An integrated large-scale photonic accelerator with ultralow latency

Hua S, Divita E, Yu S, Peng B, Roques-Carmes C, Su Z, Chen Z, Bai Y, Zou J, Zhu Y, Xu Y, Lu C, Di Y, Chen H, Jiang L, Wang L, Ou L, Zhang C, Chen J, Zhang W, Zhu H, Kuang W, Wang L, Meng H, Steinman M, Shen Y. 2025. An integrated large-scale photonic accelerator with ultralow latency. Nature. 640, 361–367.

Download (ext.)

Journal Article | Published | English

Scopus indexed
Author
Hua, Shiyue; Divita, Erwan; Yu, Shanshan; Peng, Bo; Roques-Carmes, CharlesISTA; Su, Zhan; Chen, Zhang; Bai, Yanfei; Zou, Jinghui; Zhu, Yunpeng; Xu, Yelong; Lu, Cheng-kuan
All
Abstract
Integrated photonics, particularly silicon photonics, have emerged as cutting-edge technology driven by promising applications such as short-reach communications, autonomous driving, biosensing and photonic computing1,2,3,4. As advances in AI lead to growing computing demands, photonic computing has gained considerable attention as an appealing candidate. Nonetheless, there are substantial technical challenges in the scaling up of integrated photonics systems to realize these advantages, such as ensuring consistent performance gains in upscaled integrated device clusters, establishing standard designs and verification processes for complex circuits, as well as packaging large-scale systems. These obstacles arise primarily because of the relative immaturity of integrated photonics manufacturing and the scarcity of advanced packaging solutions involving photonics. Here we report a large-scale integrated photonic accelerator comprising more than 16,000 photonic components. The accelerator is designed to deliver standard linear matrix multiply–accumulate (MAC) functions, enabling computing with high speed up to 1 GHz frequency and low latency as small as 3 ns per cycle. Logic, memory and control functions that support photonic matrix MAC operations were designed into a cointegrated electronics chip. To seamlessly integrate the electronics and photonics chips at the commercial scale, we have made use of an innovative 2.5D hybrid advanced packaging approach. Through the development of this accelerator system, we demonstrate an ultralow computation latency for heuristic solvers of computationally hard Ising problems whose performance greatly relies on the computing latency.
Publishing Year
Date Published
2025-04-09
Journal Title
Nature
Publisher
Springer Nature
Volume
640
Page
361-367
ISSN
eISSN
IST-REx-ID

Cite this

Hua S, Divita E, Yu S, et al. An integrated large-scale photonic accelerator with ultralow latency. Nature. 2025;640:361-367. doi:10.1038/s41586-025-08786-6
Hua, S., Divita, E., Yu, S., Peng, B., Roques-Carmes, C., Su, Z., … Shen, Y. (2025). An integrated large-scale photonic accelerator with ultralow latency. Nature. Springer Nature. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-025-08786-6
Hua, Shiyue, Erwan Divita, Shanshan Yu, Bo Peng, Charles Roques-Carmes, Zhan Su, Zhang Chen, et al. “An Integrated Large-Scale Photonic Accelerator with Ultralow Latency.” Nature. Springer Nature, 2025. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-025-08786-6.
S. Hua et al., “An integrated large-scale photonic accelerator with ultralow latency,” Nature, vol. 640. Springer Nature, pp. 361–367, 2025.
Hua S, Divita E, Yu S, Peng B, Roques-Carmes C, Su Z, Chen Z, Bai Y, Zou J, Zhu Y, Xu Y, Lu C, Di Y, Chen H, Jiang L, Wang L, Ou L, Zhang C, Chen J, Zhang W, Zhu H, Kuang W, Wang L, Meng H, Steinman M, Shen Y. 2025. An integrated large-scale photonic accelerator with ultralow latency. Nature. 640, 361–367.
Hua, Shiyue, et al. “An Integrated Large-Scale Photonic Accelerator with Ultralow Latency.” Nature, vol. 640, Springer Nature, 2025, pp. 361–67, doi:10.1038/s41586-025-08786-6.
All files available under the following license(s):
Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International (CC BY-NC-ND 4.0):

Link(s) to Main File(s)
Access Level
OA Open Access

Export

Marked Publications

Open Data ISTA Research Explorer

Sources

PMID: 40205213
PubMed | Europe PMC

Search this title in

Google Scholar