Intel May Finally Utilize Silicon-on-Insulator for 22nm Process Tech

From X-bit Labs: After years of criticizing silicon-on-insulator technology, Intel Corp. may finally adopt it to increase performance of its future chips, according to an analyst. Believe it or not, but the adoption may be just a year away as the chipmaker if rumoured to endorse SOI with its 22nm process technology.

''We believe Intel will introduce a germanium (III V) channel and full depleted SOI at 22nm. This will give Intel a quantum leap in performance over what they are achieving and leave competitors 3-5 years behind. The 22nm process should be in manufacturing at Intel in Q4 2011," said Gus Richard, an analyst with Piper Jaffray & Co., in a report, according to EETimes web-site.

In the recent several quarters Intel has been revealing pieces of information about its 22nm process technology/technologies that will be used to manufacture Ivy Bridge-generation of microprocessors as well as system-on-chip devices. The company has not said a word about usage of SOI.

The Santa Clara, California-based maker of central processing units (CPUs) displayed its first 22nm test wafer with SRAM memory as well as logic circuits to be used in future Intel microprocessors in September '09 and said that the process technology relies on a third-generation high-k metal gate transistor technology for improved performance and lower leakage power. In early April, 2010, the company said that in case of 22nm fabrication process Intel’s research group had a variety of novel transistor and interconnect ideas in the “pipeline”, including III-V channel materials, multi-gate transistors, 3-D stacking and others. In June '10 Intel revealed a paper describing development of a 22nm floating body cell (FBC) memory on a bulk wafer "of the kind in use in high volume manufacturing today" and said that earlier results were achieved on much more expensive SOI wafers, a rather clear implication that SOI is not a part of its 22nm.

Generally speaking, nothing certain is presently known about Intel's 22nm process technology. But while the probability of SOI usage on 22nm is not too high, there is no smoke without fire, and the company may utilize silicon-on-insulator wafers sometime in future.

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