PCs today--but the entire unit is housed inside a chip package
and should be cheaper than current optical parts. And eventually it will speed
up, Intel said.
The effort is largely aimed at dodging some of the problems looming with
metal interconnects and buses. Channels in PCI Express--a faster connection for
shuttling data within a PC--can pass data at 2.5gbps, but metal channels will
likely top out at 10gbps and 20gbps because of signal attenuation and other
problems, said Ian Young, director of advanced circuits and technology
integration at Intel's lab.
"We are going to start to have trouble (with copper interconnections) at 10
gigabits," he said. "As frequency increases, optical attenuation occurs much
more slowly than electrical attenuation."
Optical chip company Primarion is
working on similar technology. Both Intel and Primarion started examining
optical interconnects a few years ago.
Fiber is currently being used to connect servers, but it will likely begin to
connect boards inside computers in two to seven years. Chip-to-chip optical
connections will start to appear in about seven years, Young said.
Unlike wires, which transfer signals with electrons, optical fiber depends on
photons, which are far faster and don't generate heat. Although optical provides
better performance, optical parts historically have been far more expensive and
tricky to make.
Intel is trying to remove some of the inherent difficulties of optical
technology by making as many of the components as possible on standard silicon
wafers. The company recently showed off a silicon modulator that chops up laser
light into 1s and 0s.
Not all components can go into silicon, though. Light can't be generated out
of silicon, for instance. In addition, the chip-to-chip interconnection contains
components that are made with gallium arsenide and germanium, which raises
manufacturing costs. Still, enough of the technology can be integrated into
standard silicon chips to make the proposition viable, Young said.
"Even though it is a hybrid package, we think we can meet the cost and
performance" levels, he said.
Peter Glaskowsky, editor in chief of The
Microprocessor Report, said optical could certainly advance overall
computing performance, but it won't be easy. Microprocessors generate
substantial amounts of heat, and optical equipment can malfunction if heated.
"Heat changes dimensions of everything in a chip," he said.