Silicon photonics technology is now gaining maturity with increasing levels of design complexity from devices to large photonic integrated circuits. Close integration of control electronics with 3D assembly of photonics and CMOS opens the way to high-performance computing architectures partitioned in chiplets connected by optical NoC on silicon photonic interposers. In this paper, we give an overview of our works on optical links and NoC for manycore systems, from low-level control of photonic devices to high-level system optimization of the optical communications. We detail the POPSTAR optical NoC topology and architecture (Processors On Photonic Silicon interposer Terascale ARchitecture) with electro-optical interface chiplets, the corresponding nested spiral topology for single-writer multiplereader links and the associated control electronics, in charge of high-speed drivers, thermal stabilization and handling of the protocol stack, from data integrity to flow-control, routing and arbitration of the optical communications. The strengths and opportunities for this architecture will be discussed, with a shift in system & implementation constraints with respect to previous optical NoC proposals, and new challenges to be addressed.
In this paper, we propose a laser actuated microgripper that can be activated remotely for micromanipulation applications. The gripper is based on an optothermally actuated polymeric chevron-shaped structure coated with optimized metallic layers to enhance its optical absorbance. Gold is used as a metallic layer due to its good absorption of visible light. The thermal deformation of the chevron-shaped actuator with metallic layers is first modeled to identify the parameters affecting its behavior. Then, an optimal thickness of the metallic layers that allows the largest possible deformation is obtained and compared with simulation results. Next, microgrippers are fabricated using conventional photolithography and metal deposition techniques for further characterization. The experiments show that the microgripper can realize an opening of 40 µm, a response time of 60 ms, and a generated force in the order of hundreds of µN. Finally, a pick-and-place experiment of 120 µm microbeads is conducted to confirm the performance of the microgripper. The remote actuation and the simple fabrication and actuation of the proposed microgripper makes it a highly promising candidate to be utilized as a mobile microrobot for lab-on-chip applications.
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