Intel Opens Door on 7nm, Foundry
SAN FRANCISCO — Intel believes it can drive Moore’s Law down to 7 nm even without long-delayed advances in lithography. It also gave its most detailed look to date at its foundry service for sharing its chipmaking prowess, including a description of a new low-cost alternative to 2.5D chip stacking it has in development.
“My day job is working on [research for a process to make] 7 nm [chips and] I believe there is a way without EUV,” said Intel fellow Mark Bohr, responding to a question after a talk on Intel’s new 14 nm process.
To read the full article, click here
Related Semiconductor IP
- General use, integer-N 4GHz Hybrid Phase Locked Loop on TSMC 28HPC
- JPEG XL Encoder
- LPDDR6/5X/5 PHY V2 - Intel 18A-P
- ML-KEM Key Encapsulation & ML-DSA Digital Signature Engine
- MIPI SoundWire I3S Peripheral IP
Related News
- Synopsys and Intel Foundry Propel Angstrom-Scale Chip Designs on Intel 18A and Intel 18A-P Technologies
- MediaTek's Global Ambition Opens Door to CEVA
- Sofics joins the Intel Foundry Services (IFS) Accelerator IP Alliance program
- Lorentz Solution Joins Intel Foundry Services (IFS) Accelerator EDA Alliance Program to Enable Peakview EM Platform and Accelerate IC and 3DIC Designs
Latest News
- BAE Systems advances RH12™ Storefront with new radiation-hardened circuit technology for space community
- GlobalFoundries and BAE Systems Collaborate on Semiconductors for Space
- Synopsys Appoints Mike Ellow as Chief Revenue Officer
- Ainekko Buys Esperanto Hardware IP, Open-Sources It
- Frontgrade Gaisler and DELTATEC Enable Advanced Space Computing Across Multiple Missions