Institut für Mathematik

Vortrag

Modul:   MAT076  Arbeitsgemeinschaft in Codierungstheorie und Kryptographie

Chord Signaling

Vortrag von Prof. Dr. Amin Shokrollahi

Sprecher eingeladen von: Prof. Dr. Joachim Rosenthal

Datum: 21.10.20  Zeit: 15.00 - 16.00  Raum: Y27H28



(**This eSeminar will also be live-streamed on Zoom, using the same meeting details as previous seminars. If you do not have meeting details, please contact karan.khathuria@math.uzh.ch **)

Communication of data on electrical wires between chips is fast gaining prominence in the electronics industry. Because most of the components of the transmitter and the receiver of such links are analog, rather than digital, they don’t benefit as much from Moore’s law. On the other hand, the need to transmit data ever faster calls for higher rates of transmission over existing electrical wires. Since in this type of communication, noise is highly frequency dependent, higher transmission rates lead to much higher noise, and therefore a much higher growth of power consumption than linear. The industry has long recognised this problem as the “Interconnect bottleneck”. Fundamental solutions to this important problem have remained elusive, however.
A look at the capacity of these channels reveals that today we are only transmitting at anywhere between 1% to 4% of the capacity. Therefore, at least on the surface, there is a lot to be gained by applying methods from communication theory to this problem. However, unlike many other systems such as wireless, DSL, satellite, or optical communication, the constraints on the chip-to-chip communication system are very different: transmission rates are typically 1000 times those encountered in wireless communication. On the other hand, the energy consumed for the transmission and recovery of each bit is about 1000 times less than what is customary in wireless. Also, latency requirements are extremely stringent, allowing only latencies up to very few nanoseconds. Therefore, it is not possible to use fancy processing methods.
In this talk I will introduce a new modulation scheme for chip-to-chip communication which we call chordal codes. These codes are somewhat reminiscent of spatial MIMO systems, and provide a first step towards a better utilisation of the available communication bandwidth between chips. Current implementations of systems based on these codes show a large reduction of total power of the communication PHY and a large increase of the communication speed compared to other classical systems.