Engineering researchers have developed new software, called FreePDK15, to facilitate chip design and are making it freely available in order to foster new research focused on pushing the frontiers of computer technology.
"State-of-the-art transistors are now 15 nanometers (nm) long, and you can fit a billion of those transistors on a single chip," says Rhett Davis, an electrical and computer engineering researcher at NC State. "That means we need software to design those chips and ours is the first free software that enables that level of chip design. There are no confidentiality agreements to hold researchers back and no strings attached, since one of our goals is to bring more people into the chip design field."
Davis launched the FreePDK project and oversaw development of the software by a team of students and private sector volunteers with the support of fellow NC State researcher Paul Franzon.
The FreePDK15 software gives chip designers accurate rules and definitions for what optical lithography can (and can't) do on the 15 nm scale. Optical lithography is the technology used to print transistor designs on a chip.
"Basically, the software allows designers free rein to explore new ideas, while keeping them within the bounds of what is physically possible," Davis explains.
(Score: 2) by DECbot on Thursday August 14 2014, @08:16PM
You do make a good point. Without a virtual electronic or thermal performance test, it'd be mighty expensive for a hobbyist to constantly ask fabs to do runoffs for him to check for bugs and related issues.
cats~$ sudo chown -R us /home/base
(Score: 2) by TK on Thursday August 14 2014, @08:47PM
Agilent has a thermal simulation package [keysight.com] that's available as a 30-day free trial. The simulation software definitely exists, but it's expensive enough that no one is putting the sticker price on their websites.
The fleas have smaller fleas, upon their backs to bite them, and those fleas have lesser fleas, and so ad infinitum