The
pace of those improvements has slowed, but International
Business Machines Corp on Thursday said that silicon has at
least one more generational advance in store.
IBM introduced what it says is the world's first 2-nanonmeter
chipmaking technology. The technology could be as much as 45%
faster than the mainstream 7-nanometer chips in many of today's
laptops and phones and up to 75% more power efficient, the
company said.
The technology likely will take several years to come to market.
Once a major manufacturer of chips, IBM now outsources its
high-volume chip production to Samsung Electronics Co Ltd but
maintains a chip manufacturing research center in Albany, New
York that produces test runs of chips and has joint technology
development deals with Samsung and Intel Corp to use IBM's
chipmaking technology.
The 2-nanometer chips will be smaller and faster than today's
leading edge 5-nanonmeter chips, which are just now showing up
in premium smartphones like Apple Inc's iPhone 12 models, and
the 3-nanometer chips expected to come after 5-nanometer.
The technology IBM showed Thursday is the most basic building
block of a chip: a transistor, which acts like an electrical
on-off switch to form the 1s and 0s of binary digits at that
foundation of all modern computing.
Making the switches very tiny makes them faster and more power
efficient, but it also creates problems with electrons leaking
when the switches are supposed to be off. Darío Gil, senior vice
president and director of IBM Research, told Reuters in an
interview that scientists were able to drape sheets of
insulating material just a few nanometers thick to stop leaks.
"In the end, there's transistors, and everything else (in
computing) relies on whether that transistor gets better or not.
And it's not a guarantee that there will be a transistor advance
generation to generation anymore. So it's a big deal every time
we get a chance to say there will be another," Gil said.
(Reporting by Stephen Nellis in San Francisco; Editing by Anil
D'Silva)
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