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After many years of research, micro processors will be build of transistors
using different materials as have been the case in the past 40 years:
"Gordon Moore, 78, came out of retirement, where he spends some of his time
in Hawaii, to issue a statement Friday about the Intel team's innovation.
He said Intel's use of high-k and metal materials ``marks the biggest change
in transistor technology'' since Intel's pioneering use of polysilicon in 1969."
Transistor scaling could not continue when the isolating SiO2 dielectric
that separates the Gate of CMOS transistor from the conducting Channel
became 1.2 nm or just five molecules thick. Experimental transistors which
reached a thickness of 0.8 nm were to leaky to be used in production.
The solution to continue scaling now is to use materials which have a far
higher dielectric constant so that the isolating layer can be much thicker.
Hafnium based compounds are used while the traditional material used for
the gate, polysilicon, is replaced by metals.
Rather, surprisingly, after many years of difficult progress in research, both
Intel and IBM/AMD now announced that this new technique will go into
mass production for their micro processors. Intel will roll out chips at the
end of the year while IBM and AMD plan to do so in mid 2008.
http://www.mercurynews.com/mld/mercurynews/16558220.htm
http://www.intel.com/technology/silicon/45nm_technology.htm?iid=homepage+42nm
Regards, Hans
using different materials as have been the case in the past 40 years:
"Gordon Moore, 78, came out of retirement, where he spends some of his time
in Hawaii, to issue a statement Friday about the Intel team's innovation.
He said Intel's use of high-k and metal materials ``marks the biggest change
in transistor technology'' since Intel's pioneering use of polysilicon in 1969."
Transistor scaling could not continue when the isolating SiO2 dielectric
that separates the Gate of CMOS transistor from the conducting Channel
became 1.2 nm or just five molecules thick. Experimental transistors which
reached a thickness of 0.8 nm were to leaky to be used in production.
The solution to continue scaling now is to use materials which have a far
higher dielectric constant so that the isolating layer can be much thicker.
Hafnium based compounds are used while the traditional material used for
the gate, polysilicon, is replaced by metals.
Rather, surprisingly, after many years of difficult progress in research, both
Intel and IBM/AMD now announced that this new technique will go into
mass production for their micro processors. Intel will roll out chips at the
end of the year while IBM and AMD plan to do so in mid 2008.
http://www.mercurynews.com/mld/mercurynews/16558220.htm
http://www.intel.com/technology/silicon/45nm_technology.htm?iid=homepage+42nm
Regards, Hans
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