Altera Shows World's First Optical FPGA Technology Demonstration
Customer Demonstration Underscores Company's Commitment to Develop Leading-Edge Technologies that Address Major Industry Challenges
San Jose, Calif., March 5, 2012—Changing how bandwidth-intensive applications can be designed and built, Altera Corporation (NASDAQ: ALTR) today announced the world's first demonstration of the company's Optical FPGA technology. Developed in conjunction with Avago Technologies, the demonstration shows how Altera's optically interconnected programmable devices can significantly increase interconnect bandwidth while reducing overall system complexity, power, and price. The technology demonstration is one in a series of recent innovations delivered by Altera, including the industry's first OpenCL program for FPGAs and 28-Gbps transceiver technology delivering the industry's highest data rates with superior signal integrity. Altera has been showing select customers the demonstration over the last quarter and will showcase it at the Optical Fibre Communication Conference and Exposition (OFC) being held at the Los Angeles Convention Center from March 6 to 8, 2012, in booth 2825.
As data rates approach 100-Gbps and beyond, significantly more bandwidth is required for next-generation applications in the computer and storage, communication infrastructure, and broadcast markets. By integrating programmable devices and optical transceivers within a single package, Altera's Optical FPGA technology can break through the reach, power, port density, cost, and circuit board complexity limitations of copper-based and conventional optical solutions.
"The Optical FPGA technology demonstration underscores Altera's commitment to develop innovations that address major industry challenges and ultimately, enable new innovations," said Bradley Howe, vice president of IC Engineering at Altera. "As data rate demands continue to rapidly increase, engineers need to look beyond copper and traditional optical solutions in order to meet the performance, cost, and power demands of next-generation video, cloud computing, and 3D gaming applications."
The demonstration shows Altera's Optical FPGA technology on a test board derived from the company's Stratix® IV FPGA 100G development kit, integrated with Avago Technologies' 12-Channel MicroPOD optical modules. By integrating high-speed optical transceivers onto the package that holds the FPGA, the electrical signal path from the I/O pad of the chip to the input of the optical transceiver has been reduced to a fraction of an inch. This shorter path reduces signal degradation and jitter, improving signal integrity and reducing data errors caused by parasitic elements in the signal path. Such integration can also help engineers reduce their overall board development and engineering costs.
In a loopback configuration, the demonstration shows 100GbE traffic of assorted packet sizes sent and received using the chip's internal traffic generator. The data path is sent back and forth through the FPGA transceivers and optical modules to achieve a bit error rate (BER) of 10^-12 or less. The short routing distance keeps signal integrity high and the emitted electromagnetic interference very low. Digital diagnostics monitoring (DDM), such as module case temperature and laser bias current, is also shown detecting potential issues and preventing link loss. This is especially critical for data center applications where link downtimes can equate to millions of dollars in lost revenue. Finally, the demonstration shows the optical FPGA's unique heat-sinking capability, which ensures the optics stay within the standard 0°C to 70°C temperature range.
"As the world leader in Data Center optics, Avago worked with Altera to combine our proven MicroPOD optical modules with their Stratix FPGAs, taking the concept of embedded parallel optics to the next level of integration," said Philip Gadd, vice president and general manager of the Fiber Optics Product Division at Avago. "This will allow FPGA users to utilize the high bandwidth and compact size advantages of parallel optical interfaces that are currently used in data centers."
For more information on Altera's optical developments, including an upcoming video and white paper, visit www.altera.com/optical.
About Altera
Altera programmable solutions enable system and semiconductor companies to rapidly and cost-effectively innovate, differentiate, and win in their markets. Find out more about Altera's FPGA, CPLD and ASIC devices at www.altera.com.
|
Intel FPGA Hot IP
Related News
- Altera's Stratix IV GT FPGAs Interoperate Directly with 40G QSFP Optical Modules
- Intilop's 10G Full TCP Accelerators with Network Security Features IP Core for Altera/Intel FPGAs qualified by major University and Government clients
- Altera Discloses Industry's First Heterogeneous SiP Devices that Integrate HBM2 DRAM with FPGAs
- Altera Partners with Intrinsic-ID to Develop World's Most Secure High-end FPGA
- Altera FPGAs Help Enable Deployment of Harris Corporation's Latest Falcon III Wideband Tactical Radio
Breaking News
- Arm loses out in Qualcomm court case, wants a re-trial
- Jury is out in the Arm vs Qualcomm trial
- Ceva Seeks To Exploit Synergies in Portfolio with Nano NPU
- Synopsys Responds to U.K. Competition and Markets Authority's Phase 1 Announcement Regarding Ansys Acquisition
- Alphawave Semi Scales UCIe™ to 64 Gbps Enabling >20 Tbps/mm Bandwidth Density for Die-to-Die Chiplet Connectivity
Most Popular
E-mail This Article | Printer-Friendly Page |