Abstract

The Network-on-Chip (NoC) paradigm is used as a scalable interconnection infrastructure for multi-core chips. To enhance the performance of conventional interconnect-based multi-core chips, on-chip wireless interconnect has emerged as a radically different technology. However, this emerging interconnect paradigm imposes significant challenges pertaining to reliable integration and design. In this paper, we focus on two types of mm-wave wireless NoC architectures. One is a hierarchical architecture with long-range wireless shortcuts and the other is a power-law connectivity based small-world network without any hierarchy. We demonstrate that though the hierarchical architecture offers more bandwidth with lower energy dissipation than the small-world-based counterpart, it has significantly more area overhead. Also, the power-law connectivity based small-world wireless NoC is more robust in presence of wireless link failures.

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