Intels press release verbatim:
Intel’s Transistor Technology Breakthrough Represents Biggest Change to Computer Chips In 40 Years
Intel Producing First Processor Prototypes With New, Tiny 45 Nanometer Transistors, Accelerating Era of Multi-Core Computing
SANTA CLARA, Calif., Jan. 27, 2007 – In one of the biggest advancements in fundamental transistor design, Intel Corporation today revealed that it is using two dramatically new materials to build the insulating walls and switching gates of its 45 nanometer (nm) transistors. Hundreds of millions of these microscopic transistors – or switches – will be inside the next generation Intel Core 2 Duo, Intel Core 2 Quad and Xeon families of multi-core processors. The company also said it has five early-version products up and running — the first of fifteen 45nm processor products planned from Intel.
The transistor feat allows the company to continue delivering record-breaking PC, laptop and server processor speeds, while reducing the amount of electrical leakage from transistors that can hamper chip and PC design, size, power consumption, noise and costs. It also ensures Moore’s Law, a high-tech industry axiom that transistor counts double about every two years, thrives well into the next decade.
Intel believes it has extended its lead of more than a year over the rest of the semiconductor industry with the first working 45nm processors of its next-generation 45nm family of products – codenamed “Penryn.” The early versions, which will be targeted at five different computer market segments, are running Windows Vista, Mac OS X, Windows XP and Linux operating systems, as well as various applications. The company remains on track for 45nm production in the second half of this year.
Intel’s Transistors Get a “High-k and Metal Gate” Make-Over at 45nm
Intel is the first to implement an innovative combination of new materials that drastically reduces transistor leakage and increases performance in its 45nm process technology. The company will use a new material with a property called high-k, for the transistor gate dielectric, and a new combination of metal materials for the transistor gate electrode.
“The implementation of high-k and metal materials marks the biggest change in transistor technology since the introduction of polysilicon gate MOS transistors in the late 1960s,” said Intel Co-Founder Gordon Moore.
Transistors are tiny switches that process the ones and zeroes of the digital world. The gate turns the transistor on and off and the gate dielectric is an insulator underneath it that separates it from the channel where current flows. The combination of the metal gates and the high-k gate dielectric leads to transistors with very low current leakage and record high performance.
“As more and more transistors are packed onto a single piece of silicon, the industry continues to research current leakage reduction solutions,” said Mark Bohr, Intel senior fellow. “Meanwhile our engineers and designers have achieved a remarkable accomplishment that ensures the leadership of Intel products and innovation. Our implementation of novel high-k and metal gate transistors for our 45nm process technology will help Intel deliver even faster, more energy efficient multi-core products that build upon our successful Intel Core 2 and Xeon family of processors, and extend Moore’s Law well into the next decade.”
For comparison, approximately 400 of Intel’s 45nm transistors could fit on the surface of a single human red blood cell. Just a decade ago, the state-of-the-art process technology was 250nm, meaning transistor dimensions were approximately 5.5 times the size and 30 times the area of the technology announced today by Intel.
As the number of transistors on a chip roughly doubles every two years in accordance with Moore’s Law, Intel is able to innovate and integrate, adding more features and computing processing cores, increasing performance, and decreasing manufacturing costs and cost per transistor. To maintain this pace of innovation, transistors must continue to shrink to ever-smaller sizes. However, using current materials, the ability to shrink transistors is reaching fundamental limits because of increased power and heat issues that develop as feature sizes reach atomic levels. As a result, implementing new materials is imperative to the future of Moore’s Law and the economics of the information age.
Intel’s High-k, Metal Gate Recipe for 45nm Process Technology
Silicon dioxide has been used to make the transistor gate dielectric for more than 40 years because of its manufacturability and ability to deliver continued transistor performance improvements as it has been made ever thinner. Intel has successfully shrunk the silicon dioxide gate dielectric to as little as 1.2nm thick ? equal to five atomic layers ? on our previous 65nm process technology, but the continued shrinking has led to increased current leakage through the gate dielectric, resulting in wasted electric current and unnecessary heat.
Transistor gate leakage associated with the ever-thinning silicon dioxide gate dielectric is recognized by the industry as one of the most formidable technical challenges facing Moore’s Law. To solve this critical issue, Intel replaced the silicon dioxide with a thicker hafnium-based high-k material in the gate dielectric, reducing leakage by more than 10 times compared to the silicon dioxide used for more than four decades.
Because the high-k gate dielectric is not compatible with today’s silicon gate electrode, the second part of Intel’s 45nm transistor material recipe is the development of new metal gate materials. While the specific metals that Intel uses remains secret, the company will use a combination of different metal materials for the transistor gate electrodes.
The combination of the high-k gate dielectric with the metal gate for Intel’s 45nm process technology provides more than a 20 percent increase in drive current, or higher transistor performance. Conversely it reduces source-drain leakage by more than five times, thus improving the energy efficiency of the transistor.
Intel’s 45nm process technology also improves transistor density by approximately two times that of the previous generation, allowing the company to either increase the overall transistor count or to make processors smaller. Because the 45nm transistors are smaller than the previous generation, they take less energy to switch on and off, reducing active switching power by approximately 30 percent. Intel will use copper wires with a low-k dielectric for its 45nm interconnects for increased performance and lower power consumption. It will also use innovative design rules and advanced mask techniques to extend the use of 193nm dry lithography to manufacture its 45nm processors because of the cost advantages and high manufacturability it affords.
Penryn Family Will Bring More Energy Efficient Performance
The Penryn family of processors is a derivative of the Intel Core microarchitecture and marks the next step in Intel’s rapid cadence of delivering a new process technology and new microarchitecture every other year. The combination of Intel’s leading 45nm process technology, high-volume manufacturing capabilities, and leading microarchitecture design enabled the company to already develop its first working 45nm Penryn processors.
The company has more than 15 products based on 45nm in development across desktop, mobile, workstation and enterprise segments. With more than 400 million transistors for dual-core processors and more than 800 million for quad-core, the Penryn family of 45nm processors includes new microarchitecture features for greater performance and power management capabilities, as well as higher core speeds and up to 12 megabytes of cache. The Penryn family designs also bring approximately 50 new Intel SSE4 instructions that expand capabilities and performance for media and high-performance computing applications.
More info: http://www.intel.com/pressroom/kits/45nm/index.htm
Related articles:
Intel processor breakthrough biggest chip advance in 40 years; coming before year end – January 27, 2007
Intel to announce processor breakthrough; new chips will run faster, consume less power – January 27, 2007
Intel pledges 80-core processor within five years – September 26, 2006
Apple chose well: Anandtech – Intel Core 2 Duo ‘the fastest desktop processor we’ve ever tested’ – July 14, 2006
Apple chose well: Intel poised to take massive lead across the board over AMD – June 07, 2006
Intel first to demonstrate working 45nm chips – January 26, 2006
Intel-based Macs running both Mac OS X and Windows will be good for Apple – June 10, 2005
Apple to use Intel microprocessors beginning in 2006, all Macs to be Intel-based by end of 2007 – June 06, 2005
@ Zune Tang
OK, Microsoft lackey.
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Your potential (how much money that is in your wallet). Our passion (us receiving your money and laughing at you).
I hope this means cooler MacBooks.
the switch to intel is looking smarter and smarter
Hey ZuneT,
Can I borrow some of those “IT guys where I work are really smart.” The ones where I work don’t have a clue. Not only are they mainly Windoze droids, but yesterday they announced (and did) a reboot of all the routers — on a campus of 16,000 students — at noon. “It’s a critical Cisco update and noon is quiet time for lunch.” Except for 1,000s of students in class. The airheads couldn’t get it together to do it before 8 and were too clueless to wait for 5. And they contiually bash Macs and make campus software hard or impossible to use on a Mac by their lameness.
Wait a minute – I think I understand – MicroShaft paid them to come work for us!
…and has been doing so all over the MDN comments for weeks. Are we so reflexively defensive that we don’t recognize anti-MS sarcasm?
high-k???
I think some guy tried to sell me some of that last night in the bathroom of the bar.
All this just as Lord Jobs exits the personal computer business. Hope that phone thingy works out for you Stevie boy, otherwise we’ll soon be watching a program entitled the Rise and Fall of Apple, Inc.
Re: Enterprise Mobile IT will benefit from this –> The Spectacular Failure of WinCE and Windows Mobile
On another topic, remember the banner: “Redmond, start your photocopiers” circa June 2004? The exchange of email at Microsoft two to three days later:
– – – – – – – – – –
Lenn Pryor to Vic Gundotra; Quentin Clark
RE: tiger
Tonight I got on corpnet, hooked up Mail.app to my Exchange server and then downloaded all of my mail into the local file store. I did system wide queries against docs. contacts, apps, photos, music, and … my Microsoft email on a Mac. It was fucking amazing. It is like I just got a free pass to Longhorn land today.
– – – – – – – – – –
Vic Gundotra to Quentin Clark; CC Lenn Pryor
RE: tiger
I’m assuming you saw the speech
Lenn is running the bits already
He says he is blown away by the WinFS clone [sic] functionality – it’s already working
I will install bits before I send the DVDs [tiger] to you
I’m amazed you guys didn’t send someone to the conference J
– – – – – – – – – –
Quentin Clark to Vic Gundotra; CC: Lenn Pryor
RE: tiger
Yes. We must have this. We must do analysis. I will return them [the DVDs], unharmed
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Quentin Clark to Vic Gundotra;
RE: tiger
Any idea how I can get my hands on the developer bits apple released at their conference this week?
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There was more, but the above is enough.
How do some of you guys not get the fact that Zune Tang is being sarcastic??? To Zune Tang, keep it up – you’re hilarious!
Remember when “those people” predicted the fall of Apple over a decade ago? And not only do they continue to be wrong time and time again, but their small world seems to be shrinking further?
And it’s Apple Inc. Commas are soooo last century.
RE: ZT
I am not sure if you are being intentionally ironic, sarcastic, or just don’t have a clue, but I found the following to be particularly funny or sad, depending on what you were thinking when you wrote this:
Let me make this simple so you Mac lemmings might grasp it: Stick with Windows because enterprise IT says so.
Who is being the lemming?
windows compatibility 2009
?? et al
Hilarity? Sure, for the dim witted and those with short attention spans. Tang is boring and repetitive; Tang is worn out and tepid. Apple’s aphorism is “Think Different”, but Tang has been serving the same leftover swill for months. What Tang lacks in cleverness Tang attempts to compensate with excesses in redundancy and monotony. In fact, Tang is more like Microsoft than Apple. Tang is pathetic and so are Tang’s advocates.
Tang is tiring…were is Triumph the Comic Dog when you need him?
I think he’s pooping.
Sigh…Zune Tang being boring, repetitive, tired etc. is part of the joke. C’mon guys, save your scorn for real trolls. Piling on Zune Tang just confirms the stereotype of the rabid, illogical Apple fanboy. You give the other guys too goddamned much ammunition.
Sigh…since when is “being boring, repetitive, tired etc.” considered humorous much less commendable or excusable? Obviously, a significant percentage of persons have a decidedly different opinion than you concerning what defines humor and what is agonizingly tedious and uninspired.
With persons like Zune Tang, who is really giving “the other guys too goddamned much ammunition.” Tang reminds me of those dolls with a string attached to their bellies that little children play with. Pull the string and you can hear the same 5 or 6 sentences repeated over and over and over and over and over. You may be entertained or impressed by childrens’ dolls or persons with limited vocabularies, I’m not.
All of you who think I’m being sarcastic just don’t get it. I have lived in the real world of IT for years and know what you cannot see. Your little joke of an OS would never survive.
The enterprise lives on the innovation and security that Microsoft has delivered in Vista.
Try again.
Zune Tang:
Dilbert can stick with Microsoft, we humans will stick with Mac OS X. Enjoy your viruses, spyware and adware.
RE: ZT
> I have lived in the real world of IT for years and know what you cannot see.
What can’t I see? Corporate politics and empire building that puts ones own job security in front of the true needs of the company?
Microsoft OS development is a house of cards that will collapse under it’s own weight. Vista will succeed, not because of inherent superiority, but because of inertia. However that inertia is running out of steam. Microsoft’s business and software model is a dinosaur, the last of a breed that is doomed to extinction.
> Your little joke of an OS would never survive.
BSD Unix (on which Mac OS X is based) is a joke? If Mac OS X is a joke, why is it that Microsoft is copying (although badly) security practices that have long been apart of Mac OS X?
I would admit that OS X and associated 3rd party software is weak in some aspects of what corporate IT needs. However OS X is on much firmer ground, especially concerning security, compared to the quick sand on which Microsoft OS development is based. Again, the problem is backwards compatibility. At some point Microsoft must break with the past if it is to survive.