IBM Extends Moore's Law to the Third Dimension

User rating: 4.7 / 5 after 177 vote(s)

An IBM scientist holds a thinned wafer of silicon computer circuits which is ready for bonding to another circuit wafer where IBMacutes advanced quotthrough-silicon viaquot process will connect the wafers together by etching thousands of holes throug ...
An IBM scientist holds a thinned wafer of silicon computer circuits, which is ready for bonding to another circuit wafer, where IBM's advanced "through-silicon via" process will connect the wafers together by etching thousands of holes through each layer and filling them with metal to create 3-D integrated stacked chips. The IBM breakthrough can shorten wire lengths inside chips up to 1000 times and allow for hundreds more pathways for data to flow among different functions on a chip. This technique will extend Moore's Law beyond its expected limits, paving the way for a new breed of smaller, faster and lower power chips. Credit: IBM

IBM today announced a breakthrough chip-stacking technology in a manufacturing environment that paves the way for three-dimensional chips that will extend Moore’s Law beyond its expected limits. The technology – called “through-silicon vias” -- allows different chip components to be packaged much closer together for faster, smaller, and lower-power systems.


Full story »

All News summaries from Technology news
All News summaries for April 12, 2007