Rivalries between companies have a charm of their own. For many years, it was Intel v. AMD, then it became Microsoft v. Google. The most interesting rivalry today is, of course, Intel v. ARM. After Intel's trigate transistor announcement, I was therefore not surprised to see these news articles:
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Ion-cut, the process used for manufacturing SOI wafers for the past 15 years, is the most popular method to form c-Si layers for monolithic 3D-ICs. In this blog-post, I'll share cost estimates for ion-cut, and explain why even price-sensitive markets such as solar are adopting it. For monolithic 3D, it is often required to form single crystal silicon above copper wiring layers at temperatures lower than 400C. Fig. 1 shows the ion-cut process, which is the most popular method of achieving this objective. Hydrogen is first implanted into a "top layer wafer" to create a defect plane. This "top layer wafer" is then flipped and bonded onto a "bottom layer wafer" having transistors and copper wiring.After this, the structure is cleaved at the defect plane using a 400C anneal or a sideways mechanical force. Finally, a CMP is done to get a good surface. The previous paragraph explained how ion-cut can be used for stacking single crystal silicon layers for 3D-ICs. For forming a SOI wafer using ion-cut, the "bottom layer wafer" in Fig. 1 is a blank silicon wafer instead of a processed one with transistors and wires. As many of you know, ion-cut is the standard process used for high-volume manufacturing of SOI wafers today. Cost-of-Ownership Analysis Fig. 2 shows cost calculations for ion-cut using a Sematech Cost-of-Ownership framework. Tool prices and throughputs are obtained from equipment manufacturers who provide tools for these ion-cut process steps. The "top layer wafer" in Fig. 1 is re-used, as is typical in an ion-cut process. The total cost per wafer for a single ion-cut is $58, which is close to estimates that ion-cut practitioners in the industry have provided us. The number seems reasonable... this is what you'd expect of a process that doesn't involve any litho steps. In addition, with passage of time, one would expect throughput of various steps to improve significantly, bringing the price down further. Companies such as Twin Creeks Technologies and SiGen are using ion-cut for the solar industry today (Fig. 3). As you'd know, the solar industry is a lot more cost-sensitive than the semiconductor industry... this application is possible mainly because these vendors are reaching costs similar to Fig. 2. Hmmm... If the additional cost per wafer is $58, why are SOI wafers considered "costly" today? This is because of business issues with SOI wafer manufacturing (see Fig. 4).
The price per ion-cut could be as low as $58, which is miniscule compared to wafer cost of a logic wafer (~$4000), NAND flash memory wafer (~$1500) or DRAM wafer (~$2000). This is encouraging for the monolithic 3D application, since ion-cut is the most popular technique to get stacked single crystal silicon layers. Once these stacked single crystal silicon layers are obtained, one can use MonolithIC 3D Inc.'s innovative device architectures to build high-quality 3D chips. We had an exciting meeting last week with Fabian Pease, a Stanford University Professor who was one of the inventors of microchannel COOLing. Let me tell you about this meeting...
All of us know Jerry Sanders' famous quote from the 1990s. "Real men have fabs", said the AMD CEO. Over the past decade, several famous companies, many of whom had real men, dumped their fabs and went fab-lite or fabless. I believe there will be a similar move towards the IP business model in the next decade. Here's why...
Over the past decade, we've seen a slew of rewritable (RW) memory devices: Phase change memory, resistive RAM and MRAM, just to name a few. What is sorely needed is an architecture that allows these RW devices to be built into chips that compete with NAND flash memory. We'll describe MonolithIC 3D Inc.'s solution to this problem in this blog-post...
We made the first public presentation of our monolithic 3D DRAM at the AVS 3D workshop last week. Let me share details of the technology with you in this blog-post...
As you'd know, I spent three years at SanDisk before joining MonolithIC 3D Inc. Unfortunately, my time in the flash memory industry coincided with some of it's worst years. I saw huge losses, big layoffs, ridiculous price declines and a hostile take-over attempt :-( Based on this, you'd think flash memory is one of the most difficult parts of the semiconductor industry. Not true. The DRAM industry is so cut-throat that the flash industry appears benign in comparison.
A few weeks back, in my "Looking Beyond Lithography" post, I explained the reasons why flash memory makers such as Toshiba, Samsung and Hynix are exploring an alternative approach to Moore's law. In this blog-post, let's see if this approach is viable for logic technologies...
I am pleased to introduce you to IntSim v2.0 today. IntSim v2.0 is a CAD tool to simulate and optimize monolithic versions of 2D and 3D-ICs. |
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