Optical link between electrical circuit boards

Optical waveguides – With optical coupler – Particular coupling structure

Reexamination Certificate

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C385S014000, C359S199200

Reexamination Certificate

active

06393184

ABSTRACT:

TECHNICAL FIELD
This invention relates to the connection of two or more electrical circuit boards, and in particular to the connection of two or more electrical circuit boards using optical components.
BACKGROUND ART
The use of electrical circuit boards, for example integrated electronic circuits printed on silicon, i.e. so-called PCBs (printed circuit boards) is very well known. There is frequently a need to form connections between the boards, to allow data communication across them. A typical connection is a “point to point” connection. This, as its name suggests, connects between one point on one board to another point on the other board.
Traditionally, point to point connections have been made by copper wires, arranged to extend between the contact points on the boards that are to be connected. Such copper wires may be provided as a module, e.g. mounted on an interface card, which can be clipped directly in place between the circuit boards.
More recently, it has been proposed to use optical components, in particular optical transceivers to provide the data connection between two electrical circuit boards. A pair of optical transceivers is used, each typically being provided on a module that can be soldered to its respective circuit board. The first transceiver translates electrical data from the first circuit board to optical data, and transmits it via an optical fiber link to the second of the pair of transceivers. This converts the data to electrical form for the second circuit board. The second transceiver similarly provides its own optical fiber link to the first transceiver, to transmit data in the reverse direction. Thus, two optical fibres are provided between the pair of transceivers, and the data link along each fibre is unidirectional. The use of optical transceivers to provide a point to point link between electrical circuit boards has a number of advantages compared to the traditional copper wire link. In particular, data transmission can be of the order of gigabits/second (Gbps) with significantly reduced cross talk compared to copper wire links. Also the optical transceivers are more compact than the traditional copper links.
Using the known optical transceiver point to point links, parallel data (e.g. 16 bits wide at a clock speed of 50 MHz) is generally serialised, and encoded before optical transmission. Using the above known transceiver pair/optical fibre pair link, it is possible to transmit data of the order of Gbps. If higher transmission rates are required, then modules must be stacked in some way. This is not generally possible, in most circuit board layout systems. Data transmission rates are therefore limited.
It is also known to use optical transceivers, for point to point circuit board links, in which the transceivers use vertical cavity surface emitting lasers (VCSELs) to act as an optical source, and multimode ribbon optical fibre to connect between the transceivers. The VCSELs allow an army of lasers to be mounted side by side so that a plurality of signals can be provided. These are transmitted along the ribbon fibre. The use of a laser array and multiple (ribbon) fibre allows high bandwidths to be achieved. However, since they use VCSELs as the light source, the light must be coupled into a 90° C. plane for transmission between the boards. In one known solution, this is achieved by coupling the lasers to a polymer waveguide, which is bent the required 90° C. before coupling into the optical fibre. This is expensive.
DISCLOSURE OF INVENTION
We have discovered another method and module for providing an optical point to point connection between two electrical circuit boards.
A first aspect of the present invention provides a method of providing a point to point connection between two electrical circuit boards comprising:
(i) providing a pair of optical transceivers, each formed on a silicon-on-insulator chip and each being in electrical contact with one of the said circuit boards, each optical transceiver comprising:
(a) a branched rib waveguide comprising a common stem and first and second branches extending from the common stem;
(b) fibre connection means for receiving an optical fibre, and being in communication with the stem of the branched rib waveguide;
(c) a light source for providing optical signals, the light source being in communication with the first branch of the branched rib waveguide; and
(d) a light receiver in communication with the second branch of the branched rib waveguide; and
(ii) providing a single optical fibre linking the stem of the branched rib waveguide of the first transceiver to the stem of the branched rib waveguide of the second transceiver.
An advantage of the method of the present invention, compared to the transceiver pair link of the prior art, is that only a single optical fibre is provided to link the two transceivers. This is made possible because of the manner in which the laser and receiver photodiode are provided at the terminus of branches of a rib waveguide in a silicon layer, which branches extend from a common stem. According to the invention, therefore, traffic, between the transceivers of the pair, is bidirectional, along the common linking optical fibre. Since bi-directional transmission is used, the number of fibres required to achieve a given bandwidth is half that of comparable prior art devices, e.g. of comparable VCSEL devices. Also since the number of fibres is halved compared to prior art devices, the number of optical fibre connectors required is also halved. Connector costs are generally a significant proportion of the cost of fibre optic devices, and hence this advantageously results in cost savings.
Furthermore, integration of components on a silicon-on-insulator chip significantly simplifies fabrication of the devices and so reduces the cost.
Each transceiver preferably also comprises a monitor photodiode in communication with the laser, via another optical waveguide formed on the chip. This monitor photodiode acts to monitor proper functioning of the laser.
Where optical components are said to be “in communication” with each other in this specification, it is intended that the components are in optical communication with each other.
The light source is preferably a laser, and the light receiver(s) are preferably photodiode(s). Methods of mounting light sources and light receivers on a silicon-on-insulator chip are described in U.S. Pat. No. 5,881,190 and U.S. Ser. No. 09/019,729, the disclosures of which are incorporated herein by reference.
The said fibre connection means preferably comprises a groove formed in the silicon-on-insulator chip. The use of such connection means is described in W
0
97/43676, the disclosure of which is incorporated herein by reference, A V-groove is preferably etched into the silicon using a crystallographically dependent wet etch and the waveguide preferably arranged to extend out over the end of the etched-V-groove so as to abut with an optical fibre located in the V-groove for communication with the waveguide.
The rib waveguide is formed by an etching technique to leave an upwardly projecting rib in the silicon layer, which can be appropriately sized to act as a waveguide, preferably, but not necessarily, a single mode waveguide. The insulating layer beneath the silicon layer is preferably silicon dioxide. The substrate layer beneath the silicon dioxide layer is preferably silicon. Silicon on insulator rib waveguide devices are known, and are described, for example in U.S. Pat. No. 5,757,986 and other references given therein, the disclosures of which are incorporated herein by reference.
In a preferred embodiment, the method comprises providing a plurality of said pairs of optical transceivers, one of each pair being provided on a first silicon-on-insulator chip, and the other of each pair being provided on a second silicon-on-insulator chip. Preferably each pair of the plurality of pairs of transceivers are connected by respective fibres in a ribbon fibre array. In other words, two silicon on insulator chips are preferably provided, into each of w

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