Chip makers plot shift to larger silicon wafers
Chip makers Intel, Samsung Electronics and Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. announced Monday that they will collaborate to move chip manufacturing onto larger silicon wafers by 2012.
The move to 450-millimeter wafers will help semiconductor makers keep pace with demand for chips and also help reduce manufacturing costs per chip, Intel said. It should also result in more efficient use of the resources used to make chips, including water and energy.
The companies said they would work with the rest of the industry to help make sure all of the required components and infrastructure are developed and tested for a pilot manufacturing line by the target date.
The new wafers will be an upgrade from the 300-mm wafers that many big chip makers currently use to manufacture chips. Intel began large-scale use of 300-mm wafers in 2001, Rob Willoner, a technology analyst at Intel, said recently.
Once chip companies have made the move, their manufacturing costs should fall and end-users should start to see higher-performing chips at lower prices, said Joe Draina, associate director with the International Sematech Initiative (ISMI), which is a subsidiary of Sematech, a consortium of leading semiconductor manufacturers.
The transition to a new wafer size coincides roughly with Intel's plans to start manufacturing chips using a more advanced, 22-nanometer process in 2011. The transition to 450-mm wafers will help companies keep pace with Moore's Law, which states that the number of transistors on chips doubles every two years.
"As we start to get to those tight, smaller geometries -- 22 nm and below -- it starts to become more and more attractive and desirable to be out of 300 mm and on to a 450-mm wafer," Draina said. As feature sizes on chips shrink, the 450-mm wafer could double the chip output on the 22-nm process compared to a 300-mm wafer, Draina said
Using the analogy of making a pizza, Willoner outlined the benefit of moving to 450-mm wafers. "It doesn't cost a whole lot more to make a 12-inch pizza than it does to make an 8-inch pizza," he said. "Perhaps it uses a tiny bit more energy, but it's not double the cost, whereas the area of the pizza is double."
The investment required from chip manufacturers will be significant, however. Willoner and Draina both estimated the investment in equipment and standards development for 450-mm fabs to be in the billions of dollars.
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