Intel Shrinks Chip, Hits Milestone
Prototypes of high-density chips support nearly eight times as many transistors as today's Pentium 4.
James Niccolai, IDG News Service
Intel has produced prototypes of high-density memory chips
using an advanced manufacturing process, and will use the technology in faster
microprocessors scheduled for introduction in the second half of next year, the
company announced Tuesday at the CeBIT trade show in Hanover, Germany.
The SRAM chips have a capacity of 52 megabits, which Intel claimed is an industry record, and pack 330 million transistors onto the surface of each chip, said Mark Bohr, a fellow with Intel's technology and manufacturing group. That compares with about 42 million transistors on today's Pentium 4 processor.
The memory chips won't be sold as standalone products but are significant to end users for two reasons, Bohr said. First, SRAMs provide a standard way to test out a new manufacturing process, and the prototypes show that Intel is on track to introduce its new 0.09-micron manufacturing process next year, which it will use to make faster microprocessors, Bohr said.
"These demonstrate all of the [0.09-micron] process features required for microprocessors, including transistors and interconnects," he said. "This silicon is real and fully functional."
The micron figure refers to the size of circuits etched onto the surface of the chips. One micron is equal to one one-thousandth of a millimeter, and today's fastest Pentium 4 chips are made using a 0.13-micron process. Like other chip makers, Intel moves to a new manufacturing process about every two years, which allows it to boost the speed of its chips while keeping costs down.
Chip Advances Due
The SRAM chips are also noteworthy because they can act as "portable circuit blocks" that will be integrated with future processors to boost the size of their on-chip memory cache, Bohr said. The memory cache is a kind of data reservoir that sits adjacent to the main processor, and a larger on-chip cache generally means better performance.
The first processor built using the 0.09-micron process will be a Pentium 4 code-named Prescott that is due out in the second half of 2003, Bohr said. He wouldn't say how many transistors are expected to be on the chip, but at its developer conference here recently Intel demonstrated a Pentium 4 running at 4 GHz, which it said it planned to introduce next year. Today's fastest Pentium 4 tops out at 2.2 GHz.
In the prototype chips announced Tuesday, each SRAM cell--a group of six memory transistors--measures only one square micron, which is also an industry record and compares with 20 square microns in 1994, Bohr said. The chips were manufactured at Intel's development fabrication plant in Hillsboro, Oregon, on 300-millimeter silicon wafers. Each SRAM chip measured about one square centimeter, he said.
Intel isn't the only chip maker moving forward with a 0.09-micron process. Last month, Royal Philips Electronics, STMicroelectronics, and Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing said they too had produced test chips using a 0.09-micron process and expected to offer prototypes in the second half of this year.
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