This paper discusses a hybrid optoelectronic scheme for a new interconnection network, "Tori connected mESHes (TESH)". The major features of TESH are the following: it is hierarchical, thus allowing exploitation of computation locality as well as easy expansion up to a million processors or devices, it permits efficient VLSI/ULSI realization, it is designed to make use of redundancy for defect circumvention, and it appears to be well suited for 3-D stacked implementation. Here, we discuss a novel extension to these capabilities through the provision of optical interconnections at the highest level, while keeping the lower levels electronic through metal wires. The advantages of the resulting architecture, dubbed as Level-Hybrid Optoelectronic TESH, are the elimination of bottlenecks which typically occur at the highest level due to the aggregation of traffic, and the reduction of cost by using traditional wire channels at the lower levels -- where optical links are deemed un...
Vijay K. Jain, Glenn H. Chapman