By
Michael Kanellos
Monday, August 30 2004 03:01 PM
URL:
http://www.zdnetasia.com/news/hardware/0,39042972,39191801,00.htm
Intel will try to further cut power
consumption in its next generation of chips by using improved strained
silicon, along with transistors that block power to other circuits, and
other added features.
The Santa Clara, Calif.-based PC maker will incorporate a number of changes in its 65-nanometer manufacturing process,
which will begin in 2005, said Mark Bohr, an Intel senior fellow and
director of processor architecture and integration. Experimental SRAM
chips have already been produced on the process.
Depending on the goals of the chip designer, circuits made on the
65-nanometer process can boost performance or cut power consumption or
do both, but Intel is putting a definite accent on energy conservation. (65-nanometer refers to the average size of features of a chip. A nanometer is a billionth of a meter.)
The enhanced version of strained silicon--a technology that first
appeared in Intel's 90-nanometer chips--can increase performance by 30
percent compared with nonstrained chips or provide a 4x improvement in
inadvertent electricity leakage.
"With strained silicon, Intel is at least a generation ahead," Bohr
said. "The enhanced strained silicon can be used to enhance drive
current or reduce leakage."
Competitors IBM and Advanced Micro Devices have also begun to include strained silicon in chips.
Shrinking transistors and transistor components is at the heart of Moore's Law,
which postulates that the number of transistors on a chip doubles every
two years. Smaller transistors generally are faster (electrons have to
cover less ground) and can result in smaller, cheaper, better and more
energy-efficient chips. Ten million transistors in the test SRAM chips
could fit on the tip of a ballpoint pen.
Following Moore's Law rigorously over the last 30 years,
however, has resulted in extremely dense chips that are difficult to
design, expensive to produce, tough to release on schedule and that exude as much heat, proportionally, as a rocket nozzle.
"As we scale dimensions, things get tougher," Bohr said.
Other alternations in the 65-nanometer generation will come in the
oxide gate, a thin layer that helps control the flow of electrons
between a transistor's source and the drain, a key element in
controlling whether a computer sees a piece of data as a "1" or a "0."
In 65-nanometer chips, the length of gate oxide will get
shorter, which will improve performance, but the gate oxide will retain
its thickness. Typically, the oxide gets thinner in manufacturing
transitions. By keeping the thickness the same, capacitance (a function
of how much energy gets stored in a given material) goes down by 20
percent, which consequently reduces the potential for leakage.
Chips made on this process will also include sleep transistors that shut off power to other blocks of transistors.
Bohr couldn't quantify the power consumption these sleep transistors
will curb, but potentially it could be quite a bit in both active power
consumption and leakage.
"It is a noticeable gain in leakage reduction," he said.
The first chips made on the 65-nanometer process will come out in late
2005, Bohr said, first in Oregon and subsequently in Arizona and
Ireland. He added that the transition from 90-nanometer to 65-nanometer
probably won't be as taxing as the shift from 130-nanometer to
90-nanometer, which involved more changes in the underlying silicon.
Nonetheless, history shows that transitions in manufacturing
take longer than expected. Designers often opt for performance over
power savings.
"They are giving their circuit designers a lot of tools to
control power, but it remains to be seen how they will use these
skills," said Nathan Brookwood, an analyst with Insight 64.
Manufacturing transitions are also expected to start occurring
at three-year, rather than two-year, intervals as time goes on. Many
expect the 45-nanometer transition slated for 2007 to be particularly
difficult, as chipmakers will likely have to change the materials in
the transistor gate and gate oxide. By 2021 or so, the shrinking of
transistor elements under Moore's Law is expected to come to an end.
Bohr added that Intel will adapt 248- and 193-nanometer lithography
tools to produce 65-nanometer chips. Lithography tools "draw"
transistors on wafers by shining light onto masks, maps of a chip's
circuitry that cost millions of dollars to produce. The shadow cast by
the masks (reduced greatly in size by lenses) in turn causes
photoresistant chemicals on the wafer to react and expose metal.
New generations of lithography tools often take years to come to market
and can cost US$15 million or more, so adapting old tools for the new
chips reduces risk exposure.
Intel will further engage in "dry" lithography for 65-nanometer
manufacturing. Some manufacturers are currently exploring the
possibility of immersion lithography,
in which the wafers are submerged in water. The water helps focus the
laser beam, which in turn lets engineers draw smaller circuits.
Extreme Ultraviolet, or EUV, lithography, which uses light with
a much smaller wavelength, will start to replace 193-nanometer
equipment toward the end of the decade.
One thing Intel's 65-nanometer chips won't contain is
Silicon-on-Insulator, or SOI, an additional layer that advocates say
cuts leakage power. In the early part of the decade, Intel experimented
with adding what it called Ultra Thin SOI into its chips.
Now that notion has been scrapped, and Intel believes the power savings
that Ultra Thin SOI would have brought will be accomplished through the
tri-gate transistor, a future transistor that effectively triples the area inside a transistor for transporting electrons.