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[Author] Yoshio KAMEDA(6hit)

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  • A Hybrid Switch System Architecture for Large-Scale Digital Communication Network Using SFQ Technology

    Shinichi YOROZU  Yoshio KAMEDA  Shuichi TAHARA  

     
    PAPER-Digital Applications

      Vol:
    E84-C No:1
      Page(s):
    15-19

    Within the next few decades, high-end telecommunication systems on the larger nationwide network will require a switching capacity of over 5 Tbps. Advanced optical transmission technologies, such as wavelength division multiplexing (WDM) will support optical-fiber data transmission at such speeds. However, semiconductors may not be capable of high-throughput data switching because of the limitations by power consumption and operating speed, and pin count. Superconducting single flux quantum (SFQ) technology is a promising approach for overcoming these problems. This paper proposed an optical-electrical-SFQ hybrid switching system and a novel switch architecture. This architecture uses time-shifted internal speedup, shuffle and grouping exchange and a Batcher-Banyan switch. Our proposed switch consists of an interface circuit with small buffers, a Batcher sorter, a time-shift-speedup buffer (TSSB), a Banyan switch, and a slowdown buffer. Simulations showed good scalability up to 100 Tbps, which no router could ever offer such features.

  • Logic Design of a Single-Flux-Quantum (SFQ) 22 Unit Switch for Banyan Networks

    Yoshio KAMEDA  Shinichi YOROZU  Shuichi TAHARA  

     
    PAPER-Digital Devices and Their Applications

      Vol:
    E85-C No:3
      Page(s):
    625-630

    We describe the logic design of a single-flux-quantum (SFQ) 22 unit switch. It is the main component of the SFQ Banyan packet switch we are developing that enables a switching capacity of over 1 Tbit/s. In this paper, we focus on the design of the controller in the unit switch. The controller does not have a simple "off-the-shelf" conventional circuit, like those used in shift registers or adders. To design such a complicated random logic circuit, we need to adopt a systematic top-down design approach. Using a graphical technique, we first obtained logic functions. Next, to use the deep pipeline architecture, we broke down the functions into one-level logic operations that can be executed within one clock cycle. Finally, we mapped the functions on to the physical circuits using pre-designed SFQ standard cells. The 22 unit switch consists of 59 logic gates and needs about 600 Josephson junctions without gate interconnections. We tested the gate-level circuit by logic simulation and found that it operates correctly at a throughput of 40 GHz.

  • Development of Cryopackaging and I/O Technologies for High-Speed Superconductive Digital Systems

    Yoshihito HASHIMOTO  Shinichi YOROZU  Yoshio KAMEDA  

     
    INVITED PAPER

      Vol:
    E91-C No:3
      Page(s):
    325-332

    A cryocooled system with I/O interface circuits, which enables high-speed system operation of superconductive single-flux-quantum (SFQ) circuits at over 40 GHz, and the demonstration of a 47-Gbps SFQ 22 switch system are presented. The cryocooled system has 32 I/Os and cools an SFQ multi-chip module (MCM) to 4 K with a two-stage 1-W Gifford-McMahon cryocooler. An SFQ 4:1 multiplexer (MUX) and an SFQ 1:4 demultiplexer (DEMUX) have been designed to interface the speed gap between the I/O (~10 Gbps/ch) and SFQ circuits (>40 GHz). An SFQ 22 switch chip, in which the MUX/DEMUX and an SFQ 22 switch are integrated, and an 8-channel superconductive voltage driver (SVD) chip have been designed with an advanced cell library for a junction critical current density of 10 kA/cm2. An SFQ 22 switch MCM has been made by flip-chip bonding the switch chip and SVD chip on a superconductive MCM carrier with φ 50-µm InSn solder bumps. An SFQ 22 switch system, which is the switch MCM packaged in the cryocooled system, has been demonstrated up to a port speed of 47 Gbps for the first time.

  • A Single Flux Quantum (SFQ) Packet Switch Unit towards Scalable Non-blocking Router

    Shinichi YOROZU  Yoshio KAMEDA  Shuichi TAHARA  

     
    PAPER-Digital Devices and Their Applications

      Vol:
    E85-C No:3
      Page(s):
    617-620

    High-end telecommunication systems in the larger nationwide networks of the next decade will require routers having a packet switching throughput capacity of over 10 Tbps. In such future high-end routers, the packet switch, which is the biggest bottleneck of the router, will need higher processing speeds than semiconductor devices. We propose a high-end router system architecture using single flux quantum (SFQ) technology. This system consists of semiconductor line card units and an SFQ switch card unit. The features of this switch card architecture are (1) using internal speedup architecture to reduce effective loads in the network, (2) using a packet switch scheduler to attain non-blocking characteristics. This architecture can expand the switching capacity to a level greater than tens of Tbps scale, keeping with non-blocking characteristics.

  • Development of Passive Interconnection Technology for SFQ Circuits

    Yoshihito HASHIMOTO  Shinichi YOROZU  Yoshio KAMEDA  Akira FUJIMAKI  Hirotaka TERAI  Nobuyuki YOSHIKAWA  

     
    INVITED PAPER

      Vol:
    E88-C No:2
      Page(s):
    198-207

    To enable the use of passive transmission lines (PTLs) for the interconnection of single-flux-quantum (SFQ) circuits, we have implemented a driver and a receiver and have developed a method for designing SFQ circuits with passive interconnections. Basic components and properties of passive interconnections, such as the frequency characteristics of the driver and receiver, the PTL delay, and the crosstalk between PTLs, have been experimentally verified. Our developed components and design method have been applied to actual SFQ circuits, such as a 44 switch having block-to-block passive interconnections and a 22 switch having gate-to-gate passive interconnections. We have also shown the advantages of PTLs over Josephson transmission lines (JTLs). We also discuss the prospects of SFQ circuits having passive interconnections.

  • Design and Demonstration of a 44 SFQ Network Switch Prototype System and 10-Gbps Bit-Error-Rate Measurement

    Yoshio KAMEDA  Yoshihito HASHIMOTO  Shinichi YOROZU  

     
    INVITED PAPER

      Vol:
    E91-C No:3
      Page(s):
    333-341

    We developed a 44 SFQ network switch prototype system and demonstrated its operation at 10 Gbps. The system's core is composed of two SFQ chips: a 44 switch and a 6-channel voltage driver. The 44 switch chip contained both a switch fabric (i.e. a data path) and a switch scheduler (i.e. a controller). Both chips were attached to a multi-chip-module (MCM) carrier, which was then installed in a cryocooled system with 32 10-Gbps ports. Each chip contained about 2100 Josephson junctions on a 5-mm5-mm die. An NEC standard 2.5-kA/cm2 fabrication process was used for the switch chip. We increased the critical current density to 10 kA/cm2 for the driver chip to improve speed while maintaining wide bias margins. MCM implementation enabled us to use a hybrid critical current density technology. Voltage pulses were transferred between two chips through passive transmission lines on the MCM carrier. The cryocooled system was cooled down to about 4 K using a two-stage 1-W cryocooler. We correctly operated the whole system at 10 Gbps. The switch scheduler, which is driven by an on-chip clock generator, operated at 40 GHz. The speed gap between SFQ and room temperature devices was filled by on-chip SFQ FIFO buffers or shift registers. We measured the bit error rate at 10 Gbps and found that it was on the order of 10-13 for the 44 SFQ switch fabric. In addition, using semiconductor interface circuitry, we built a four-port SFQ Ethernet switch. All the components except for a compressor were installed in a standard 19-inch rack, filling a space 21 U (933.5 mm or 36.75 inches) in height. After four personal computers (PCs) were connected to the switch, we have successfully transferred video data between them.