Difference between revisions of "Routing layer"

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(added note on association with the below assembly layer)
(Related: added some related page links)
 
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* [[Redundancy]] <br>fail stop  producer, fail stop consumer, redundant network topology, ...
 
* [[Redundancy]] <br>fail stop  producer, fail stop consumer, redundant network topology, ...
 
* [[Transportation and transmission]]
 
* [[Transportation and transmission]]
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* [[Gemstone metamaterial on chip factory]]
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* [[Design of gem-gum on-chip factories]]
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* [[Assembly layer]], [[sub-layer]]
  
 
== External links ==
 
== External links ==

Latest revision as of 20:12, 28 August 2022

This article is a stub. It needs to be expanded.
Conceptual cross-section through an assembly level of a gem-gum factory with an especial focus on routing layer.

Delineation of the concept

Routing layers are not to confuse with transport channels!
Unlike routing layers which are wedged between (but can still be counted to) assembly levels,
transport channels lead into- or out-of assembly levels that have more than one single of sub layers
(for the sake of picking an optimal compenslow design parameter).
See: Deprecated terminology: Transport layers

On the choice of association with the upstream (below) assembly layer

Te routing layer above an assembly layer is chosen to be
counted to the same assembly layer because it is closer in scale than the routinglayer below.

This is basically because:
Machinery for routing does not need to be (and should not be) much bigger than the parts being routed.

Related



External links

Macroscopic analogies: