Silicon Photonics: Fueling the Next Information Revolution
Monday, October 17, 2016 at 7:43AM
Roy Rubenstein in Daryl Inniss, Morgan Kaufman, book, data centres, semiconductors, silicon photonics, telecoms

New book to be published in December 2016


Silicon Photonics: Fueling the Next Information Revolution is the title of the book Daryl Inniss and I have just completed.

We started writing the book at the end of 2014. We felt the timing was right for a silicon photonics synthesis book that assesses the significant changes taking place in the datacom, telecom, and semiconductor industries, and explains the market opportunities that will result and the role silicon photonics will play.

Silicon photonics is coming to market at a time of momentous change. Internet content providers are driving new requirements as they scale their data centres. The chip industry is grappling with the end of Moore’s law. And the telecom community faces its own challenges as the bandwidth-carrying capacity of fibre starts to be approached.


Silicon photonics will be a key technology for a post–Moore’s law era, and it will be the chip industry, not the photonics industry, that will drive optics

 

Each of these changes – the data center, the end of Moore’s law, and a looming capacity crunch – is significant in its own right. But collectively they signify a need for new thinking regarding chips, optics, and systems. Such requirements will also give rise to new business opportunities and industry change. Silicon photonics is arriving at an opportune time.

Despite this, the optical industry still questions the significance of silicon photonics while, for the chip industry, optics remains a science peripheral to their daily concerns. This too will change.

The book discusses how silicon photonics is set to influence both industries. For the optical industry, the technology will allow designs to be tackled in new ways. For the chip industry, silicon photonics may be a peripheral if interesting technology, but it will impact chip design.

The focus of the book is the telecom and datacom industries; these are and will remain the primary markets for silicon photonics for the next decade at least. But we also note other developments where silicon photonics can play an important role.

Silicon photonics will be a key technology for a post–Moore’s law era, and it will be the chip industry, not the photonics industry, that will drive optics.

The book is being published by Elsevier’s Morgan Kaufman and will be available from mid-December. To see the contents of the book, click here.

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