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Automated Design and Optimization of Distributed Filtering Circuits via Reinforcement Learning

Gao, Peng, Yu, Tao, Wang, Fei, Yuan, Ru-Yue

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

Designing distributed filtering circuits (DFCs) is complex and time-consuming, with the circuit performance relying heavily on the expertise and experience of electronics engineers. However, manual design methods tend to have exceedingly low-efficiency. This study proposes a novel end-to-end automated method for fabricating circuits to improve the design of DFCs. The proposed method harnesses reinforcement learning (RL) algorithms, eliminating the dependence on the design experience of engineers. Thus, it significantly reduces the subjectivity and constraints associated with circuit design. The experimental findings demonstrate clear improvements in both design efficiency and quality when comparing the proposed method with traditional engineer-driven methods. In particular, the proposed method achieves superior performance when designing complex or rapidly evolving DFCs. Furthermore, compared to existing circuit automation design techniques, the proposed method demonstrates superior design efficiency, highlighting the substantial potential of RL in circuit design automation.


TeMPO: Efficient Time-Multiplexed Dynamic Photonic Tensor Core for Edge AI with Compact Slow-Light Electro-Optic Modulator

Zhang, Meng, Yin, Dennis, Gangi, Nicholas, Begović, Amir, Chen, Alexander, Huang, Zhaoran Rena, Gu, Jiaqi

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

Electronic-photonic computing systems offer immense potential in energy-efficient artificial intelligence (AI) acceleration tasks due to the superior computing speed and efficiency of optics, especially for real-time, low-energy deep neural network (DNN) inference tasks on resource-restricted edge platforms. However, current optical neural accelerators based on foundry-available devices and conventional system architecture still encounter a performance gap compared to highly customized electronic counterparts. To bridge the performance gap due to lack of domain specialization, we present a time-multiplexed dynamic photonic tensor accelerator, dubbed TeMPO, with cross-layer device/circuit/architecture customization. At the device level, we present foundry-compatible, customized photonic devices, including a slow-light electro-optic modulator with experimental demonstration, optical splitters, and phase shifters that significantly reduce the footprint and power in input encoding and dot-product calculation. At the circuit level, partial products are hierarchically accumulated via parallel photocurrent aggregation, lightweight capacitive temporal integration, and sequential digital summation, considerably relieving the analog-to-digital conversion bottleneck. We also employ a multi-tile, multi-core architecture to maximize hardware sharing for higher efficiency. Across diverse edge AI workloads, TeMPO delivers digital-comparable task accuracy with superior quantization/noise tolerance. We achieve a 368.6 TOPS peak performance, 22.3 TOPS/W energy efficiency, and 1.2 TOPS/mm$^2$ compute density, pushing the Pareto frontier in edge AI hardware. This work signifies the power of cross-layer co-design and domain-specific customization, paving the way for future electronic-photonic accelerators with even greater performance and efficiency.


Reinforcement Learning for Photonic Component Design

Witt, Donald, Young, Jeff, Chrostowski, Lukas

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

We present a new fab-in-the-loop reinforcement learning algorithm for the design of nano-photonic components that accounts for the imperfections present in nanofabrication processes. As a demonstration of the potential of this technique, we apply it to the design of photonic crystal grating couplers fabricated on an air clad 220 nm silicon on insulator single etch platform. This fab-in-the-loop algorithm improves the insertion loss from 8.8 to 3.24 dB. The widest bandwidth designs produced using our fab-in-the-loop algorithm can cover a 150 nm bandwidth with less than 10.2 dB of loss at their lowest point.


M3ICRO: Machine Learning-Enabled Compact Photonic Tensor Core based on PRogrammable Multi-Operand Multimode Interference

Gu, Jiaqi, Zhu, Hanqing, Feng, Chenghao, Jiang, Zixuan, Chen, Ray T., Pan, David Z.

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

Photonic computing shows promise for transformative advancements in machine learning (ML) acceleration, offering ultra-fast speed, massive parallelism, and high energy efficiency. However, current photonic tensor core (PTC) designs based on standard optical components hinder scalability and compute density due to their large spatial footprint. To address this, we propose an ultra-compact PTC using customized programmable multi-operand multimode interference (MOMMI) devices, named M3ICRO. The programmable MOMMI leverages the intrinsic light propagation principle, providing a single-device programmable matrix unit beyond the conventional computing paradigm of one multiply-accumulate (MAC) operation per device. To overcome the optimization difficulty of customized devices that often requires time-consuming simulation, we apply ML for optics to predict the device behavior and enable a differentiable optimization flow. We thoroughly investigate the reconfigurability and matrix expressivity of our customized PTC, and introduce a novel block unfolding method to fully exploit the computing capabilities of a complex-valued PTC for near-universal real-valued linear transformations. Extensive evaluations demonstrate that M3ICRO achieves a 3.4-9.6x smaller footprint, 1.6-4.4x higher speed, 10.6-42x higher compute density, 3.7-12x higher system throughput, and superior noise robustness compared to state-of-the-art coherent PTC designs, while maintaining close-to-digital task accuracy across various ML benchmarks. Our code is open-sourced at https://github.com/JeremieMelo/M3ICRO-MOMMI.


Analysis of Optical Loss and Crosstalk Noise in MZI-based Coherent Photonic Neural Networks

Shafiee, Amin, Banerjee, Sanmitra, Chakrabarty, Krishnendu, Pasricha, Sudeep, Nikdast, Mahdi

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

With the continuous increase in the size and complexity of machine learning models, the need for specialized hardware to efficiently run such models is rapidly growing. To address such a need, silicon-photonic-based neural network (SP-NN) accelerators have recently emerged as a promising alternative to electronic accelerators due to their lower latency and higher energy efficiency. Not only can SP-NNs alleviate the fan-in and fan-out problem with linear algebra processors, their operational bandwidth can match that of the photodetection rate (typically 100 GHz), which is at least over an order of magnitude faster than electronic counterparts that are restricted to a clock rate of a few GHz. Unfortunately, the underlying silicon photonic devices in SP-NNs suffer from inherent optical losses and crosstalk noise originating from fabrication imperfections and undesired optical couplings, the impact of which accumulates as the network scales up. Consequently, the inferencing accuracy in an SP-NN can be affected by such inefficiencies -- e.g., can drop to below 10% -- the impact of which is yet to be fully studied. In this paper, we comprehensively model the optical loss and crosstalk noise using a bottom-up approach, from the device to the system level, in coherent SP-NNs built using Mach-Zehnder interferometer (MZI) devices. The proposed models can be applied to any SP-NN architecture with different configurations to analyze the effect of loss and crosstalk. Such an analysis is important where there are inferencing accuracy and scalability requirements to meet when designing an SP-NN. Using the proposed analytical framework, we show a high power penalty and a catastrophic inferencing accuracy drop of up to 84% for SP-NNs of different scales with three known MZI mesh configurations (i.e., Reck, Clements, and Diamond) due to accumulated optical loss and crosstalk noise.


Characterizing Coherent Integrated Photonic Neural Networks under Imperfections

Banerjee, Sanmitra, Nikdast, Mahdi, Chakrabarty, Krishnendu

arXiv.org Artificial Intelligence

Integrated photonic neural networks (IPNNs) are emerging as promising successors to conventional electronic AI accelerators as they offer substantial improvements in computing speed and energy efficiency. In particular, coherent IPNNs use arrays of Mach-Zehnder interferometers (MZIs) for unitary transformations to perform energy-efficient matrix-vector multiplication. However, the underlying MZI devices in IPNNs are susceptible to uncertainties stemming from optical lithographic variations and thermal crosstalk and can experience imprecisions due to non-uniform MZI insertion loss and quantization errors due to low-precision encoding in the tuned phase angles. In this paper, we, for the first time, systematically characterize the impact of such uncertainties and imprecisions (together referred to as imperfections) in IPNNs using a bottom-up approach. We show that their impact on IPNN accuracy can vary widely based on the tuned parameters (e.g., phase angles) of the affected components, their physical location, and the nature and distribution of the imperfections. To improve reliability measures, we identify critical IPNN building blocks that, under imperfections, can lead to catastrophic degradation in the classification accuracy. We show that under multiple simultaneous imperfections, the IPNN inferencing accuracy can degrade by up to 46%, even when the imperfection parameters are restricted within a small range. Our results also indicate that the inferencing accuracy is sensitive to imperfections affecting the MZIs in the linear layers next to the input layer of the IPNN.