Intel's new
45nm Penryn processor allows the chipmaker to take on some major challenges
facing the semiconductor industry on its road to ever smaller chips, but it is
just a small step in the overall redesign required for super-small chips.
Intel has found a new way to cut transistor leakage by swapping out some of
the materials that its uses to construct the devices.
The main benefit of this approach lies in the fact that the use of these
so-called High-K and metal gate transistors allows the chipmaker to maintain its
current transistor design and keep using current production techniques.
Current generation technologies using silicon dioxide had reached their
limits and could not be deployed in smaller chips without dramatically
increasing leakage.
Especially the High-K technique allows Intel to keep using existing
manufacturing and design techniques for several generations of semiconductors.
"This is significant, just like a lot of things happening at the 45nm scale.
It's one of the steps required to drastically change the way we manufacture
semiconductors," said Jim McGregor, a director with analyst firm
In-Stat
who covers chip designs.
Semiconductor researchers have discussed both techniques for years now, but
so far nobody has been able to demonstrate any working chips.
Intel unveiled early production units of its High-K and metal gate chips on
Friday and is preparing to start shipping them in volume later this year.
An ideal transistor is able to completely block the electric current
travelling through its components. But in practice current slips by components
that are designed to block these flows.
This process is known as leakage. It shortens battery life in notebook
computers and causes enterprise servers to produce more heat. As chip components
continue to shrink in size, leakage has become an increasing issue.
Chip developers such as
AMD and
IBM are relying on
more expensive production techniques such as Silicon on Insulator and are
planning to switch to so-called immersion lithography for their 45nm chips.
But Intel's ability to stick to its current production process ensures a low
cost and efficient transition.
Independent industry analyst
Rob
Enderle typified the announcement as "an advance that allows you to extend a
process that would otherwise be obsolete".
"It allows Intel to bring something to market that otherwise probably would
not have shown up until next year," Endrerle told
vnunet.com.
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