SHARE
Follow this article on Twitter Facebook LinkedIn Bookmark and Share
Home >> No Category

Intel to bring out the metal at 45 nanometers

Intel to bring out the metal at 45 nanometers

By:  Tom Krazit  On: 05 Nov 2003 For: IDG News Service Creator

Intel Corp. will change two materials used in the manufacturing of its chips in order to improve performance and reduce power leakage as its transistors shrink over the next four or five years, the company announced Wednesday.

Intel Corp. will change two materials used in the manufacturing of its chips in order to improve performance and reduce power leakage as its transistors shrink over the next four or five years, the company announced Wednesday.

When Intel rolls out its 45 nanometer process technology, scheduled for 2007, it will substitute a "high-k" material for the silicon dioxide gate dielectric currently used in making transistors for its processors. The Santa Clara, Calif., company will also use metal gate electrodes in place of the polysilicon gate electrodes on its current transistors.

"A transistor is basically a sophisticated switch, and we're changing two small elements to prevent current leakage," said Ken David, director of components research for Intel's technology and manufacturing group, during a conference call for media and analysts. Intel fellow Robert Chau will provide additional details about the new technologies in a paper to be presented to attendees at the International Workshop on Gate Insulator in Tokyo on Thursday.

The silicon dioxide gate dielectric in Intel's transistors is used to keep the electric field applied to the switching mechanism, or gate electrode, of a transistor from mixing with the current flowing through the transistor, said Dean McCarron, principal analyst with Mercury Research Inc. in Cave Creek, Ariz.

As semiconductor companies have continued to manufacture smaller and faster transistors, the width of that gate dielectric has decreased to the point where electric current can leak from the channel through which it flows out onto the surface of the chip, causing heat to dissipate from the chip, David said.

After five years of research aimed at solving the leakage problem, Intel chose a material with a high "k" value that does just as good a job as silicon dioxide in separating the electrical fields, but is thick enough to prevent current leakage, David said. A material's "k" value refers to its ability to compress electrical fields.

The company is not releasing the properties or identity of the new material, he said. It allows about 100 times less current to leak from the transistor and improves the capacitance of the transistor by up to 60 per cent, as compared to silicon dioxide, David said. Improved capacitance results in faster transistors, he said.

But this new high-k material does not work very well with the polysilicon gate electrodes currently used in Intel's transistors, David said. Due to incompatiblities between the high-k material and the polysilicon, the transistor requires more voltage in order to function, and the electrons flowing through the transistor move at a slower rate, he said.

To solve those problems, Intel will use a metal gate electrode when it rolls out the high-k material, David said. The company will use one kind of metal for positive transistors, and another for negative transistors, and tweak its process technology to allow both metals to interact, he said. Intel is also not disclosing the particular metals it selected.


Sign up for our Newsletters












Print |  Views: 300   |   Rating:offoffoffoffoff  (0 votes)
Rate this article on a scale of
1 to 5 stars,5 being the best.




Tom Krazit Tom Krazit is a contributor to the International Data Group (IDG) News Service, which publishes global technology stories from bureaus around the world to more than 300 publications in more than 60 countries.

Related Content

Better chips coming, says Intel
Better chips coming, says IntelResearchers at Intel Corp. have found a better way to insulate circuits, enabling them to save energy as they pack more transistors onto each processor. Intel could start building chips with these new "tri-gate transistors" by 2010, enabling either a 45 percent increase in speed or a 35 percent reduction in total power used, compared to the company's current 65-nanometer process transistors.
Intel to ship 45-nano chip next year
Intel to ship 45-nano chip next yearIntel Corp. will enter the next era of Moore's Law in the second half of 2007 with commercial shipment of its first PC processors based on a 45-nanometer manufacturing process, the company said Wednesday. Intel showed off what it called the world's first fully functional SRAM (static RAM) chip made with a 45nm process technology.
Intel prepares for next 20 years of chip making
Intel prepares for next 20 years of chip makingIntel Corp. drew the curtain Friday on some of its future research projects to continue making transistors smaller, faster, and less power-hungry out as far as 2020.
Intel goes tick tock
by joaquim p. menezes - “our tick-tock strategy” – is how intel ceo, paul ottelini, described his company’s game plan to alternate the latest silicon technology,
blog comments powered by Disqus