To make a computer more powerful, you have to increase the frequency of its internal clock, a vital component that orchestrates the operation of circuits and times exchanges between components. The faster the exchanges, the more powerful the computer. With the traditional tree-mesh clock-signal distribution architectures, two distant components do not receive the clock signal at the same time. This means that a safety margin must be factored in, limiting the ability to increase clock frequency.
Clock-mesh architecture makes signal distribution more uniform, reducing this time delay. The clock-mesh technology Leti implemented on a multicore circuit reduced the differences in signal arrival times at two distant points by 50%.
The energy-hungry architecture can bring clock frequency to levels in excess of 2 GHz. It is suitable for HPC, an application where performance takes priority over energy efficiency. Leti is also working on more energy-efficient architectures like small distributed systems.