Abstract

The fault diameter and wide diameter are commonly used to measure the fault tolerance and transmission delay of interconnection networks beyond traditional diameter. The [Formula: see text]-wide diameter of graph [Formula: see text], denoted by [Formula: see text], is the minimum integer [Formula: see text] such that there exist at least [Formula: see text] internally vertex disjoint paths of length at most [Formula: see text] for any two distinct vertices in [Formula: see text]. The [Formula: see text]-fault diameter of graph [Formula: see text], denoted by [Formula: see text], is the maximum diameter of the survival graph obtained by deleting at most [Formula: see text] vertices in [Formula: see text]. The exchanged crossed cube, as a compounded interconnection network denoted by [Formula: see text], holds the desirable properties of both crossed cube and exchanged hypercube, while achieving a better balanced between cost and performance of the parallel computing systems. In this paper, we construct [Formula: see text] internally vertex disjoint paths between any two distinct vertices of [Formula: see text]. Moreover, we determine the upper and lower bounds of [Formula: see text]-wide diameter and [Formula: see text]-fault diameter of [Formula: see text], i.e., [Formula: see text], which shows that the exchanged crossed cube has better efficiency and reliability than that of the exchanged hypercube.

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