This disclosure relates generally to the design of physical devices for fabrication, and in particular but not exclusively, relates to photonic devices including but not limited to optical multiplexers and demultiplexers.
Fiber-optic communication is typically employed to transmit information from one place to another via light that has been modulated to carry the information. For example, many telecommunication companies use optical fiber to transmit telephone signals, internet communication, and cable television signals. But the cost of deploying optical fibers for fiber-optic communication may be prohibitive. As such, techniques have been developed to more efficiently use the bandwidth available within a single optical fiber. Wavelength-division multiplexing is one such technique that bundles multiple optical carrier signals onto a single optical fiber using different wavelengths. Various techniques may be used to simulate performance of such devices, though such techniques are often time consuming and use large amounts of computing resources.
In some embodiments, a non-transitory computer-readable medium having computer-executable instructions stored thereon is provided. The instructions, in response to execution by one or more processors of a computing system, cause the computing system to perform actions for optimizing a design for a physical device to be fabricated by a fabrication system, the actions comprising: receiving, by the computing system, an initial design; simulating, by the computing system, performance of the initial design to determine a simulated performance metric of the initial design; determining, by the computing system, a Jacobian of the simulated performance metric of the initial design; backpropagating a gradient of the simulated performance metric of the initial design to generate an updated design; estimating, by the computing system, performance of the updated design using the Jacobian of the simulated performance metric of the initial design to determine an estimated performance metric; and backpropagating a gradient of the estimated performance metric to generate a further updated design.
In some embodiments, a method for optimizing a design for a physical device to be fabricated by a fabrication system is provided. A computing system receives an initial design. The computing system simulates performance of the initial design to determine a simulated performance metric of the initial design. The computing system determines a Jacobian of the simulated performance metric of the initial design. The computing system backpropagates a gradient of the simulated performance metric of the initial design to generate an updated design. The computing system estimates performance of the updated design using the Jacobian of the simulated performance metric of the initial design to determine an estimated performance metric. The computing system backpropagates a gradient of the estimated performance metric to generate a further updated design.
Non-limiting and non-exhaustive embodiments of the invention are described with reference to the following figures, wherein like reference numerals refer to like parts throughout the various views unless otherwise specified. Not all instances of an element are necessarily labeled so as not to clutter the drawings where appropriate. The drawings are not necessarily to scale, emphasis instead being placed upon illustrating the principles being described. To easily identify the discussion of any particular element or act, the most significant digit or digits in a reference number refer to the figure number in which that element is first introduced.
In some embodiments of the present disclosure, techniques for designing and fabricating physical devices, including but not limited to photonic devices such as optical communication devices, are provided that use fabrication models that represent morphological transformations to an intended design induced by a fabrication system to improve the accuracy of performance simulations and thereby improve the performance of the fabricated physical device.
In the illustrated embodiment, optical communication device 102 includes a controller 104, one or more interface device(s) 112 (e.g., fiber optic couplers, light guides, waveguides, and the like), a multiplexer (mux), demultiplexer (demux), or combination thereof (MUX/DEMUX 114), one or more light source(s) 116 (e.g., light emitting diodes, lasers, and the like), and one or more light sensor(s) 118 (e.g., photodiodes, phototransistors, photoresistors, and the like) coupled to one another. The controller includes one or more processor(s) 106 (e.g., one or more central processing units, application specific circuits, field programmable gate arrays, or otherwise) and memory 108 (e.g., volatile memory such as DRAM and SAM, non-volatile memory such as ROM, flash memory, and the like). It is appreciated that optical communication device 120 may include the same or similar elements as optical communication device 102, which have been omitted for clarity.
Controller 104 orchestrates operation of optical communication device 102 for transmitting and/or receiving optical signal 110 (e.g., a multi-channel optical signal having a plurality of distinct wavelength channels or otherwise). Controller 104 includes software (e.g., instructions included in memory 108 coupled to processor 106) and/or hardware logic (e.g., application specific integrated circuits, field-programmable gate arrays, and the like) that when executed by controller 104 causes controller 104 and/or optical communication device 102 to perform operations.
In one embodiment, controller 104 may choreograph operations of optical communication device 102 to cause light source(s) 116 to generate a plurality of distinct wavelength channels that are multiplexed via MUX/DEMUX 114 into a multi-channel optical signal 110 that is subsequently transmitted to optical communication device 120 via interface device 112. In other words, light source(s) 116 may output light having different wavelengths (e.g., 1271 nm, 1291 nm, 1311 nm, 1331 nm, 1506 nm, 1514 nm, 1551 nm, 1571, or otherwise) that may be modulated or pulsed via controller 104 to generate a plurality of distinct wavelength channels representative of information. The plurality of distinct wavelength channels are subsequently combined or otherwise multiplexed via MUX/DEMUX 114 into a multi-channel optical signal 110 that is transmitted to optical communication device 120 via interface device 112. In the same or another embodiment, controller 104 may choreograph operations of optical communication device 102 to cause a plurality of distinct wavelength channels to be demultiplexed via MUX/DEMUX 114 from a multi-channel optical signal 110 that is received via interface device 112 from optical communication device 120.
It is appreciated that in some embodiments certain elements of optical communication device 102 and/or optical communication device 120 may have been omitted to avoid obscuring certain aspects of the disclosure. For example, optical communication device 102 and optical communication device 120 may include amplification circuitry, lenses, or components to facilitate transmitting and receiving optical signal 110. It is further appreciated that in some embodiments optical communication device 102 and/or optical communication device 120 may not necessarily include all elements illustrated in
As illustrated in
In the illustrated embodiment of
As illustrated in
In the illustrated embodiment each of the plurality of output regions 304 are parallel to each other one of the plurality of output region 304. However, in other embodiments the plurality of output regions 304 may not be parallel to one another or even disposed on the same side (e.g., one or more of the plurality of output regions 304 and/or input region 302 may be disposed proximate to sides of dispersive region 332 that are adjacent to first side 328 and/or second side 330). In some embodiments adjacent ones of the plurality of output regions are separated from each other by a common separation distance when the plurality of output regions includes at least three output regions. For example, as illustrated adjacent output region 308 and output region 310 are separated from one another by distance 306, which may be common to the separation distance between other pairs of adjacent output regions.
As illustrated in the embodiment of
It is noted that the first material and second material of dispersive region 332 are arranged and shaped within the dispersive region such that the material interface pattern is substantially proportional to a design obtainable with an inverse design process, which will be discussed in greater detail later in the present disclosure. More specifically, in some embodiments, the inverse design process may include iterative gradient-based optimization of a design based at least in part on a loss function that incorporates a performance loss (e.g., to enforce functionality) and a fabrication loss (e.g., to enforce fabricability and binarization of a first material and a second material) that is reduced or otherwise adjusted via iterative gradient-based optimization to generate the design. In the same or other embodiments, other optimization techniques may be used instead of, or jointly with, gradient-based optimization. Advantageously, this allows for optimization of a near unlimited number of design parameters to achieve functionality and performance within a predetermined area that may not have been possible with conventional design techniques.
For example, in one embodiment dispersive region 332 is structured to optically separate each of the four channels from the multi-channel optical signal within a predetermined area of 35 μm×35 μm (e.g., as defined by width 324 and length 326 of dispersive region 332) when the input region 302 receives the multi-channel optical signal. In the same or another embodiment, the dispersive region is structured to accommodate a common bandwidth for each of the four channels, each of the four channels having different center wavelengths. In one embodiment the common bandwidth is approximately 13 nm wide and the different center wavelengths is selected from a group consisting of 1271 nm, 1291 nm, 1311 nm, 1331 nm, 1506 nm, 1514 nm, 1551 nm, and 1571 nm. In some embodiments, the entire structure of demultiplexer 316 (e.g., including input region 302, periphery region 318, dispersive region 332, and plurality of output regions 304) fits within a predetermined area (e.g., as defined by width 320 and length 322). In one embodiment the predetermined area is 35 μm×35 μm. It is appreciated that in other embodiments dispersive region 332 and/or demultiplexer 316 fits within other areas greater than or less than 35 μm×35 μm, which may result in changes to the structure of dispersive region 332 (e.g., the arrangement and shape of the first and second material) and/or other components of demultiplexer 316.
In the same or other embodiments the dispersive region is structured to have a power transmission of −2 dB or greater from the input region 302, through the dispersive region 332, and to the corresponding one of the plurality of output regions 304 for a given wavelength within one of the plurality of distinct wavelength channels. For example, if channel 1 of a multi-channel optical signal is mapped to output region 308, then when demultiplexer 316 receives the multi-channel optical signal at input region 302 the dispersive region 332 will optically separate channel 1 from the multi-channel optical signal and guide a portion of the multi-channel optical signal corresponding to channel 1 to output region 308 with a power transmission of −2 dB or greater. In the same or another embodiment, dispersive region 332 is structured such that an adverse power transmission (i.e., isolation) for the given wavelength from the input region to any of the plurality of output regions other than the corresponding one of the plurality of output regions is −30 dB or less, −22 dB or less, or otherwise. For example, if channel 1 of a multi-channel optical signal is mapped to output region 308, then the adverse power transmission from input region 302 to any other one of the plurality of output regions (e.g., output region 310, output region 312, output region 314) other than the corresponding one of the plurality of output regions (e.g., output region 308) is −30 dB or less, −22 dB or less, or otherwise. In some embodiments, a maximum power reflection from demultiplexer 316 of an input signal (e.g., a multi-channel optical signal) received at an input region (e.g., input region 302) is reflected back to the input region by dispersive region 332 or otherwise is −40 dB or less, −20 dB or less, −8 dB or less, or otherwise. It is appreciated that in other embodiments the power transmission, adverse power transmission, maximum power, or other performance characteristics may be different than the respective values discussed herein, but the structure of dispersive region 332 may change due to the intrinsic relationship between structure, functionality, and performance of demultiplexer 316.
In one embodiment a silicon on insulator (SOI) wafer may be initially provided that includes a support substrate (e.g., a silicon substrate) that corresponds to substrate 334, a silicon dioxide dielectric layer that corresponds to dielectric layer 336, a silicon layer (e.g., intrinsic, doped, or otherwise), and a oxide layer (e.g., intrinsic, grown, or otherwise). In one embodiment, the silicon in the active layer 338 may be etched selectively by lithographically creating a pattern on the SOI wafer that is transferred to SOI wafer via a dry etch process (e.g., via a photoresist mask or other hard mask) to remove portions of the silicon. The silicon may be etched all the way down to dielectric layer 336 to form voids that may subsequently be backfilled with silicon dioxide that is subsequently encapsulated with silicon dioxide to form cladding layer 340. In one embodiment, there may be several etch depths including a full etch depth of the silicon to obtain the targeted structure. In one embodiment, the silicon may be 206 nm thick and thus the full etch depth may be 206 nm. In some embodiments, this may be a two-step encapsulation process in which two silicon dioxide depositions are performed with an intermediate chemical mechanical planarization used to yield a planar surface.
It is appreciated that in the illustrated embodiments of demultiplexer 316 as shown in
As illustrated in
The first material 410 (i.e., black colored regions within dispersive region 406) and second material 412 (i.e., white colored regions within dispersive region 406) of photonic demultiplexer 400 are inhomogeneously interspersed to create a plurality of interfaces that collectively form material interface pattern 420 as illustrated in
As illustrated in
In some embodiments, material interface pattern 420 includes one or more dendritic shapes, wherein each of the one or more dendritic shapes are defined as a branched structure formed from first material 410 or second material 412 and having a width that alternates between increasing and decreasing in size along a corresponding direction. Referring back to
In some embodiments, the inverse design process includes a fabrication loss that enforces a minimum feature size, for example, to ensure fabricability of the design. In the illustrated embodiment of photonic demultiplexer 400 illustrated in
As illustrated, system 500 includes controller 512, display 502, input device(s) 504, communication device(s) 506, network 508, remote resources 510, bus 534, and bus 520. Controller 512 includes processor 514, memory 516, local storage 518, and photonic device simulator 522. Photonic device simulator 522 includes operational simulation engine 526, fabrication loss calculation logic 528, calculation logic 524, adjoint simulation engine 530, and optimization engine 532. It is appreciated that in some embodiments, controller 512 may be a distributed system.
Controller 512 is coupled to display 502 (e.g., a light emitting diode display, a liquid crystal display, and the like) coupled to bus 534 through bus 520 for displaying information to a user utilizing system 500 to optimize structural parameters of the photonic device (i.e., demultiplexer). Input device 504 is coupled to bus 534 through bus 520 for communicating information and command selections to processor 514. Input device 504 may include a mouse, trackball, keyboard, stylus, or other computer peripheral, to facilitate an interaction between the user and controller 512. In response, controller 512 may provide verification of the interaction through display 502.
Another device, which may optionally be coupled to controller 512, is one or more communication device(s) 506 for accessing remote resources 510 of a distributed system via network 508. Communication device 506 may include any of a number of networking peripheral devices such as those used for coupling to an Ethernet, Internet, or wide area network, and the like. Communication device 506 may further include a mechanism that provides connectivity between controller 512 and the outside world. Note that any or all of the components of system 500 illustrated in
Controller 512 orchestrates operation of system 500 for optimizing structural parameters of the photonic device. Processor 514 (e.g., one or more central processing units, graphics processing units, and/or tensor processing units, etc.), memory 516 (e.g., volatile memory such as DRAM and SRAM, non-volatile memory such as ROM, flash memory, and the like), local storage 518 (e.g., magnetic memory such as computer disk drives), and the photonic device simulator 522 are coupled to each other through bus 520. Controller 512 includes software (e.g., instructions included in memory 516 coupled to processor 514) and/or hardware logic (e.g., application specific integrated circuits, field-programmable gate arrays, and the like) that when executed by controller 512 causes controller 512 or system 500 to perform operations. The operations may be based on instructions stored within any one of, or a combination of, memory 516, local storage 518, physical device simulator 522, and remote resources 510 accessed through network 508.
In the illustrated embodiment, the components of photonic device simulator 522 are utilized to optimize structural parameters of the photonic device (e.g., MUX/DEMUX 114 of
As illustrated in
Each of the plurality of voxels 612 may be associated with a structural value, a field value, and a source value. Collectively, the structural values of the virtual prototype 606 describe the structural parameters of the photonic device. In one embodiment, the structural values may correspond to a relative permittivity, permeability, and/or refractive index that collectively describe structural (i.e., material) boundaries or interfaces of the photonic device (e.g., material interface pattern 420 of
In the illustrated embodiment, the photonic device corresponds to an optical demultiplexer having a design region 614 (e.g., corresponding to dispersive region 332 of
However, in other embodiments, the entirety of the photonic device may be placed within the design region 614 such that the structural parameters may represent any portion or the entirety of the design of the photonic device. The electric and magnetic fields within the virtual prototype 606 (and subsequently the photonic device) may change (e.g., represented by the field value of the individual voxel that collectively correspond to the field response of the virtual prototype) in response to the excitation source. The output ports 604 of the optical demultiplexer may be used for determining a performance metric of the photonic device in response to the excitation source (e.g., power transmission from input port 602 to a specific one of the output ports 604). The initial description of the photonic device, including initial structural parameters, excitation sources, performance parameters or metrics, and other parameters describing the photonic device, are received by the system (e.g., system 500 of
Once the operational simulation reaches a steady state (e.g., changes to the field values in response to the excitation source substantially stabilize or reduce to negligible values) or otherwise concludes, one or more performance metrics may be determined. In one embodiment, the performance metric corresponds to the power transmission at a corresponding one of the output ports 604 mapped to the distinct wavelength channel being simulated by the excitation source. In other words, in some embodiments, the performance metric represents power (at one or more frequencies of interest) in the target mode shape at the specific locations of the output ports 604. A loss value or metric of the input design (e.g., the initial design and/or any refined design in which the structural parameters have been updated) based, at least in part, on the performance metric may be determined via a loss function. The loss metric, in conjunction with an adjoint simulation, may be utilized to determine a structural gradient (e.g., influence of structural parameters on loss metric) for updating or otherwise revising the structural parameters to reduce the loss metric (i.e. increase the performance metric). It is noted that the loss metric may be further based on a fabrication loss value that is utilized to enforce a minimum feature size of the photonic device to promote fabricability of the device, and/or other loss values.
In some embodiments, iterative cycles of performing the operational simulation, and adjoint simulation, determining the structural gradient, and updating the structural parameters to reduce the loss metric are performed successively as part of an inverse design process that utilizes iterative gradient-based optimization. An optimization scheme such as gradient descent may be utilized to determine specific amounts or degrees of changes to the structural parameters of the photonic device to incrementally reduce the loss metric. More specifically, after each cycle the structural parameters are updated (e.g., optimized) to reduce the loss metric. The operational simulation, adjoint simulation, and updating the structural parameters are iteratively repeated until the loss metric substantially converges or is otherwise below or within a threshold value or range such that the photonic device provides the desired performed while maintaining fabricability.
One problem in designing physical devices such as the photonic devices described above is that fabrication systems generally do not produce photonic devices that have the precise structure that is simulated using the techniques described above. The fabrication of photonic devices using fabrication systems such as semiconductor foundries involves a complex, multi-stage process of transferring the design from a photomask to a silicon wafer. Despite pre-corrections made to the photomask to compensate for distortion effects introduced by the photolithography process, the fabricated physical device still may exhibit shape distortions including but not limited to rounding of sharp corners, erosion or dilation of shape contours, oblique sidewall angles, and non-uniform layer thicknesses. These distortions are due to statistical variations of semiconductor processing and can affect performance of the manufactured physical devices in unexpected ways, given the delicate wave-interference physics which underlies the performance of physical devices such as the photonic devices described herein.
In order to compensate for these changes in a design for a physical device that are introduced by a fabrication process, a fabrication model that represents the changes that occur during the fabrication process can be inserted into an inverse design process so that the simulation of the physical device more accurately represents the output of the fabrication process.
As illustrated in
After receiving the initial design 730, the operational simulation 702 uses a fabrication model 744 to simulate the fabrication of the photonic device based on the initial structural parameters to create structural parameters 706 to be simulated in the simulation portion 742. In some embodiments, the fabrication model 744 is a sequence of differentiable operations that embodies differences from the initial design 730 that will be introduced by a fabrication system during fabrication. In some embodiments, instead of a sequence of differentiable operations, the fabrication model 744 may be represented by a neural network. An example architecture for the fabrication model 744 and parameters for the fabrication model 744 that may be learned using an optimization process as described in further detail below.
After the structural parameters 706 are determined using the fabrication model 744, the operational simulation 702 proceeds to a simulation portion 742. The simulation portion 742 occurs over a plurality of time-steps (e.g., from an initial time step to a final time step over a pre-determined or conditional number of time steps having a specified time step size) and models changes (e.g., from the initial field value 710) in electric and magnetic fields of a plurality of voxels describing the virtual prototype and/or photonic device that collectively correspond to the field response. More specifically, update operations (e.g., update operation 712, update operation 714, and update operation 716) are iterative and based on the field response, structural parameters 706, and one or more excitation sources 708. Each update operation is succeeded by another update operation, which are representative of successive steps forward in time within the plurality of time steps. For example, update operation 714 updates the field values 734 (see, e.g.,
Once the final time step of the simulation portion 742 is performed (although three update operations are illustrated for the sake of clarity and brevity, in some embodiments more than three update operations are performed), a simulated performance metric 718 is used to determine a performance loss value 720 associated with the structural parameters 706. In some embodiments, the simulated performance metric 718 is a characterization of the performance of the simulated device at one or more points (e.g., at the output ports of the device) and at one or more bandwidths, similar to the illustration in
From the loss metric 722, a loss gradient 724 may be determined. The loss gradient 724 may be treated as adjoint or virtual sources (e.g., physical stimuli or excitation source originating at an output region or port) which are backpropagated in reverse (from the final time step incrementally through the plurality of time steps until reaching the initial time step via update operation 726, update operation 746, and update operation 748) to determine gradient 728. Because it is determined based on the simulated performance metric 718, the gradient 728 is associated with the initial design 730 as modified by the fabrication model 744.
In the illustrated embodiment, the FDTD solve (e.g., simulation portion 742 of the operational simulation 702) and backward solve (e.g., adjoint simulation 704) problem are described pictorially, from a high-level, using only “update” and “loss” operations as well as their corresponding gradient operations. The simulation is set up initially in which the structural parameters, physical stimuli (i.e., excitation sources), and initial field states of the virtual prototype (and photonic device) are provided (e.g., via an initial description and/or input design). As discussed previously, the field values are updated in response to the excitation sources based on the structural parameters. More specifically, the update operation is given by ϕ, where =ϕ(
,
,
) for
=1, . . . ,
. Here,
corresponds to the total number of time steps (e.g., the plurality of time steps) for the operational simulation, where
corresponds to the field response (the field value associated with the electric and magnetic fields of each of the plurality of voxels) of the virtual prototype at time step
,
corresponds to the excitation source(s) (the source value associated with the electric and magnetic fields for each of the plurality of voxels) of the virtual prototype at time step
, and
corresponds to the structural parameters describing the topology and/or material properties of the physical device (e.g., relative permittivity, index of refraction, and the like).
It is noted that using the FDTD method, the update operation may specifically be stated as:
ϕ(,
,
)=A(
)
+B(
)
That is to say the FDTD update is linear with respect to the field and source terms. Concretely, A()∈
and B(
)∈
are linear operators which depend on the structural parameters,
, and act on the fields,
, and the sources,
, respectively. Here, it is assumed that
,
∈
where N is the number of FDTD field components in the operational simulation. Additionally, the loss operation (e.g., loss function) may be given by L=f(
, . . . ,
), which takes as input the computed fields and produces a single, real-valued scalar (e.g., the loss metric) that can be reduced and/or minimized.
In terms of revising or otherwise optimizing the structural parameters of the physical device, the relevant quantity to produce is dL/d, which is used to describe the influence of changes in the structural parameters of the initial design 730 on the loss value and is denoted as the gradient 728 illustrated in
, which include
The update operation 714 of the operational simulation 702 updates the field value 734, , of the plurality of voxels at the
th time step to the next time step (i.e.,
+1 time step), which correspond to the field values 736,
. The gradient 738 are utilized to determine for the backpropagation (e.g., update operation 726 backwards in time), which combined with the gradient 740 are used, at least in part, to calculate the structural gradient,
is the contribution of each field to the loss metric, L. It is noted that this is the partial derivative, and therefore does not take into account the causal relationship of →
. Thus,
is utilized which encompasses the →
relationship. The loss gradient, dL/d
, may also be used to compute the structural gradient, dL/d
, and corresponds to the total derivative of the field with respect to loss value, L. The loss gradient, dL/d
, at a particular time step,
, is equal to the summation of
Finally, ∂/∂
, which corresponds to the field gradient, is used which is the contribution to dL/d
from each time/update step.
In particular, the memory footprint to directly compute
may be so large that it is difficult to store more than a handful of state Tensors. The state Tensor corresponds to storing the values of all of the FDTD cells (e.g., the plurality of voxels) for a single simulation time step. It is appreciated that the term “tensor” may refer to tensors in a mathematical sense or as described by the TensorFlow framework developed by Alphabet, Inc. In some embodiments the term “tensor” refers to a mathematical tensor which corresponds to a multidimensional array that follows specific transformation laws. In some embodiments, the term “tensor” refers to TensorFlow tensors, in which a tensor is described as a generalization of vectors and matrices to potentially higher dimensions (e.g., n-dimensional arrays of base data types), and is not necessarily limited to specific transformation laws. For example, for the general loss function f, it may be necessary to store the fields, , for all time steps,
. This is because, for most choices of f, the gradient will be a function of the arguments of f. This difficulty is compounded by the fact that the values of for larger values of
are needed before the values for smaller
due to the incremental updates of the field response and/or through backpropagation of the loss metric, which may prevent the use of schemes that attempt to store only the values ∂L/∂
, at an immediate time step.
An additional difficulty is further illustrated when computing the structural gradient, dL/d, which is given by:
For completeness, the full form of the first term in the sum, dL/d, is expressed as:
Based on the definition of ϕ as described by equation (1), it is noted that
which can be substituted in equation (3) to arrive at an adjoint update for backpropagation (e.g., the update operations such as update operation 726), which can be expressed as:
or
The adjoint update is the backpropagation of the loss gradient (e.g., from the loss metric) from later to earlier time steps and may be referred to as a backwards solve for dL/d. More specifically, the loss gradient may initially be based upon the backpropagation of a loss metric determined from the operational simulation with the loss function. The second term in the sum of the structural gradient, dL/d
, corresponds to the field gradient and is denoted as:
for the particular form of ϕ described by the first equation above. Thus, each term of the sum associated depends on both for >=/
0 and for
<
0. Since the dependency chains of these two terms are in opposite directions, it is concluded that computing dL/d
in this way requires the storage of
values for all of
. In some embodiments, the need to store all field value may be mitigated by a reduced representation of the fields.
Returning to
From a start block, the method 800 proceeds to block 802, where an initial design of a physical device such as a photonic integrated circuit is received. In some embodiments, the initial design may describe structural parameters of the physical device within a simulated environment. The simulated environment may include a plurality of voxels that collectively describe the structural parameters of the physical device. Each of the plurality of voxels is associated with a structural value to describe the structural parameters, a field value to describe the field response (e.g., the electric and magnetic fields in one or more orthogonal directions) to physical stimuli (e.g., one or more excitation sources), and a source value to describe the physical stimuli. In some embodiments the initial design may be a first description of the physical device in which values for the structural parameters may be random values or null values outside of the periphery region such that there is no bias for the initial (e.g., first) design.
It is appreciated that the initial description or input design may be a relative term. Thus, in some embodiments an initial description may be a first description of the physical device described within the context of the simulated environment (e.g., a first input design for performing a first operational simulation). However, in other embodiments, the term initial description may refer to an initial description of a particular cycle (e.g., of performing an operational simulation, operating an adjoint simulation, and updating the structural parameters and/or locations of one or more ports). In such an embodiment, the initial design or design of that particular cycle may correspond to a revised description or refined design (e.g., generated from a previous cycle).
In some embodiments, the simulated environment includes a design region that includes a portion of the plurality of voxels which have structural parameters that may be updated, revised, or otherwise changed to optimize the structural parameters of the physical device. In the same or other embodiments, the structural parameters are associated with geometric boundaries and/or material compositions of the physical device based on the material properties (e.g., relative permittivity, index of refraction, etc.) of the simulated environment.
Block 804 illustrates performing an operational simulation 702 of the physical device within the simulated environment operating in response to one or more excitation sources 708 to determine a simulated performance metric 718 associated with the initial design 730. More specifically, in some embodiments an electromagnetic simulation is performed in which a field response of the photonic integrated circuit is updated incrementally over a plurality of time steps to determine how the field response of the physical device changes due to the excitation sources 708 (e.g., an FDTD simulation, an FDFD simulation, or an FEM simulation). A simulated environment may be configured to be representative of structural parameters 706 of the physical device. In some embodiments, the simulated environment is configured (e.g., the number of voxels, shape/arrangement of voxels, and specific values for the structural value, field value, and/or source value of the voxels are set based on the structural parameters 706).
In some embodiments the simulated environment includes a design region optically coupled between a first communication region and one or more second communication regions. In some embodiments, the first communication region may correspond to an input region or port (e.g., where an excitation source originates), while the second communication region may correspond to one or more output regions or ports (e.g., when designing a physical device where an output may be measured to determine the physical characteristics of the fabrication process). However, in other embodiments, the first communication region may correspond to an output region or port, while the plurality of second communication regions corresponds to a plurality of input ports or region.
During the operational simulation 702, the field values of the plurality of voxels are updated in response to the excitation sources 708 and based, at least in part, on structural parameters 706 of the integrated photonic circuit. Additionally, each update operation at a particular time step may also be based, at least in part, on a previous (e.g., immediately prior) time step.
Consequently, the operational simulation 702 simulates an interaction between the photonic device (i.e., the photonic integrated circuit) and a physical stimuli (i.e., one or more excitation sources) to determine a simulated output of the photonic device (e.g., at one or more of the output ports or regions) in response to the physical stimuli. The interaction may correspond to any one of, or combination of a perturbation, retransmission, attenuation, dispersion, refraction, reflection, diffraction, absorption, scattering, amplification, or otherwise of the physical stimuli within electromagnetic domain due, at least in part, to the structural parameters of the photonic device and underlying physics governing operation of the photonic device. Thus, the operational simulation simulates how the field response of the simulated environment changes due to the excitation source over a plurality of time steps (e.g., from an initial to final time step with a pre-determined step size).
For example, the excitation source may be light of one or more wavelengths specified by the initial design. The excitation source may originate at or be disposed proximate to the first communication region (i.e., a port designated as the input port) when performing the operational simulation. During the operational simulation, the field response at one or more output ports may then be utilized to determine a simulated performance metric 718 that represents a simulated power transmission of the photonic integrated circuit for the one or more wavelengths received by the input port.
In some embodiments, a fabrication model 744 may be used to determine the structural parameters 706 based on the initial design 730. The fabrication model 744 may be used to transform structural parameters of the initial design into structural parameters that would be predicted to be generated using the fabrication process, and may use any suitable technique, including but not limited to performing one or more morphological operations as described below. In some embodiments, a fabrication model 744 may not be used, and the structural parameters of the initial design 730 may be used directly as the structural parameters 706 in the operational simulation 702.
At block 806, a loss metric 722 is determined based on the simulated performance metric 718, and the loss metric 722 is backpropagated through the simulated environment to determine a structural gradient. In some embodiments, a comparison of the simulated performance metric 718 to a desired performance metric may be used to determine a performance loss value 720, and the performance loss value 720 may be used to determine the loss metric 722. In some embodiments, the performance loss value 720 may be used directly as the loss metric 722. In some embodiments, the performance loss value 720 may be combined with measurements of other desired characteristics of the physical device to create the loss metric 722. In some embodiments, the loss metric is treated as an adjoint or virtual source and is backpropagated incrementally using a loss gradient 724 from a final time step to earlier time steps in a backwards simulation to determine the structural gradient 728 of the physical device.
The structural gradient indicates a direction in which parameters of the initial design 730 should be adjusted in order to provide improved performance. Accordingly, at block 808, an updated design is generated by updating the initial design 730 based on the structural gradient. The design of the physical device is revised (e.g., generated a revised description) by updating the initial design (e.g., structural parameters indicated by the initial design) based on the structural gradient 728. In some embodiments, adjusting for the loss metric may reduce the loss metric. However, in other embodiments, the loss metric may be adjusted or otherwise compensated in a manner that does not necessarily reduce the loss metric, In one embodiment, adjusting the loss metric may provide a general direction within the parameterization space to obtain designs that will ultimately result in increased performance while also maintaining device fabricability and targeted performance metrics. In some embodiments, the updated initial design is generated by utilizing an optimization scheme after a cycle of operational and adjoint simulations via a gradient descent algorithm, Markov Chain Monte Carlo algorithm, or other optimization techniques.
In some previous techniques, the actions of performing an operational simulation to determine a simulated performance metric (block 804), backpropagating a loss metric to determine a structural gradient (block 806), and generating an updated design based on the structural gradient (block 808) would be iterated in order to optimize the design of the physical device. However, the performance of the operational simulation 702 can be exceedingly time consuming and can use a great deal of computing resources, particularly when the design region is large and/or is subdivided into a large number of voxels 612.
In some embodiments, a linear model of the operational simulation is used to approximate results for the operational simulation for one or more iterations of the updates to the design. By replacing the operational simulation with the linear model for one or more iterations, the overall method 800 can be accelerated and the amount of computing resources can be reduced, since the costly operational simulation is skipped during the replaced iterations.
Assume that the operational simulation is represented by a function F(des), wherein des is the design provided to the operational simulation and has shape (Nx, Ny), with Nx being the number of voxels 612 in a first dimension and Ny being the number of voxels 612 in a second dimension. One of ordinary skill in the art will recognize that, if the design is of greater dimensionality (e.g., three-dimensional), then the shape of des will include additional dimensions. The operational simulation F(des) produces scattering parameters as a result that has a shape of (Nwavelengths, Nports), with Nwavelengths being the number of wavelengths tested by the operational simulation and Nports being the number of input and/or output ports of the initial design.
In order to create a linear approximation of the operational simulation, a Jacobian of the operational simulation is used. The Jacobian, represented by
has a shape of (Nwavelengths, Nports, Nx, Ny), and indicates a gradient for each voxel 612 of the design area for each wavelength and each port. The linear model for the operational simulation may then be expressed as:
F′(des)=F(des0)+J(des−des0)
In other words, the result of the linear model approximation of the simulation of an updated design (des) may be computed by simulating the initial design (des0), and adding the result of the Jacobian multiplied by the differences between the updated design (des) and the initial design (des0).
Accordingly, at block 810, a Jacobian of the simulated performance metric is determined. Any suitable technique for determining the Jacobian may be used. In some embodiments, adjoint simulation techniques such as those discussed above with respect to
At block 812, performance of the updated design (which had been updated at block 808 based on the result of the simulation and backpropagation) is estimated using the Jacobian of the simulated performance metric of the initial design to determine an estimated performance metric. That is, des is the updated design, des0 is the initial design, the simulated performance metric determined at block 804 is F(des0), and Jacobian of the simulated performance metric of the initial design determined at block 810 is J, and these values are used to efficiently determine F′(des) without performing another operational simulation.
At block 814, a gradient of the estimated performance metric is backpropagated to determine an updated structural gradient, and at block 816, a further updated design is generated by updating the updated design based on the updated structural gradient. The loss metric may be defined as L(F (des)), instead of L(F (des)) as used at block 806. While the accuracy of the estimated performance metric may be lower than if the full operational simulation was conducted, it has been determined that the accuracy of the estimated performance metric is high enough to allow one or more iterations of the operational simulation to be skipped.
The method 800 then proceeds to a decision block 818, where a determination is made regarding whether further iterations of the estimation of the performance metric using the linear model for the operational simulation should be conducted. In some embodiments, the actions of blocks 812 to 816 may be performed a single time before proceeding. In some embodiments, the accuracy of the estimated performance metric may remain high enough to be useful for several iterations of estimation and structural updates, and so the estimation and updates in blocks 812 to 816 may be iterated several times before moving on to a further operational simulation. In some embodiments, a number of times the actions of blocks 812 to 816 are repeated may be a tunable hyperparameter in the overall method 800. In some embodiments, the number of times the actions of blocks 812 to 816 are repeated may be a predetermined number, such as one time, two times, three times, or any other suitable number of times.
Accordingly, if it is determined that the actions of blocks 812 to 816 have not been repeated the desired number of times, then the determination at decision block 818 is YES, and the method 800 returns to block 812 to perform a subsequent iteration of the estimation and structural updates. One will recognize that on the next iteration, the further updated design is used as the updated design, while the previously determined Jacobian and simulated performance metric are reused.
Otherwise, if it is determined that the actions of blocks 812 to 816 have already been repeated the desired number of times, then the determination at decision block 818 is NO, and the method 800 proceeds to decision block 820.
At decision block 820, a determination is made as to whether further iterations of the update of design are to be processed. In some embodiments, the determination is based on whether the loss metric has converged to a global or local minimum value (i.e., the loss metric is not improving after two or more iterations of updating of the design). In some embodiments, the determination is based on whether the loss metric has reached a threshold value that indicates usable performance. In some embodiments, the determination is based on whether a predetermined number of update iterations have been performed.
If it is determined that further update iterations are desired, then the result of decision block 820 is NO, and the method 800 returns to block 804 to perform another iteration that includes an operational simulation to determine a simulated performance metric and one or more estimations to produce estimated performance metrics.
Returning to decision block 820, if it is determined that further update iterations are not desired, then the result of decision block 820 is YES, and the method 800 proceeds to block 822. Block 822 shows providing the further updated design of the physical device to the fabrication system to fabricate the physical device. The fabrication system then fabricates the physical device based on the optimized design.
The method 800 then proceeds to an end block and terminates.
In the preceding description, numerous specific details are set forth to provide an understanding of various embodiments of the present disclosure. One skilled in the relevant art will recognize, however, that the techniques described herein can be practiced without one or more of the specific details, or with other methods, components, materials, etc. In other instances, well-known structures, materials, or operations are not shown or described in detail to avoid obscuring certain aspects.
Reference throughout this specification to “one embodiment” or “an embodiment” means that a particular feature, structure, or characteristic described in connection with the embodiment is included in at least one embodiment of the present invention. Thus, the appearances of the phrases “in one embodiment” or “in an embodiment” in various places throughout this specification are not necessarily all referring to the same embodiment. Furthermore, the particular features, structures, or characteristics may be combined in any suitable manner in one or more embodiments.
The order in which some or all of the blocks appear in each method flowchart should not be deemed limiting. Rather, one of ordinary skill in the art having the benefit of the present disclosure will understand that actions associated with some of the blocks may be executed in a variety of orders not illustrated, or even in parallel.
The processes explained above are described in terms of computer software and hardware. The techniques described may constitute machine-executable instructions embodied within a tangible or non-transitory machine (e.g., computer) readable storage medium, that when executed by a machine will cause the machine to perform the operations described. Additionally, the processes may be embodied within hardware, such as an application specific integrated circuit (“ASIC”) or otherwise.
The above description of illustrated embodiments of the invention, including what is described in the Abstract, is not intended to be exhaustive or to limit the invention to the precise forms disclosed. While specific embodiments of, and examples for, the invention are described herein for illustrative purposes, various modifications are possible within the scope of the invention, as those skilled in the relevant art will recognize.
These modifications can be made to the invention in light of the above detailed description. The terms used in the following claims should not be construed to limit the invention to the specific embodiments disclosed in the specification. Rather, the scope of the invention is to be determined entirely by the following claims, which are to be construed in accordance with established doctrines of claim interpretation.