SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Technology Stocks : Mellanox Technologies, Ltd. -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: PaulAquino who wrote (713)3/20/2017 8:53:38 AM
From: PaulAquino1 Recommendation

Recommended By
Jim Mullens

  Respond to of 954
 

Mellanox Introduces New 100Gb/s Silicon Photonics Optical Engine Product Line


Last update: 20/03/2017 8:30:00 am

Solutions Extend Options for Hyperscale, Enterprise, Storage and HPC Data Centers
SUNNYVALE, Calif. & YOKNEAM, Israel--(BUSINESS WIRE)--March 20, 2017--

Mellanox Technologies, Ltd. (NASDAQ: MLNX), a leading supplier of high-performance, end-to-end smart interconnect solutions for data center servers and storage systems, today introduced a new line of 100Gb/s silicon photonics components to serve the growing demand of hyperscale Web 2.0 and cloud optical interconnects. The new product line provides module makers with access to a fully qualified portfolio of silicon photonics components and optical engine subassemblies.

"Our customers can now achieve significant time to market advantages for embedded modules and transceivers by using fully-qualified, and cost-effective silicon photonics component and chip sets," said Amir Prescher, senior vice president of business development and general manager of the interconnect business at Mellanox. "PSM4 represents the highest volume, most cost effective and flexible building blocks for 100Gb/s for single mode fiber transceivers for data center applications. End customers benefit by having more supplier options and Mellanox benefits by scaling our high-volume silicon photonics products."

Specifically, Mellanox is announcing the immediate availability of:
-- 100Gb/s PSM4 silicon photonics 1550nm transmitter, with flip-chip bonded
DFB lasers with attached 1m. fiber pigtail for reaches of 2km

-- 100Gb/s PSM4 silicon photonics 1550nm transmitter, with flip-chip bonded
DFB lasers with attached fiber stub for connectorized transceivers with
reaches of 2km

-- Low-power 100Gb/s (4x25G) modulator driver IC

-- 100Gb/s PSM4 silicon photonics 1310 and 1550nm receiver array with 1m
fiber pigtail

-- 100Gb/s PSM4 silicon photonics 1310 and 1550 receiver array for
connectorized transceivers

-- Low-power 100Gb/s (4x25G) trans-impedance amplifier IC

These components are fully qualified for use in low-cost, electronics-style packaging, ensuring a low-risk, quick time to market advantage. Because the Mellanox silicon photonics platform eliminates the need for complex optical alignment of lenses, isolators, and laser subassemblies, customers can scale to high volume manufacturing easier and faster than traditional technologies.

Recently, Mellanox announced that it has shipped more 100,000 Direct Attach Copper (DAC) cables and more 200,000 optical transceiver modules for 100Gb/s networks, confirming the market demand and high volume manufacturing leadership for 100Gb/s interconnect products.

Mellanox will be exhibiting at the Optical Fiber Conference (OFC), March 21-23, at the Los Angeles Convention Center, Los Angeles, CA, booth no. 3715. Mellanox will be showcasing live demonstrations of its 100Gb/s end-to-end switching, network adapter and copper and optical cables and transceivers solutions, including:
-- Live 200Gb/s silicon photonics demonstration

-- Spectrum SN2700, SN2410 and SN2100 100Gb/s QSFP28/ SFP28 switches

-- ConnectX(R)-4 and ConnectX-5 25G/50G/100Gb/s QSFP28/SFP28 network
adapters

-- LinkX(TM) 25G/50G/100Gb/s DAC & AOC cables and 100G SR4 & PSM4
transceivers

-- New Quantum switches with 40 ports of 200Gb/s QSFP28 in 1RUchassis

-- New ConnectX-6 adapters with two ports of 200Gb/s QSFP28

-- Silicon Photonics Optical engines and components

At OFC, the Company will also be demonstrating interoperability of the Mellanox Silicon Photonics 100Gb/s PSM4 with Innolight, AOI, Oclaro, and Hisense transceivers in both the Mellanox booth and in the adjacent Ethernet Alliance booth, no. 1709.



To: PaulAquino who wrote (713)3/23/2017 3:40:21 PM
From: PaulAquino  Respond to of 954
 
Fujitsu Looks to 3D ICs, Silicon Photonics to Drive Future Systems

March 23, 2017 Jeffrey Burt
nextplatform.com

The rise of public and private clouds, the growth of the Internet of Things, the proliferation of mobile devices and the massive amounts of data that need to be collected, stored, moved and analyzed that are being generated by such fast-growing emerging trends promise to drive significant changes in both software and hardware development in the coming years.

Depending on who you’re talking to, there could be anywhere from 10 billion to 25 billion connected devices worldwide, self-driving cars are expected to rapidly grow in use in the next decade and corporate data is no longer housed primarily in stationary storage appliances in the datacenter, but are accessible via cloud environments, mobile devices and IoT devices.

For hardware makers, the push is on to create servers and other systems that can move out toward the edge of the corporate networks, to be as close as possible to the sources of the data to ensure near-real-time analysis of the data and to reduce the amount of traffic going over the networks by determining at the point where the data is generated which information needs to be routed back to the datacenter and which is irrelevant and can be deleted. There is increasing demand for smaller, more energy-efficient and more powerful compute systems that can be placed out at the network’s edge or in the end devices themselves, such as automated vehicles.

That in turn will demand not only new materials for the compute systems but also new ways of packaging the components to ensure high density, high performance and energy efficiency, according to Shigenori Aoki, who leads R&D on devices, hardware implementations and new materials at Fujitsu Laboratories. In recent research, Aoki talked about some of the research work that Fujitsu Labs is doing in terms of developing technologies and processes for an increasingly hyperconnected, cloud-centric world. The work includes not only such new materials as nanocarbon for carbon-based semiconductors but also new capabilities like extra-sensitive sensors.

Fujitsu engineers also are focusing on developing new ways of packaging components to create information and communications technologies (ICT) to handle the demands of the IoT era in which the data traffic on networks will jump 23 percent in the coming years but will have to be moved and managed on systems that can’t grow in size or consume more power than current hardware, he wrote. He also envisions a future where systems like autonomous vehicles will need to carry essentially small, compact and powerful servers inside of them, and HPC systems small enough to carry. Aoki’s idea of a device packaging roadmap for primarily server applications looks like this:



In the past, many of the improvements in hardware have been tied to the shrinking of processors and other components. However, that trend – driven in large part over the past five decades by Moore’s Law – is slowing, forcing hardware makers like Fujistu and others to consider other parts of the equation, such as packaging.

“In a few decades, semiconductor devices and related hardware have led ICT progress with downsizing, cost-cutting, and upgrading,” Aoki wrote. “The scaling of silicon MOS devices and the following packaging development has miniaturized supercomputers in the twentieth century into today’s smartphones. “Silicon scaling has been slowing down since 2010, because of physical limitations in processing technology and difficulties related to the huge [financial] capital expenditure that is required. This financial aspect reduced the number of silicon MOS vendors, so that only a few companies now survive in areas of processors, DRAMs, and so on.”

According to Aoki, “where there is uniformity between core devices, original packaging technologies come to be essential.”

For high-density packaging, a key is reducing the length of wiring between devices to reduce latency and overall device size. Currently, much of that has translated into fine wiring lines on a substrate close to semiconductor devices. Such wiring lines are expensive and for the most part have been used in such high-end systems as supercomputers. However, the growing demand for compact and powerful servers for such systems as self-driving cars is calling for systems that have the performance of a high-end server rack but that a tenth to a hundredth of the size. Fujitsu is developing the use of 2.5-dimension integrated circuits – interposers made from a silicon substrate developed via a semiconductor-class process that Aoki said results in more dense wiring and products about the tenth of the size of current systems. The 3D process of stacking silicon wafers and dies and interconnecting them vertically can bring more density by a factor of 100, but the process is expensive. For small, dense servers to find their way into cars and the network edge, a less expensive process will be necessary, he said.

“Future neuro-computers and brain-type computers need a great number of interconnects between processors, and the number is an order of magnitude larger than today’s one,” Aoki wrote. “At that time, a novel higher-density packaging technology will appear based on the current 3D ICs.”

Fujitsu also is pushing ahead with research into silicon photonics. As we’ve talked about before at The Next Platform, as the challenges of shrinking transistors to keep pace with Moore’s Law become apparent, chip makers are looking at other ways to keep the performance gains going. Moving data more quickly and efficiently is one of those ways, and silicon photonics has been getting a hard look for years from the likes of Intel, IBM, Mellanox and Juniper Networks. It promises lower power requirements and better transmission distance when compared to copper-based I/O technologies. Fujitsu Labs also is developing silicon photonics technologies, including with narrow-space optical wiring, where silicon optical waveguides “strongly confine light and turn it with much smaller diameter than the conventional glass waveguides,” Aoki wrote.

Cooling is another aspect of packaging that Fujitsu engineers are focusing on. In particular, they are looking to take the water-cooling technology they’ve developed for large-scale systems like the K supercomputer – currently number seven on the Top500 list of the world’s fastest systems and powered by 705,024 SPARC64 VIIIfx processing cores – and bringing it to smaller high-density packages. Technologies like as 3D ICs and silicon photonics will need new cooling technologies aimed at hot spots within the integrated circuits. Moving a coolant through such a small space is not easy, given issues around flow rate, pumping power and the small size of the channels, but Fujitsu has developed a two-phase cooling system that uses coolant vaporization, which Aoki said needs a slower flow rate than liquid cooling and enables the self-circulation of the coolant in a manner similar to heat pipes. Aoki said the plan is to bring the cooling technology to both computers and mobile devices.