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Field Programmable Gate Arrays (FPGAs) have been used widely in recent years because of their flexible reconfiguration capabilities. Moreover, demand of high-speed reconfiguration for FPGAs has been increasing. However, since reconfiguration of FPGAs cannot be increased because of the serial transfer of configuration data, new optically reconfigurable gate arrays (ORGAs) have been proposed as an alternative...
Demands for fast dynamic reconfiguration for programmable devices have increased because the fast dynamic reconfiguration can increase the number of functions on a gate array. This paper presents a proposal of a novel optically differential reconfigurable gate array architecture with a microelectromechanical system (MEMS) mirror array that enables high-speed reconfiguration by exploiting large-bandwidth...
Recently, optically reconfigurable gate arrays (ORGAs), which consist of a gate array VLSI, a holographic memory, and a laser array, have been developed to achieve a huge virtual gate count that is much larger than those of currently available VLSIs. Consequently, exploitation of the storage capacity of a holographic memory produces ORGAs with more than tera-gate capacity. However, comparison of conventional...
Recently, optically reconfigurable gate arrays (OR-GAs) consisting of a gate array VLSI, a holographic memory, and a laser array have been developed to achieve a huge virtual gate count that is much larger than those of currently available VLSIs. Consequently, ORGAs with more than tera-gate capacity will be realized by exploiting the storage capacity of a holographic memory. However, in contrast to...
In previously proposed ORGAs, the optical reconfiguration period was designed to be constant by assuming a worst-case reconfiguration speed. However, the diffraction efficiency of a holographic memory differs depending on the number of bright bits included in a configuration context. Therefore, previous ORGAs can not fully exploit reconfiguration performance. For that reason, this paper presents a...
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