* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download Design of Low Power and High Speed Laser Driver
Electric power system wikipedia , lookup
Audio power wikipedia , lookup
History of electric power transmission wikipedia , lookup
Electrification wikipedia , lookup
Loudspeaker wikipedia , lookup
Buck converter wikipedia , lookup
Power engineering wikipedia , lookup
Switched-mode power supply wikipedia , lookup
Wireless power transfer wikipedia , lookup
Loudspeaker enclosure wikipedia , lookup
Alternating current wikipedia , lookup
Design of High-Speed Laser Driver Using a Standard CMOS Technology for Optical Data Transmission Dissertation Defense Presentation By Seok Hun Hyun Advisor: Martin A. Brooke November 2004 Outline Introduction Background Design of A High Current Laser Driver Design of A Low Power Laser Driver Thin Film Laser Integration onto CMOS circuits Conclusion and Future Research Introduction Objective Design of laser driver for optical data transmission Using a standard CMOS technology Studying the behavior of circuit performance with parasitic components Working at commercially interesting highspeed and low power consumption Introduction Fundamental constraints in electronic communication links Noise, Interference, Power, Cost, etc. Use of optics as a replacement for electronics LAN, MAN, board-to-board and chip-to-chip interconnects Background Optoelectronic Links Background Eye Diagram Jitter EYE Signal Distortion Logic “1” Noise Margin Logic “0” Background CMOS technology Low power Low cost High yield Higher degree of integration Vast standard cell library TSMC 0.18 um mixed-signal CMOS Background Laser Driver The electro-optic interface limits the maximum speed of system Simple current switch responses to the input signal modulated with data stream Critical challenge: To deliver large current with very short rise and fall times since the bandwidth is trade off for large current. Background Examples of laser driver Reference: Jerry D. Gibson, The Communications Handbook, CRC press, 1996. High Current Laser Driver Required to be other types of lasers FP, DFB, MQW, etc. More than 20 mA modulation currents A driver for LVDS standards Input: 100 mVp-p Speed : > 10 Gbps Output current: Mod. 0~40 mA, Bias : 0~30 mA High Current Laser Driver Hard to design a current switch with LVDS input amplitude (100 mVp-p) Require pre-driver stages Bandwidth Enhancement Technique Shunt peaking Source degeneration Cherry-Hooper topology High Current Laser Driver Shunt peaking High Current Laser Driver Source degeneration High Current Laser Driver Cherry-Hooper topology High Current Laser Driver Pre-drive stage (a) Active inductor (b) CH topology High Current Laser Driver Laser driver with CH topology High Current Laser Driver Eye diagram at 10 Gbps High Current Laser Driver Laser driver and simulation at 10 Gbps High Current Laser Driver Eye diagram at 10 Gbps High Current Laser Driver Specifications Performance LD with the CH LD with active inductors Speed 10 Gbps 10 Gbps Input 100mVp-p 100mVp-p Output Power Mod: 40mAp-p Bias: 30mA 694 mW Mod: 40mAp-p Bias: 30mA 312 mW High Current Laser Driver Comparison Speed Mod. Input Power Petersen’s work [Ref] 10 Gbps 30 m 500 m 492.2 mW This research 10 Gbps 40 m 100 m 312 mW [Ref]:A. K. Petersen, K. Kiziloglu, T. Yoon, F. Williams, Jr., and M. R. Sandor, "Front-end CMOS chipset for 10 Gb/s communication," presented at Proceedings of 2002 IEEE Radio Frequency Integrated Circuits Symposium RFIC, 2-4 June 2002, Seattle, WA, USA, 2002. Low Power CMOS Laser Driver Parallel Optical Interconnects (POI) are available for rack-to-rack communication at bandwidth of up to 30 Gbps with 12 channels of 2.5 Gbps operation Next generation POIs will operate at 10 Gbps The key to demonstrate such links is low power laser driver and receiver Low Power CMOS Laser Driver Design Goal Specifications Goal Speed Greater than 10 Gbps Current Bias: > 10 mA Mod.: > 10 mA Power As low as possible Current density < 1 mA/um2 Differential topology Immune to delta I noise Low Power CMOS Laser Driver Simulation Process IC technology, Circuit topology Schematic-based simulations Verification of function of circuits Layout of circuit Parameter extraction from layout Re-simulations with the extracted Check the specifications Low Power CMOS Laser Driver Schematics VDD VDD For Electrical Test Z Z Z1 In+ InCurrent Switch IBIAS Z Z IMOD VSS VSS Low Power CMOS Laser Driver High speed laser model Low Power CMOS Laser Driver Simulation without packaging parasitics Input : 800 mVp-p PRBS Mod. : up to 10 mAp-p Speed : 10 Gbps Power : 62.5 mW Low Power CMOS Laser Driver Simulation with packaging parasitics Wire-bonding parasitics Traces on test board Soldering and cable Low Power CMOS Laser Driver Current (A) Transient response with line parasitics Voltage (V) Wirebonding : 2 nH Trace line : 5 nH Soldering, cable : 10 nH Speed : 10 Gbps Low Power CMOS Laser Driver Decoupling capacitors Low Power CMOS Laser Driver Current (A) Simulations with parasitics and decoupling capacitors Voltage (V) Input : 800 mVp-p PRBS Mod. : up to 10 mAp-p Speed : 10 Gbps Power : 62.5 mW Low Power CMOS Laser Driver Temperature Variations Current (A) Yellow : 27 oC Red : 100 oC Cyan : 200 oC Voltage (V) Low Power CMOS Laser Driver Layout of Laser Driver MiM Capacitors ESD protection circuitry Multiple finger structure A symmetrical layout Current density consideration Low Power CMOS Laser Driver TSMC 0.18um Chip Layout Transimpedance amplifier Laser Drivers Calibration transistors Low Power CMOS Laser Driver ESD protection circuitry Positive ESD Pulse are clamped to the ESD_VDD Negative ESD pulse are clamped to the ESD_VSS Low Power CMOS Laser Driver Test Setup Low Power CMOS Laser Driver Test board 5 GHz S(21) dB -2 dB -5 dB Frequency (Hz) Transmission characteristics (S21) of the traces on the test board using HPADS 10 GHz Low Power CMOS Laser Driver Transient response test @ 1 Gbps Error-Free Operation @ 5 Gbps Low Power CMOS Laser Driver Transient response test @ 10 Gbps 3.11 x 10 -14 @ 12 Gbps BER at 10 Gbps Low Power CMOS Laser Driver SONET OC-192 eye mask Low Power CMOS Laser Driver Simulation vs. Measurement Simulation Measurement Low Power CMOS Laser Driver Optimized specifications of the laser driver Specifications Conditions Laser modulation up to 12 mA Power Dissipation 65.5W Speed over 10 Gbps BER > 3.11 X 10-14 Area 825 X 613 μm Technology TSMC 0.18 μm CMOS Low Power CMOS Laser Driver Published laser drivers Authors Speed Modulation Bias Input Chan G.C 2.5 Gbps 20 mAp-p Chan C.T 2.5 Gbps 20 mAp-p Petersen A. K 10 Gbps 30 mAp-p Cao, J 10 Gbps 8 mAp-p N/A LVDS 0.18 um CMOS Eo, J.Y 10 Gbps N/A N/A 250 mVp-p InGaP HBT Alexandru A.C 10 Gbps 20 mAp-p 10 mA 800 mVp-p N/A N/A 40 mA 500 mVp-p 10 mA 400 mVp-p Technology 0.35 um 0.18 um CMOS 0.18 um CMOS SiGe HBT Low Power CMOS Laser Driver A detailed comparison Low power consumption Up to 12 Gbps operation The lowest input voltage Speed Mod. Input Power Eo’s work 10 Gbps N/A 250 mV 65 mW Petersen’s work 10 Gbps 30 m 500 mV 492.2 mW This research 12 Gbps 10 m 800 mV 65.5 mW This research 10 Gbps 40 m 100 mV 312 mW Thin Film Laser Integration onto CMOS Circuits Edge emitting laser 20 mA 0 mA developed by GT optoelectric group Thin Film Laser Integration onto CMOS Circuits Thin film integration Separate fabrication Independent optimization Reduce packaging parasitics Thin Film Laser Integration onto CMOS Circuits S(21) dB S(21) dB Metal line experiments 500 um length and 20 um spacing b/w lines 3 um SiO2 on a silicon substrate Thin Film Laser Integration onto CMOS Circuits A photograph of the fabricated optical transmitter Thin film Laser integration onto CMOS chip Simulation and Measurement Simulation L-I measurement Conclusion and Future Work High-speed and low power CMOS laser driver was designed and tested High-speed laser diode and parasitics in packaging were modeled and incorporated in the driver design Low power consumption at 10 Gbps speed The driver compatible with LVDS IEEE standard was designed, simulated The first demonstration of thin film laser onto CMOS laser driver Conclusion and Future Work Future Work Speed verification of the optical transmitter with a thin film laser Additional function blocks such as a multiplexer Verification of high-current LVDS driver circuitry Implementation of optical transceiver with optical receivers. Questions