A 40Gb/s multi-data-rate CMOS transceiver chipset with SFI-5 interface for optical transmission systems

Autor: Akira Tanabe, A. Noda, Sadao Fujita, Risato Ohhira, Hidemi Noguchi, Hiroshi Yamaguchi, Tomoyuki Yamase, Z. Yamazaki, Hiroaki Shoda, H. Ikeda, M. Okamoto, S. Tomari, Shinichi Tanaka, Shunichi Kaeriyama, Nobuhiro Kawahara, K. Hosoya, T. Takahashi, K. Hijioka, Yasushi Amamiya
Rok vydání: 2009
Předmět:
Zdroj: ISSCC
DOI: 10.1109/isscc.2009.4977456
Popis: As 40Gb/s optical communication systems enter the commercial stage, the transceiver, which is a key component of these systems, requires lower power dissipation, a size reduction, and a wider frequency range to meet the requirements of several standards, such as OC-768/STM-256 (39.8Gb/s), OTU-3 (43.0Gb/s), and 4×10GbE-LANPHY (44.6Gb/s). 40Gb/s transceivers have already been reported in SiGe-based technology.However, they dissipate more than 10W in total and do not support 39.8-to-44.6Gb/s wide-range operations [1–2]. There have been recent reports on CMOS transceivers, but their speed performance is still less than 40Gb/s and their output signal suffers from large jitter [3–5]. In this paper, 40Gb/s SFI-5-compliant TX and RX chips in 65nm CMOS technology consume 2.8W each. This low power dissipation allows for a small and low-cost plastic BGA package. The TX has a full-rate clock architecture that is based on a 40GHz VCO, a 40Gb/s retiming D-FF, and 40GHz clock-distribution circuits that lead to a low jitter of 0.57ps rms and 3.1ps pp at 40Gb/s. A 40/20GHz clock-timing-adjustment circuit based on a phase interpolator is used to ensure wide-range error-free operations (BER ≪ 10−12) at 39.8 to 44.6Gb/s. A quadruple loop architecture is introduced in the CDR circuit of the RX, resulting in a 38Gb/s error-free operation (BER ≪ 10−12) at 231−1 PRBS with a low rms jitter of 210fs in the recovered clock.
Databáze: OpenAIRE