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Ansys Collaborates with GlobalFoundries to Deliver Next-Gen Silicon Photonics Solutions to Advance New Era of Datacenters

TheLostSwede

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Ansys announced it is collaborating with GF to deliver innovative, unique, and feature-rich solutions to solve some of the biggest challenges facing data centers today. With data being generated at a record pace, causing a surge of power consumption in data centers globally, there is an ever-increasing need for innovative solutions to accelerate data transmission while optimizing energy efficiency. To meet such rising demands, GF is focused on developing groundbreaking semiconductor solutions that leverage the potential of photons—instead of electrons—to transfer and move data, maintaining GF's position as a leader in the rapidly growing optical networking space.

GF Fotonix is GF's next generation, widely disruptive, monolithic platform. GF Fotonix is the first in the industry to combine its differentiated 300 mm photonics and RF-CMOS features on a silicon wafer, delivering best-in-class performance at scale. "Our engagement with Ansys is another example of how GF is partnering with the ecosystem leaders to deliver innovative, time to market solutions for our customers," said Mike Cadigan, senior vice president for Customer Design Enablement, GF. "By coupling GF Fotonix with Ansys' industry-leading simulation solutions, we are reaching new levels in photonic chip design. With support for Verilog-A simulation and process-enabled custom design, designers have greater modeling capabilities to meet their performance, power, and density requirements."




Recognizing the importance of custom component design to meet the strict requirements of today's advanced applications, GF and Ansys together developed the first process file to support the growing demand for the GF Fotonix platform. With the process file, customers can create custom components to consolidate complex processing onto a single chip for high-speed, low power consumption data transmission, improving product and energy efficiency.

The process file works in tandem with Ansys' photonics simulation software, enabling designers to simulate 3D geometries with predictive accuracy, including correct layer thicknesses, material data and more, in accordance with GF's design flow and process design kit specifications.

GF will also leverage the Ansys Lumerical Photonic Verilog-A Platform, which enables photonics modeling using Verilog-A, an industry-standard modeling language for electrical analog circuits. This provides the ability to combine custom components and foundry process design kit (PDK) components in the same circuit, both modelled using Verilog-A, and to run sophisticated bidirectional photonic circuit simulation, which advances design capabilities for optical networking, communication, and connectivity such as chip-to-chip, fiber optics, and 5G.

"Integrating Ansys' simulation solutions into GF's design flow for custom SiPh chips opens new doors for innovation within the photonics industry," said John Lee, vice president and general manager of the electronics, semiconductor and optics business unit at Ansys. "This collaboration supplies designers with enhanced tools to leverage photonics simulation for high-performance solutions in optical applications across industries from next-generation connectivity to supercomputing and more."

GF Fotonix will be made at the company's advanced manufacturing facility in Malta, N.Y., with PDK 1.0 available in April 2022.

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If this gets out of labs I feel like it's going to be similar to traditional cable/coax internet getting replaced with fiber. Replacing electrons with photons is working really well there so hopefully similar effects happen to semiconductors.
 
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time to market solutions for our customers," said Mike Cadigan
I think, thais needs to improve much, much more, but we'd need something solid to measure the gain here, single digit vs double digit improvement. Its like comparing rendering, this is faster than that sort of thing.
 
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If this gets out of labs I feel like it's going to be similar to traditional cable/coax internet getting replaced with fiber. Replacing electrons with photons is working really well there so hopefully similar effects happen to semiconductors.
Maybe you don't understand what "this" is. But it's perfectly possible that I don't, either. The press release alone isn't of much help.

I understand it's about developing the technology to create silicon chips with built-in optical transmitters and receivers. If you have those, you can build optical networks that are cheaper and faster and more power efficient too. One of the uses is short range communication between chips, between blades in a server rack, and between server racks. Ansys is helping with their simulation software so an electro-optical system can be simulated as one unit, not as separate systems.

One of the GF's customers might be Marvell:
 
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