INTEL Corporation announced development
of a new, ultra-fast, yet very low
power prototype transistor using
new materials that could form the
basis of its microprocessors and
other logic products beginning in
the second half of the next decade.
Intel
and QinetiQ researchers have jointly
demonstrated an enhancement-mode
transistor using indium antimonide
(chemical symbol: InSb) to conduct
electrical current. Transistors
control the flow of information/electrical
current inside a chip. The prototype
transistor is much faster and consumes
less power than previously announced
transistors. Intel anticipates using
this new material to complement
silicon, further extending Moore's
Law.
Significant
power reduction at the transistor
level, accompanied by a substantial
performance increase, could play
a crucial role in delivering future
platforms to computer users by allowing
an increased number of features
and capabilities. Considerably less
energy used and heat generated could
add significant battery life for
mobile devices and increase opportunities
for building smaller more powerful
products.
“The
results of this research reinforce
our confidence in being able to
continue to follow Moore's Law beyond
2015. As was the case with other
Intel technical advancements, we
expect these new materials will
enhance the future of silicon-based
semiconductors,” said Ken David,
director of components research
for Intel's Technology and Manufacturing
Group “By providing 50 percent more
performance while reducing power
consumption by roughly 10 times,
this new material will give us considerable
flexibility because we will have
ability to optimize for both performance
and power of future platforms.”
InSb
is in a class of materials called
III-V compound semiconductors which
are in use today for a variety of
discrete and small scale integrated
devices such as radio-frequency
amplifiers, microwave devices and
semiconductor lasers.
Researchers
from Intel and QinetiQ have previously
announced transistors with InSb
channels. The prototype transistors
being announced today, with a gate
length of 85nm, are the smallest
ever, at less than half the size
of those disclosed earlier. This
is the first time that enhancement
mode transistors have been demonstrated.
Enhancement mode transistors are
the predominant type of transistor
used in microprocessors and other
logic. These transistors are able
to operate at a reduced voltage,
about 0.5 volts roughly half of
that for transistors in today's
chips which leads to chips with
far less power consumption.
“This
research is a great example of how
QinetiQ, working with other world-leading
companies such as Intel, is targeting
its research in technologies with
commercial potential,” said Tim
Phillips, business manager of the
Fast Transistors group at QinetiQ.