facebook rss twitter

Intel, Toshiba and Samsung to work together to shrink chips

by Pete Mason on 29 October 2010, 14:26

Tags: Intel (NASDAQ:INTC), Samsung (005935.KS), Toshiba (TYO:6502)

Quick Link: HEXUS.net/qa2sb

Add to My Vault: x

Intel has been making a lot of friends this week. As well as working with industry heavyweights on SSD design and Fortune 500 companies in the cloud, Nikkei Daily (via Reuters) has uncovered a collaboration with Toshiba and Samsung to develop new fabrication technologies.

The goal will be to develop a 10nm manufacturing process for the next generation of CPUs and flash chips. Intel's latest CPUs are based on a 35nm process, while upcoming memory chips - due to be released in the next six months - will be based on 25nm or 22nm processes.

Obviously all of the companies involved have a pretty vested interest in these technologies. Samsung and Toshiba are the top two manufacturers of NAND-type memory chips, while Intel is the number one chipmaker overall, with an increasingly large interest in flash memory.

However, current technology will not allow manufacturers to continue to shrink chips as a way of increasing component density and decreasing power-usage. Though the breakthroughs associated with high-k metal gates have allowed a certain amount of progress to be made, it won't be sufficient beyond around 20nm.

According to the report, the collaboration is expected to be formalised soon, at which point about ten other tech companies will be invited to join. Around half of the ¥10 billion (£78 million) initial research funding will be provided by Japan's Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry, with the consortium footing the remainder of the bill.

The project is expected to be completed by 2016 and should buy chip makers more time to develop the technologies required for near-atomic scale computing.



HEXUS Forums :: 6 Comments

Login with Forum Account

Don't have an account? Register today!
20nm is absolutely tiny! :o

That's only about 75 - 100 atoms, which if you consider their size, shows just HOW SMALL they really are.

Any idea what they'll be starting to use instead of silicone? Or is that what this new “Partnership” is setting out to discover?
matty-hodgson
20nm is absolutely tiny! :o

That's only about 75 - 100 atoms, which if you consider their size, shows just HOW SMALL they really are.

Any idea what they'll be starting to use instead of silicone? Or is that what this new “Partnership” is setting out to discover?

They use bath sealant these days?! ;)

I expect the partnership will produce the sub-20 nm equivalent of the high-metal k gates currently used.

Then after that it'll probably move towards photonic logic, which then might naturally lead towards some crazy quantum computing badness. Who knows. Certainly, they can't carry on as is for much longer. Also, there are some interesting new materials out there these days, such as graphene, which can be used to make transistors. Who knew you could win a Nobel prize by using some scotch tape and pencil lead, eh? Scotch tape is remarkably handy, I must say - did you know you can make x-rays with it as well?
Fraz
They use bath sealant these days?! ;)

I expect the partnership will produce the sub-20 nm equivalent of the high-metal k gates currently used.

Then after that it'll probably move towards photonic logic, which then might naturally lead towards some crazy quantum computing badness. Who knows. Certainly, they can't carry on as is for much longer. Also, there are some interesting new materials out there these days, such as graphene, which can be used to make transistors. Who knew you could win a Nobel prize by using some scotch tape and pencil lead, eh? Scotch tape is remarkably handy, I must say - did you know you can make x-rays with it as well?

I'm now expecting a step by step guide for doing that! :p
matty-hodgson
I'm now expecting a step by step guide for doing that! :p

Peel it off glass at about 3cm per second IIRC. Produces x-rays good enough to x-ray your hand with. Also produces a visible glow in a darkened room. Some dudes made a machine that used scotch tape to take x-rays:

http://www.nytimes.com/2008/10/28/science/28xray.html

It was in Nature a couple of years back also.

Edit: Nope - you don't need the glass - you can just peel it off the spool and it produces x-rays just fine apparently. Pretty neat really.
transistors only a few hundred atoms big to scotch tape creating energy in a similar fashion to the sun… what a topic