Intel Promises 5nm Silicon: IDF

abstract processor © Edelweiss - Fotolia.com

Smaller line width coming, but five years till full 450mm wafer production

Intel is confident that in the future it can produce transistors at the staggeringly small line width of five nanometers (5nm), the Intel Developer Forum  (IDF) in San Francisco heard yesterday.

Five nanometers is a step beyond the ten nanometer processes currently at the leading edge. However, it will be about five years before the new process can be made into the large-size 450 millimetre silicon wafers which make the most cost-effective mass produced chips, Mark Bohr, Intel Senior Fellow of Logic Technology Development, told an IDF press conference, according to TechEye.

To boldly go to 5nm

Bohr said that Intel is developing two versions of its technology for 22 nanometres and 14 nanometres. The P1270 is a CPU and P1271 Soc, while the 14 nanometre chips are dubbed the P1272 and the P1273.

It’s been several years since Intel staerted looking at materials and structure to continue scaling in accordance with Moore’s Law. The 3D fabrication “Trigate” technology  will be used for a couple more generations, he said.  Transistor performance and leakage are still being looked at to improve transistors.

In the last few generations Intel has improved performance and aims to continue reducing leakage. It’s doing that on several fronts for CPUs that range from mobile to server.  Intel will continue to use Trigate for 14 nanometres and 10 nanometres too.  At 22 nm, there’s 20 percent better performance on multithreaded applications and 20 percent lower power.  It is swiftly removing defect densities.

Read more of this article at TechEye