|
|||
Path to 2nm May Not Be Worth ItDiminishing returns may evaporate at 5nm Rick Merritt, EETimes SANTA CLARA, Calif. — Engineers see many options to create 5-, 3- and even 2-nm semiconductor process technologies, but some are not sure they will be able to squeeze commercial advantages from them even at 5nm. The increasing complexity and cost of making ever smaller chips is leading to diminishing returns. Data rates are peaking at 3 GHz for mobile processors, and power and area gains will narrow at 7nm, said a Qualcomm engineer in a panel at a Synopsys user group event here. Speed gains of 16 percent at 10nm may dry up at 7nm due to resistance in metal lines. Power savings will shrink from 30 percent at 10nm to 10-25 percent at 7nm, and area shrinks may decline from 37 percent at 10nm to 20-30 percent at 7nm, said Paul Penzes, a senior director of engineering on Qualcomm’s design technology team. For decades, the electronics industry followed a roadmap codified by Moore’s Law of doubling the number of transistors on a chip roughly every two years. The result was a fast pace of ever smaller, faster, cheaper products from PCs to smartphones. |
Home | Feedback | Register | Site Map |
All material on this site Copyright © 2017 Design And Reuse S.A. All rights reserved. |