Upgrade backplanes to 10 Gbps with 0% coding overhead
By Nicholas Cravotta -- 12/11/2003
Transferring payloads as fast as 10 Gbps per differential pair with 0% coding overhead, the AN6420 quad high-speed backplane SERDES (serializer/deserializer) transceiver from Accelerant Networks operates at 6.25 to 10 Gbps using PAM4 (passband-amplitude-modulation) multilevel signaling (Picture). The device also interoperates with SERDES that operate as fast as 5 Gbps with DFE (decision-feedback equalization) in binary mode. You can use DFE to open eyes as small as 5 mV to guarantee signal integrity.
Traditionally, coding schemes, such as 8B/10B or turbo coding, improve the robustness of a link by providing an error-correction mechanism—usually, an embedded pattern—within the raw bandwidth of the link that may enable limited repair of corrupted data, thus increasing the BER (bit-error rate). Additionally, coding guarantees a certain transition density, giving the data enough transitions for the receiver clock to lock onto the signal. Coding thus improves the effective BER of a link; for example, with turbo coding, a link with a BER of 1010 might increase to 1018 but at the cost of as much as 25% of the available bandwidth.
The AN6420 adds 0% coding overhead by achieving a BER of 1018 through other means, eliminating the need for coding and the associated loss of bandwidth. The transmitter includes a random polynomial scrambler, which guarantees transition density and uses a lossless-compression scheme to account for extreme-transition cases without increasing the payload. A distributed-digital-PLL architecture retimes signals traveling from one side of the chip to the other to keep jitter less than 2 psec rms. Additionally, Accelerant's "lab-in-a-chip" technology has undersampling, margining-algorithm, and vector-analyzing diagnostic units to produce an in situ BER to track link reliability on a per-link basis. You can access BER data via registers and analyze it using a company-provided GUI, which Accelerant based on the Mathworks’ (www.mathworks.com) MatLab.
Because the effective overhead is 0%, you can use the entire bandwidth to pass data; in typical 8B/10B encoding, 25% of the bandwidth is encoding overhead. For example, instead of requiring 6.25 Gbps to pass a 5-Gbps XAUI (10-Gbit attachment-unit-interface) data stream, the AN6420 can operate at 5 Gbps. Running at a lower frequency reduces overall power consumption and enhances the range of backplanes over which the device can reliably operate.
Currently available for sampling, the AN6420 uses a 0.13-micron process, and the company plans to build a later version on a 90-nm process. It comes in a 17×7-mm, plastic BGA package. It costs $80 per unit (volume quantities).
Accelerant Networks, 1-503-466-9231, www.accelerant.net.
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