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COMMERCE BUSINESS DAILY ISSUE OF JULY 2,1996 PSA#1628Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA), Contracts Management
Office (CMO), 3701 N. Fairfax Dr., Arlington VA 22203-1714 A -- FREE SPACE OPTICAL INTERCONNECT ACCELERATOR (FSOIA) SOL BAA 96-31
DUE 110496 POC Dr. ANIS HUSAIN, DARPA/ETO, fax (703) 696-2206. PROGRAM
OBJECTIVE AND DESCRIPTION: The Defense Advanced Research Projects
Agency (DARPA) is soliciting proposals for technical research in the
area of Free Space Optical Interconnect Accelerators (FSOIAs). Free
space optical interconnects (FSOIs) promise to provide the capability
of lower power, higher I/O density, higher bandwidth and global
interconnectivity between chips, MCMs and boards. Applications of
particular interest to DARPA include, but are not limited to:
reconfigurable routing and switching for future multi-processor systems
in the 0.1, 10Tbit/s which is an order of magnitude reduction in
power-volume product, rapid parallel memory access to ROM electronic or
optical memory where one may achieve the access speed of RAM but with
Gbyte capacity, I/O intensive signal/data/2-D image processing
transforms where order of magnitude throughput improvements are
considered possible, and combinations of the above. The FSOIA is
considered an effective application for evaluating the inherent
advantages of combining the advantages of optics for communications and
topological transformations with the density and computational power of
electronics. The use of FSOIs is anticipated to enable orders of
magnitude improvement over conventional electronic techniques in future
military and commercial information processing systems. Program
emphasis will be on applications that are expected to most clearly
demonstrate the advantages of a free space optical interconnect-based
accelerator to demonstrate one or more specific functions including
(but not limited to): reconfigurable routing and switching for future
multi-processor systems, rapid parallel memory access to/from
electronic or optical memory, and I/O intensive signal/data/2-D image
processing. There are three major areas of interest: (I) FSOIA
SIMULATOR: This area of interest seeks to model the performance of the
FSOIA for a specific application. The FSOIA simulator will facilitate,
for the selected high-payoff application(s), the rapid development,
design and assessment (performance and cost analysis) of alternative
FSOI architectures relative to conventional 2-D and 3-D
electrically-based implementations of the selected functions, (II)
FSOIA COMPONENT DEVELOPMENT: This area of interest addresses the
analysis of the critical components required to realize the FSOI
accelerator. Of particular interest are the relative costs/benefits of
various component options: optical emitter-based or modulator-based
architectures, choice of holographic optical elements or micro or macro
optical distribution schemes, the choice of detector elements in
silicon or III-V material, the choice of packaging scheme for the
optical to electronic integration, such as liftoff, fusion/thermal
bonding, or bump bonding. DARPA anticipates a program which will be
able to not only make design tradeoffs at the component, architecture
and systems level but also be capable of fabricating critical
components and eventually producing a prototype FSOI accelerator for
the selected application(s), and (III) FSOIA DEVELOPMENT AND
DEMONSTRATION: This area of interest addresses developing and
demonstrating FSOI technology in a way which will enable high-payoff
military and commercial applications in the area of information
processing. It is anticipated that FSOIs can be applied to several
levels of interconnects including (but not limited to): board-to-board,
MCM-MCM or even down to the chip-to-chip level. Analog optical
processing approaches are not the subject of this solicitation nor are
digital optical computing approaches (where the optical processing
elements are optical). DARPA is interested in a program that will
result in a core set of building blocks of optoelectronic components
and packaging technologies that can be applied across several of the
above applications. Additional information on these areas of interest
is provided in the Areas of Interest Section of the BAA 96-31 Proposer
Information Pamphlet described below. PROGRAM SCOPE: Collaborative
efforts based on vertically integrated research teams are strongly
encouraged. Vertical integration refers to close collaboration among
component developer/manufacturers, sub-system developers and system
integrators (users), and researchers (e.g., Universities). Proposed
teams should have expertise and experience as optoelectronic component
industrial developers/producers, users and relevant researchers. The
offerors should be capable of developing and demonstrating the FSOIA
developed under the program for high-payoff applications in information
processing, with the potential if successful (not under this program)
of commercializing the results. The program scope does not include a
field insertion but rather a concept demonstration. Offerors must
propose as one cohesive program all of the areas of interest. Awards
totalling approximately $20,000,000 over four years are expected to be
made during the first quarter of calendar year 1997. Multiple awards
are anticipated. Cost sharing is strongly encouraged. The technical POC
for this effort is Anis Husain, fax (703) 696-2206, email:
ahusain@darpa.mil. GENERAL INFORMATION: Proposers must obtain a
pamphlet, BAA 96-31 Proposer Information Pamphlet, which provides
further information on areas of interest, the submission, evaluation,
and funding processes, and proposal and proposal abstract formats. This
pamphlet may be obtained by fax, electronic mail, or mail request to
the administrative contact address given below. Proposals not meeting
the format described in the pamphlet may not be reviewed. In order to
minimize unnecessary effort in proposal preparation and review,
proposers are strongly encouraged to submit proposal abstracts in
advance of full proposals. An original and nine (9) copies of the
proposal abstract must be submitted to DARPA/ETO, 3701 North Fairfax
Drive, Arlington, VA 22203-1714 (ATTN: BAA 96-31), on or before 4:00
P.M., September 9, 1996. Proposal abstracts received after this date
may not be reviewed. Upon review, DARPA will provide written feedback
on the likelihood of a full proposal being selected and the date and
time for submission of a full proposal. Proposers not submitting
proposal abstracts must submit an original and nine (9) copies of the
full proposal to DARPA/ETO, 3701 North Fairfax Drive, Arlington, VA
22203-1714 (ATTN: BAA 96-31), on or before 4:00 P.M., November 4, 1996,
in order to be considered. This notice, in conjunction with the
pamphlet BAA 96-31 Proposer Information, constitutes the total BAA. No
additional information is available, nor will a formal RFP or other
solicitation regarding this announcement be issued. Requests for same
will be disregarded. The Government reserves the right to select for
award all, some, or none of the proposals received. All responsible
sources capable of satisfying the Government's needs may submit a
proposal which shall be considered by DARPA. Historically Black
Colleges and Universities (HBCU) and Minority Institutions (MI) are
encouraged to submit proposals and join others in submitting proposals,
however, no portion of this BAA will be set aside for HBCU and MI
participation due to the impracticality of reserving discrete or
severable areas of research in FSOIA. All administrative correspondence
and questions on this solicitation, including requests for information
on how to submit a proposal abstract or proposal to this BAA, should
be directed to one of the administrative addresses below, e-mail or fax
is preferred. DARPA intends to use electronic mail and fax for
correspondence regarding BAA 96-31. Proposals and proposal abstracts
may not be submitted by fax or e-mail, any so sent will be disregarded.
EVALUATION CRITERIA: Evaluation of proposal abstracts and proposals
will be accomplished through a technical review of each proposal using
the following criteria, which are listed in descending order of
relative importance: (1) overall scientific quality, technical merit,
and realism, (2) potential contribution of the proposed effort in terms
of its level of impact on existing or future information systems and
how well the impact is quantified and relevance to the DARPA mission,
(3) effectiveness of the management plan, and, if applicable, the team
structure and team composition, (4) offeror's commitment to
commercialization, (5) offeror's capabilities, key personnel, past
performance, related experience, facilities and techniques or unique
combination of these that form integral factors for achieving the
proposal's objectives, and (6) cost realism. Note: cost realism will
only be significant in proposals which have significantly under or
over-estimated the cost to complete their effort. The administrative
addresses for this BAA are: Fax: (703) 351-8616 (Addressed to:
DARPA/ETO, BAA 96-31), Electronic Mail: BAA96-31@darpa.mil, and Mail:
DARPA/ETO, Attn: BAA 96-31, 3701 N. Fairfax Drive, Arlington, VA
22203-1714. This announcement may be retrieved via the WWW at URL
http://www.darpa.mil/ in the solicitations area. (0180) Loren Data Corp. http://www.ld.com (SYN# 0002 19960701\A-0002.SOL)
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