I asked someone inside the industry to tell me what was going on with Global Foundries 32nm process. He had previously told me that they were having issues with packaging, so I checked with him to see where they currently were (whether they fixed the problem).
What he told me was rather interesting. GF was unable to fix their packaging issues, so they opted to change their integration scheme and limit the usage of the low-k dielectric material to just one metal level (and falling back to using the 45nm low-k dielectric for the other metal levels).
This means, unfortunately, the resultant products are going to consume a bit more power and clock a bit slower than their customers were told to expect.
It also means the new 32nm integration is now going through the reliability testing that the old integration scheme started some 6 months ago, which is why the whole train has been delayed by as many months.
He said that he expects Global Foundries to part ways with the IBM alliance once the New York fab is equipped with the enough tools to create the initial pilot line (circa beginning 16nm development with EUV toolset.) He believed this because IBM's direction is to use gate-first HKMG which will underperform the competing foundry integration schemes.
I realize there is another thread that addresses this main topic, but it has gotten so far off topic that I felt it was best to just post this information in a new thread.
What he told me was rather interesting. GF was unable to fix their packaging issues, so they opted to change their integration scheme and limit the usage of the low-k dielectric material to just one metal level (and falling back to using the 45nm low-k dielectric for the other metal levels).
This means, unfortunately, the resultant products are going to consume a bit more power and clock a bit slower than their customers were told to expect.
It also means the new 32nm integration is now going through the reliability testing that the old integration scheme started some 6 months ago, which is why the whole train has been delayed by as many months.
He said that he expects Global Foundries to part ways with the IBM alliance once the New York fab is equipped with the enough tools to create the initial pilot line (circa beginning 16nm development with EUV toolset.) He believed this because IBM's direction is to use gate-first HKMG which will underperform the competing foundry integration schemes.
I realize there is another thread that addresses this main topic, but it has gotten so far off topic that I felt it was best to just post this information in a new thread.
Last edited: