Energy Consumption and Energy Density in Optical and Electronic Signal Processing
Energy Consumption and Energy Density in Optical and Electronic Signal Processing
Energy Consumption and Energy Density in Optical and Electronic Signal Processing
DOI: 10.1109/JPHOT.2011.2166254
1943-0655/$26.00 2011 IEEE
IEEE Photonics Journal Energy Consumption and Energy Density
DOI: 10.1109/JPHOT.2011.2166254
1943-0655/$26.00 2011 IEEE
Manuscript received July 19, 2011; revised August 16, 2011; accepted August 21, 2011. Date of
publication August 30, 2011; date of current version September 23, 2011. Corresponding author:
R. Tucker (e-mail: [email protected]).
Abstract: We compare the energy consumption of digital optical and digital electronic signal
processing circuits, including the contributions to energy consumption of the optical to
electrical (O/E) converters and electrical to optical (E/O) converters, and the demultiplexers
(DEMUXs) and multiplexers (MUXs) required for electronic circuits to process high-speed
optical signals. This paper focuses on three key practical considerations, namely, energy
consumption, energy density, and the complexity of processing. We show that optical signal
processing is potentially competitive with electronics in very high-speed circuits that provide
only limited processing, i.e., when only a small number of processing operations are per-
formed on each bit of data. However, in applications that require anything more than limited
processing, electronics provides better energy efficiency and occupies a smaller footprint. In
these applications, electronics is likely to remain the technology of choice. More attention
needs to be paid to energy consumption issues in the research and development of new
digital optical technologies.
Index Terms: Optical signal processing, electronic signal processing, energy consumption,
energy efficiency.
1. Introduction
Todays society is heavily reliant on a sophisticated and ubiquitous cyber infrastructure underpinned
by advanced digital signal processing technologies. In communications networks, signal processing
functions range from computing-intensive processes, such as video coding and decoding, as well
as forward error correction (FEC), to relatively simple functions, such as signal waveform reshaping
and regeneration. The majority of this signal processing today is carried out by electronics, most of
it in the form of complementary metaloxidesemiconductor (CMOS) integrated circuits (ICs).
How does optical signal processing fit into the picture, and what is the future potential for digital
optical signal processing (sometimes referred to as all-optical signal processing) to replace some
electronic signal processing? Nonlinear optical components that can be used for signal processing
include semiconductor optical amplifiers (SOAs) [1], periodically polled Lithium Niobate (PPLN) [2],
highly nonlinear fibers (HNLFs) [3], and Silicon nanowires [4]. There have been many advances in
nonlinear digital optical signal processing over the past 30 years (see, for example [5]). However,
despite these advances, digital optical signal processing is not used in commercial telecommunica-
tions infrastructure.
There are several reasons why system designers prefer electronic signal processing over optical
signal processing: First, electronic signal processing provides outstanding performance and
throughput (i.e., processing power and capacity for very high aggregated data rates). Second,
electronic devices are very small. The feature size in state-of-the-art CMOS transistors is on the
order of 22 nmValmost two orders of magnitude smaller than an optical wavelength in the com-
munications band and at least three orders of magnitude smaller than practical optical devices.
Third, electronic devices can be monolithically integrated with a very high device density. Conse-
quently, electronic devices are many orders of magnitude less expensive than active optical com-
ponents. Fourth, nearly all proposals for optical logic devices do not satisfy a variety of practical
criteria needed for optical logic functionality [6]. Finally, and perhaps most importantly, digital elec-
tronic devices consume a relatively small amount of energy.
The importance of low energy consumption cannot be over emphasized. Energy consumption
and the associated thermal issues have been a driving consideration behind much of the progress
made by the electronic IC industry over the past half century. In comparison, the optical signal
processing research community has paid scant attention to the question of energy consumption. A
key objective of the present paper is to highlight the importance of energy consumption as a
measure of performance in optical signal processing and to provide a benchmark for comparing
energy consumption in optical and electronic circuits. We argue that energy consumption issues are
critical in the development of new digital optical technologies.
In this paper, we compare signal processing in two domains: electronic and optical. If the signal to
be processed is in one domain and the processing is carried out in the other domain, then optical to
electrical (O/E) converters and electrical to optical (E/O) converters are required to convert the
signal between domains. These conversions add to the overall energy consumption and this energy
penalty can clearly be avoided if there is no change of domain. However, if the energy consumption
of signal processing in one domain is larger than in the other domain, it may be beneficial to change
domains.
A legitimate comparison between optical and electronic processing and switching must take into
account the performance limitations imposed and the energy consumed by ancillary components
such as the O/E and E/O converters needed to change domains [7], [8]. In addition, if the bit rate of
the data to be processed is high, demultiplexers (DEMUXs) and multiplexers (MUXs) may be
needed to reduce the bit rate to a level that the electronics can handle. A comparison of energy
consumption between technologies also requires that all sources of energy consumption are
considered, including energy consumed by interconnect wires in CMOS circuits, power-supply
energies, and losses in optical circuits.
The purpose of this paper is to compare the energy consumption of digital optical and digital
electronic signal processing circuits. We consider the device footprint and the energy density per
unit chip area and show how the energy density sets a limitation on the achievable density of
integration on a chip. In our comparison, we take into account the limitations imposed by the O/E
and E/O converters as well as MUXs and DEMUXs. We provide projections of device and circuit
performance out to the year 2020, based on published trends in device technologies such as the
International Technology Roadmap for Semiconductors (ITRS) [9].
We argue that optical signal processing may be competitive with electronics in simple high-speed
circuits with limited processing power. However, unless there are many orders of magnitude of
improvement in the energy efficiency of digital optical devices, electronics is likely to remain the
technology of choice for the vast majority of digital signal processing and switching applications.
2. Energy Model
In this section, we develop an energy model of optical and electronic signal processing circuits. The
model is based on an earlier model [8] but includes an important clock-frequency-dependent term in
the model of nonlinear optical devices that was not included in the earlier model. To ensure a
common basis for comparison between optical and electronic circuits, all of the signals processing
circuits considered here have optical inputs and optical outputs. This is a mode of operation that is
suited to optical signal processing and takes advantage of the ability of optical signal processing
circuits to operate directly on optical data in communications systems.
Fig. 1. (a) Optical signal processing circuit. (b) Electronic signal processing circuit.
Fig. 2. (a) CMOS inverter circuit. (b) Schematic of a digital optical signal processing device
providing switching by new frequency generation. PPLN periodically polled Lithium Niobate.
HNLF highly nonlinear. OA optical amplifier. BG Bragg grating.
It is important to point out that while the clock frequency of the electronic signal processing chip in
Fig. 1(b) is reduced from the line rate B to B=k , the O/E and E/O converters and DEMUX and MUX
circuits must operate at B. The speed capabilities of these components ultimately limit the
achievable input bit rate B in Fig. 1(b). One approach to increasing the effective B for electronic
signal processing would be to use optical time division demultiplexing and multiplexing [12] at the
optical input and output ports in Fig. 1(b). Another approach would be to replace the m optical inputs
and outputs with mk inputs and outputs, each at a bit rate of B=k [6]. Both of these approaches are
beyond the scope of this paper.
Fig. 3. Optical or electronic signal processing device with two input and two outputs. The device
includes input and output amplifiers or buffers, and a nonlinear element.
energy is Edevice , as defined earlier. As shown in Fig. 3, this energy includes the supply energy to all
of the ancillary active components in the device. The total signal input energy per operation on all
inputs to the device in Fig. 2 is Ein , and the total signal output energy on all outputs is Eout . This
output energy includes the energy consumed by the interconnects between devices. In general, the
interconnect energy is small in optical devices because the losses in optical waveguides are small.
However, interconnect energy generally dominates in high-speed electronic circuits [13].
A common problem in the optics literature is that the signal input energy of an optical device is
often confused with the Bswitching energy[ of the device. For example, some authors use the term
switching energy to refer to energy per bit at Input 1 or Input 2 in Fig. 2(b) or at the input to the HNLF
or PPLN. Because Ein Edevice [11], this typically leads to a gross underestimation of the energy
consumption of the device and provides a misleading picture of the device energy consumption.
Unfortunately, many papers do not provide sufficient information for the reader to estimate the total
energy consumption, i.e., Edevice in Fig. 3.
Fig. 4. Device energies per bit against time. The optical device energy per bit EO is normalized to a
reference clock frequency of fref 100 GHz. HNLF highly nonlinear fiber, SOA semiconductor
optical amplifier, PPLN periodically polled Lithium Niobate.
discharging of a capacitance and is therefore independent of the clock frequency, but in digital
optical devices, the energy per logic operation is determined by the (continuous) optical power
required to activate an optical nonlinearity and the time taken to perform the logic operation.
Therefore, in all-optical digital devices, in which all data and device control are carried out by optical
signals, the nonlinear elements, amplifiers, and other active components require continuous supply
power, regardless of whether that device is performing a digital logic operation or not. In addition,
because Ein Edevice , the power consumption of nonlinear optical devices is approximately
constant. This is unavoidable because of the need to provide ancillary active devices required for
level restoration. Consequently, there is inverse relationship between the energy consumption per
bit in optical devices and the clock frequency. We therefore model the device energy per clock
period Edevice;O for digital optical devices as follows:
fref
Edevice;O EO (2)
fO
where EO is the device energy when the effective clock frequency fO is equal to a reference
clock frequency fref . Because interconnect losses are small in optical circuits, EO is independent
of the device pitch d .
The data presented in [11] are for Edevice;O and, therefore, do not take account of the clock
frequency, which varies widely between different experiments published in the literature. To
overcome this, we have renormalized the data presented in [11] from Edevice;O to EO , using (2) with a
reference clock frequency of fref 100 GHz. This renormalization removes uncertainty about the
influence of different clock frequencies. The broken line is a line of best fit to these data. The MUX
and DEMUX data are taken from a survey of device capabilities presented in [15]. Data points are
shown in Fig. 4 for an InP heterojunction bipolar transistor (HBT) DEMUX and a projection for future
SiliconGermanium (SiGe) high-speed MUX and DEMUX circuits [15]. The O/E/O data in Fig. 4 are
based on estimates for long-reach WDM transmitters and receivers. Thus, these data are relevant
to signal processing circuits used within long-reach transmission systems.
Some nonlinear devices reported in the literature use relatively long active regions in order to
maximize the interaction between the optical signal field and the nonlinear medium. For example,
recent experiments based on HNLF have used lengths of fiber as large as 1 km. Unfortunately,
devices larger than a few centimeters or, at most, a few tens of centimeters, will have too large a
footprint for practical applications and are also likely to suffer from difficulties with clock skew [13].
Therefore, the data in Fig. 4 do not include any devices that are larger than a few tens of
centimeters.
The device switching energy of a simple CMOS inverter is shown in the lower part of Fig. 4.
Decreasing device feature sizes as a function of time are shown. The smallest commercial device at
the time of writing is 22 nm, but projected energies out to feature sizes of 11 nm are included in
Fig. 4, based on data in the ITRS [9].
The lower curve in the bottom part of Fig. 4 is the energy consumed by a CMOS inverter single
gate, excluding the interconnect wires. The upper curve in the bottom part of Fig. 4 is an estimate
of the total energy, including the energy consumed by the interconnect wires in a typical CMOS
IC [16]. To estimate this total energy including the interconnect wires, we considered a commercial
32-nm two-core processor and estimated that the average total energy per transistor (including
interconnect wires) per transition is around 3 fJ [16]. From this, we estimate that the average length
of and interconnect wire length in a 32-nm processor is LW 3 m. The data in Fig. 4 for other
feature sizes were obtained by scaling the average interconnect wire length to the transistor
feature size and using other parameters from the ITRS [9]. The rate of improvement of total CMOS
energy including wires in Fig. 4 is approximately 25% per annum or a factor-of-10 improvement
over 10 years. Note that the rate of improvement of total CMOS energy including wires is less
rapid than for an isolated CMOS gate.
The total CMOS energy Edevice;E including the interconnect wires is more than two orders of
magnitude larger than the energy of an isolated CMOS gate, indicating that the consumption of
each device is dominated by the energy in the interconnect wires. This difference in energies is an
upper limit as it applies to a fairly complex processor. In simpler circuits, the average interconnect
lengths may be shorter, and this energy difference may be smaller. Our analysis of the circuit in
Fig. 1(b) uses the Edevice;E in Fig. 4. From Fig. 4, Edevice;E (including interconnect wires) is 3 fJ in
2010 and 0.3 fJ in 2020. This translates into the EE and dref figures given in Table 1.
3. Analysis
In this section, we compare the energy consumption of the circuits in Fig. 1 using estimated device
energies for the years 2010 and 2020. Fig. 5 and Table 1 summarize the data used in the analysis.
The optical device energy EO (using fref 100 GHz) is 1 pJ in 2010 and 200 fJ in 2020. This
assumes significant improvements in optical device technology over the next 10 years.
As pointed out earlier, we have ignored leakage current (i.e., static energy consumption) in
CMOS devices. Therefore, EES in Table 1 is set to zero. This is justified by analyses of CMOS
devices including leakage [14] that confirm that at high clock frequencies, the static energy
consumption in CMOS is smaller than the dynamic energy consumption.
The data for Edevice;E , EDE MUX , and EO=E =O in Fig. 5 and Table 1 are taken directly from Fig. 4.
Note that the O/E/O energies in Fig. 5 and Table 1 apply to long-reach optical transmitters and
TABLE 1
Device energies
receivers. These energies could be as much as an order of magnitude smaller if the transmitters
and receivers are optimized for transmission over short distances [17].
Fig. 6. Total energy per bit processed against number of operations per bit. The solid diagonal lines give
Ebit ;O for optical devices with fO 100 GHz and 1 THz, as well as with EO 1 pJ and 0.2 pJ. The
upper two broken lines give Ebit ;E in 2010 and 2020 for electronic circuits with DE(MUX) and O/E/O
circuits at the inputs and outputs as shown in Fig. 1(b). The lowest broken curve gives Ebit ;E in 2020 for
circuits with O/E/O converters only (i.e., without DE(MUX)s). This would apply in situations where the bit
rate is low enough not to require the (DE)MUXs.
each of which is capable of one operation per clock period clock ;E , is given by
Nop Ndevice;E =mk : (4)
more competitive from an energy consumption point of view. However, as stated earlier, optical
circuits can, in principle, operate at higher speed.
d2
Edevice;X Pd;X : (9)
fX
Fig. 7 shows Edevice;X from (9) plotted (broken lines) against the device pitch d , for
Pd 100 W/cm2 and for fX 1 GHz; 100 GHz; and 10 THz. These broken lines in Fig. 7 give
the upper bound on allowable device energy for a given fX and d . If the device energy for a
particular device falls above one of these lines, then the chip power density will exceed 100 W/cm2 .
Shown on the upper horizontal axis is the power consumed by each device, namely d 2 Pd
fx Edevice;X . Also plotted in Fig. 7 is Edevice for an 11-nm CMOS device (i.e., Edevice;E ) from (1). At a
device pitch of 107 m, a chip using these devices would be limited to an effective clock frequency
fX of less than 1 GHz. However, at larger device pitches, the effective clock frequency fX can, in
principle, increase to around 100 GHz, with a the effective clock frequency limited by the O/E/O
converters and the (DE)MUXs.
For comparison with the 11-nm CMOS example, Fig. 7 shows vertical lines representing the
constant power per device of optical devices with EO 200 fJ and 1 pJ. This indicates that the
device pitch of optical devices is limited by thermal considerations to a minimum around 104 m.
However, with a device pitch on this order, optical devices are capable, in principle, of operating at
less than 100 W/cm2 of dissipated power up to 10 THz and beyond.
in Fig. 8 represent the dissipation-limited number of optical devices for the two optical device
energies EO used in Fig. 7 and for power density limits of 100 W/cm2 and 1 kW/cm2 . While we
recognize that there is no photonic equivalent to Moores law, Fig. 8 suggests that there is some
potential for future increases in the integration density of photonic ICs. However, it appears likely
that photonic integration densities will be restricted by thermal limits to less than 104 cm2 , i.e.,
around six orders of magnitude lower than the integration density of CMOS circuits.
4. Conclusion
Energy consumption is a key consideration in the development components, devices, and circuits
for digital optical signal processing. We have shown that, from an energy consumption point of view,
digital optical signal processing is potentially competitive with electronic signal processing if the
signal to be processed is in optical form and if the signal processing function is simpleVi.e., when
there are only a few digital operations performed on each bit of data. For circuits requiring more
operations on each bit of data, electronic signal processing uses less energy, even if the data to be
processed is in optical form.
It is often argued that optical signal processing will replace digital signal processing because of its
high-speed capabilities. However, simplistic arguments based on speed alone often miss the
critically important point that digital optical devices are generally very energy hungry. Unless there
are many-orders-of-magnitude improvement in the energy efficiency of digital optical devices,
electronics is likely to remain the technology of choice for the vast majority of digital signal pro-
cessing and switching applications in telecommunications networks.
There is a large disparity between the research literature on CMOS signal processing and the
research literature on optical signal processing. While energy considerations are primary drivers in
CMOS R&D, energy considerations receive very little attention in the optical signal processing
literature. Even in papers where energy is mentioned, full details are often missing, and incorrect
interpretations of energy consumption in optical devices are not uncommon. We believe that energy
consumption is a potentially significant barrier to the commercial exploitation of digital optical cir-
cuits. More attention needs to be paid to energy consumption issues in the research and devel-
opment of new digital optical technologies.
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