Synchronous subnanosecond clock and data recovery for optically switched data centres using clock phase caching
- Kari A. Clark ,
- Daniel Cletheroe ,
- Thomas Gerard ,
- Istvan Haller ,
- Krzysztof Jozwik ,
- Kai Shi ,
- Benn Thomsen ,
- Hugh Williams ,
- Georgios Zervas ,
- Hitesh Ballani ,
- Polina Bayvel ,
- Paolo Costa ,
- Zhixin Liu
Nature Electronics |
The rapid growth in the amount of data being transferred within data centres, combined with the slowdown in Moore’s Law, creates challenges for the future scalability of electronically switched data-centre networks. Optical switches could offer a future-proof alternative, and photonic integration platforms have been demonstrated with nanosecond-scale optical switching times. End-to-end switching time is, however, currently limited by the clock and data recovery time, which typically takes microseconds, removing the benefits of nanosecond optical switching. Here we show that a clock phase caching technique can provide clock and data recovery times of under 625 ps (16 symbols at 25.6 Gb s−1). Our approach uses the measurement and storage of clock phase values in a synchronized network to simplify clock and data recovery versus conventional asynchronous approaches. We demonstrate the capabilities of our technique using a real-time prototype with commercial transceivers and validate its resilience against temperature variation and clock jitter.