Title :
Small-World Power-Law Interconnects for Nanoscale Computing Architectures
Author :
Teuscher, Christof
Author_Institution :
Los Alamos National Laboratory, CCS-1, MS-B287, Los Alamos, NM 87545, USA, E-mail: christof@teuscher.ch
Abstract :
Interconnects on today’s chips have become more important than transistors and this trend is predicted to continue with ongoing miniaturization and forthcoming beyond-silicon technologies. Current ad hoc interconnect technology is not suitable for multi-billion-transistor chip integration and we argue that radically new approaches potentially offer better performance for a lower price. The goal of this paper is to explore certain design and performance tradeoffs of both regular and irregular interconnect fabrics for self-assembled nanoscale electronics in a realistic framework. We show that fabrics with small-world-like properties have major advantages in terms of performance and robustness over purely regular fabrics. Our findings support the unconventional approach of self-assembling nanoscale electronics in a mostly random manner, which is believed to be more fabrication friendly and thus cheaper to realize.
Keywords :
Computer architecture; Delay; Design methodology; Energy consumption; Fabrics; Integrated circuit interconnections; Network-on-a-chip; Physics computing; Robustness; Self-assembly;
Conference_Titel :
Nanotechnology, 2006. IEEE-NANO 2006. Sixth IEEE Conference on
Print_ISBN :
1-4244-0077-5
DOI :
10.1109/NANO.2006.247656