IBM has unveiled its strategy to produce future chips using a 22nm
fabrication process.
The company is adopting a technique called 'computational scaling' in order
to manufacture circuits small enough to deliver more powerful and
energy-efficient devices.
While current chips such as Intel's are manufactured
using
a 45nm process, vendors are already looking ahead to succeeding generations.
Intel plans to introduce 32nm chips in 2009, but chipmakers have hit a
problem in that current lithographic methods are not adequate for designs as
small as 22nm owing to fundamental physical limitations.
IBM said that computational scaling overcomes these limitations by using
mathematical techniques to modify the shape of the masks and the characteristics
of the illuminating source used to image the circuits for each layer of an
integrated circuit.
The company is directly tying the development into its cloud computing
strategy, claiming that the process will enable the production of smaller, more
powerful and energy-efficient devices that will be required to deliver highly
scalable web services.
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