Intel has completed the development phase of its next-generation
manufacturing process that will be used to make 32nm chips, and said it is on
track for production in the fourth quarter of 2009.
A move to
32nm
technology will enable Intel to produce more energy-efficient and faster
switching transistors, leading to higher performance processors that consume
less power. Intel said it will reveal more details of its 32nm process at the
IEEE International Electron Devices meeting (IEDM) in San Francisco next week.
The 32nm process makes use of the second generation of Intel's high-k and
metal gate technology, the company said. The first chips to be built from it are
expected to be "die-shrink" versions of the current 45nm Nehalem family of
processors, as part of Intel's "tick-tock" strategy of alternating the
introduction of a new chip architecture followed by that of a new process
technology.
In a statement, Intel senior fellow Mark Bohr said that the company's
manufacturing strategy had already led to the creation of entirely new product
lines for MIDs, consumer electronics, embedded computers and
netbooks
this year.
Intel is also expected to participate in a briefing on future 22nm chip
technology during IEDM.
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