AN 738: Intel® Arria® 10 Device Design Guidelines

ID 683555
Date 6/30/2017
Public
Document Table of Contents

1.11.2. Transceiver Bank Architecture

The transceiver bank is the fundamental unit that contains all the functional blocks related to the device's high speed serial transceivers.

Each transceiver bank includes six transceiver channels in all devices except for the devices with 66 transceiver channels. These devices (with 66 transceiver channels) have both six channel and three channel transceiver banks. The uppermost transceiver bank on the left and the right side of these devices is a three channel transceiver bank. All other devices contain six channel transceiver banks.

The figures below show the transceiver bank architecture with the phase locked loop (PLL) and clock generation block (CGB) resources available in each bank.

Figure 3. Three-Channel GX Transceiver Bank Architecture
Figure 4. Six-Channel GX Transceiver Bank Architecture
Figure 5. GT Transceiver Bank Architecture for Bank GXBL1G
Note: In GT devices, the transceiver banks GXBL1E, GXBL1G, and GXBL1H include GT channels.
Figure 6. GT Transceiver Bank Architecture for Banks GXBL1E and GXBL1H

The transceiver channels perform all the required PHY layer functions between the FPGA fabric and the physical medium. The high speed clock required by the transceiver channels is generated by the transceiver PLLs. The master and local clock generation blocks (CGBs) provide the necessary high speed serial and low speed parallel clocks to drive the non-bonded and bonded channels in the transceiver bank.