New IBM and Samsung transistors could be key to super-efficient chips (updated)
IBM and Samsung claim they've made a breakthrough in semiconductor design. On day one of the IEDM [(International Electron Devices Meeting)] conference in San Francisco, the two companies unveiled a new design for stacking transistors vertically on a chip. With current processors and SoCs, transistors lie flat on the surface of the silicon, and then electric current flows from side-to-side. By contrast, Vertical Transport Field Effect Transistors (VTFET) sit perpendicular to one another and current flows vertically.
According to IBM and Samsung, this design has two advantages. First, it will allow them to bypass many performance limitations to extend Moore's Law beyond IBM's current nanosheet technology. More importantly, the design leads to less wasted energy thanks to greater current flow. They estimate VTFET will lead to processors that are either twice as fast or use 85 percent less power than chips designed with FinFET transistors. IBM and Samsung claim the process may one day allow for phones that go a full week on a single charge. They say it could also make certain energy-intensive tasks, including cryptomining, more power-efficient and therefore less impactful on the environment.
IBM blog post. Also at Notebookcheck.
See also: Samsung Begins Sampling 24 Gbps GDDR6 Memory Chips For Next-Gen GPUs
(Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday December 14 2021, @08:36PM (3 children)
See below, at least one other AC saw elevators as I did (I'm the gp).
Could have been a senior moment in my case (recently passed age 65).
(Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday December 14 2021, @10:43PM (1 child)
I was just being a smartass. :)
(Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday December 15 2021, @12:13AM
Yes, I know, and gave you the Touche for good measure.
(Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday December 15 2021, @11:51AM
I don't think it's a senior moment, because I'm about half your age (and I'm that AC).
Actually, I suspect that people assume I'm in my 60s because I've been around the green site and here for about 2 decades. I was only like 13 when I started blathering on the green site, and I've been at it for another 20 years. (Been coding since I was literally 4 years old, sooo, that's how I ended up in these parts.)