intel-7nm-chips
What’s the fastest computer chip you can think of? Now, forget about it, because
IBM announced
it has created the fastest computer chips ever made. The firm’s new
chips are four times faster than today’s top-of-the-line silicon, and
they’re also significantly more efficient.
IBM
is investing $3 billion in a private-public partnership with
GlobalFoundries to make the new 7nm chips in New York’s Hudson Valley, The New York Times reports.
The
announcement is rather a surprise, especially since it’s not coming
from Intel or chipmakers that are currently working on some of the best
and most efficient mobile chips ever made. Reports from Korea indicate
that
Samsung and TSMC are scrambling to be the first company to stabilize 10nm chip production to win a boatload of iPhone chip orders from Apple in following years.
Obviously,
7nm chips would be even faster than today’s 14nm processors and next
year’s 10nm CPUs. Comparatively, a strand of DNA measures 2.5nm while a
red blood cell has a 7,500nm diameter.
IBM
revealed on Thursday that it used a silicon-germanium instead of pure
silicon “in key regions of the molecular size switches” to create the
chips. This allowed the company to achieve faster transistor switching
with lower power requirements.
The
company will license its technology to a variety of manufacturers,
which will then mass-produce the chips with a variety of companies,
including Broadcom, Qualcomm and AMD, to name a few. It’s not clear when
the first 7nm chips will be available to consumers, though.
Regardless
of how impressive they may be, the new 7nm chips require new materials
and new manufacturing techniques. Furthermore, the industry still has to
decide whether IBM’s silicon-germanium combo is the best way to
move forward, the Times notes.
One
of the new technologies needed for 7nm chips involves the use of
extreme ultraviolet light (EUV) that etches “patterns on chips at a
resolution that approaches the diameter of individual atoms.” The
problem with EUV is that even the slightest vibration during
manufacturing can undermine the precision of the optics when it comes to
etching lines that thin.
Intel and TSMC are also eying 7nm chip production, though the companies have yet to make any