Hard Core High Performance process tech - How much can frequency be increased?

Fjodor2001

Diamond Member
Feb 6, 2010
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Hi,

As you're probably aware, when designing process tech it's a trade off between transistor density and performance. Semiconductor manufacturers therefore often have one High Performance tech and another High Density tech, depending on what a certain chip benefits the most from.

So I'm just wondering how much frequency could be improved if no consideration was given to anything else, like price or transistor density (except that the CPU cores must be able to fit on the die of course).

Let's say Intel Haswell was made on such a Hard Core Performance Process (HCCP). How much higher would it be possible to clock the 4790K which today is at 4.0/4.4 GHz?

Anyone that would care to provide a rough estimate? :confused:
 

witeken

Diamond Member
Dec 25, 2013
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Let me put it this way: if all of Intel's $50B Core revenue came from i7 88W+ CPUs, and if laptops didn't exist, then you can be quite sure (I think) that your Haswell CPU would have a nice bump in frequency compared to how it is clocked today.

Not sure if that answers your question. I don't have any quantitative information, and if anyone has, they probably wouldn't share.
 

videogames101

Diamond Member
Aug 24, 2005
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Keep in mind you'd have to re-design your CPU. But, with no consideration to anything else? How about power/cooling tech? Really really fast. I think 6 or 7 GHz+, especially if you sacrifice all your yield and use only the fastest silicon. That number is mostly a guess, but if you throw out PVT pessimism (PVT optimism anyone? :D) and use exotic cooling I really don't see why you wouldn't see gains like that, and I'm not even talking about process changes.
 
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ThatBuzzkiller

Golden Member
Nov 14, 2014
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There is no such thing as a trade-off between density and performance ...

Density is always dependent on transistor gate pitch size and nothing else therefore the density is always constant unless the transistor gate pitch was changed ...

Performance and lower power is the actual trade-off when moving to a smaller transistor because the chip designer has to choose whether to spend it on making it have lower voltages or increase the circuit size ...
 

Phynaz

Lifer
Mar 13, 2006
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There is no such thing as a trade-off between density and performance ...

Density is always dependent on transistor gate pitch size and nothing else therefore the density is always constant unless the transistor gate pitch was changed ...

Performance and lower power is the actual trade-off when moving to a smaller transistor because the chip designer has to choose whether to spend it on making it have lower voltages or increase the circuit size ...

You are mistaken, density is also dependent upon layout and other factors.
 
Mar 10, 2006
11,715
2,012
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There is no such thing as a trade-off between density and performance ...

Density is always dependent on transistor gate pitch size and nothing else therefore the density is always constant unless the transistor gate pitch was changed ...

Performance and lower power is the actual trade-off when moving to a smaller transistor because the chip designer has to choose whether to spend it on making it have lower voltages or increase the circuit size ...

False. Two words "interconnect stack."
 

Ajay

Lifer
Jan 8, 2001
16,094
8,114
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If raw performance really mattered in terms of sales, then Intel would be delivering 20%+ increases per generation (at higher power usage). But perf/watt matters in terms of sales, so we'll never see what Intel could 'really do'.
 

TheELF

Diamond Member
Dec 22, 2012
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Google for 5ghz cpu wall

silicone can't handle more than ~5Ghz
 

cen1

Member
Apr 25, 2013
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The fact is that transistor by it's very nature needs certain time to stabilize on either 1 or 0. So there is a physical minimum time that is needed for a transistor to switch state.

When you add line lengths, crosstalk, and other fun stuff it only goes downwards.

You can't just eliminate one factor because it's all interconnected and needs to be balanced out.
 

SAAA

Senior member
May 14, 2014
541
126
116
Hi,

As you're probably aware, when designing process tech it's a trade off between transistor density and performance. Semiconductor manufacturers therefore often have one High Performance tech and another High Density tech, depending on what a certain chip benefits the most from.

So I'm just wondering how much frequency could be improved if no consideration was given to anything else, like price or transistor density (except that the CPU cores must be able to fit on the die of course).

Let's say Intel Haswell was made on such a Hard Core Performance Process (HCCP). How much higher would it be possible to clock the 4790K which today is at 4.0/4.4 GHz?

Anyone that would care to provide a rough estimate? :confused:

There have been many Sandy Bridges at 5+ GHz on 32nm, I don't see why Haswell or Skylake ported on that node wouldn't reach similar speeds, remember the process is also refined for years.

Plus they would have lower temperatures too because less dense means more area to dissipate heat, remove FIVR and hilariously you could probably increase speeds even more. This if power consumption and money weren't a problem of course, because dies would be larger and pricier.
Unless you remove IGP entirely too, then I can see Haswell being under ~200mm2 and TDPs in the 100-150W range.
 

III-V

Senior member
Oct 12, 2014
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Layout only matters when your designing a chip, I was been specific about transistor dimensions ...
Yeah, and we're talking about chips here. Your input has been entirely incorrect and irrelevant.
Hi,

As you're probably aware, when designing process tech it's a trade off between transistor density and performance. Semiconductor manufacturers therefore often have one High Performance tech and another High Density tech, depending on what a certain chip benefits the most from.

So I'm just wondering how much frequency could be improved if no consideration was given to anything else, like price or transistor density (except that the CPU cores must be able to fit on the die of course).

Let's say Intel Haswell was made on such a Hard Core Performance Process (HCCP). How much higher would it be possible to clock the 4790K which today is at 4.0/4.4 GHz?

Anyone that would care to provide a rough estimate?
There's probably not much room for growth with the materials currently being used. If you really wanted to throw cost out the window, I don't see why we couldn't have 5-6GHz CPUs right now, but of course cost is the primary motivator behind... well, everything.

So, since you can't give up on cost, you have to be able to provide improvements while standing pat or improving on cost. This essentially means new materials, and new transistor innovations (e.g. FinFETs).

The benefits brought by new channel materials like III-V and Germanium are very significant, and when we inevitably move past silicon, we'll get a good boost. If carbon nanotube interconnects come to fruition, we'll get a good boost there as well.
 
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Smoblikat

Diamond Member
Nov 19, 2011
5,184
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106
Google for 5ghz cpu wall

silicone can't handle more than ~5Ghz

Ive run I5's at 5.4 on a hyper 212 before, so I know for a fact that your statement is wrong. Also, these arent fake boobs, we are talking about CPU's.

Silicone != Silicon
 

njdevilsfan87

Platinum Member
Apr 19, 2007
2,342
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We need a new C2D - something that will significantly lower clocks back down into the 2-3ghz yet remain just as fast or even faster than today's 4ghz+ chips.
 

Piroko

Senior member
Jan 10, 2013
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So I'm just wondering how much frequency could be improved if no consideration was given to anything else
As a theoretical experiment - about 100 GHz? Assuming you can come up with a design that gets by with ~5 Transistors per stage. Definitely not something as complex as Haswell though... or a Pentium 1...

Google for 5ghz cpu wall

silicone can't handle more than ~5Ghz
I'll just drop this link here. Do take note of the date.
 

jhu

Lifer
Oct 10, 1999
11,918
9
81
We need a new C2D - something that will significantly lower clocks back down into the 2-3ghz yet remain just as fast or even faster than today's 4ghz+ chips.

So, what you really want is Intel to make a really low IPC processor, clock it really high, sell that for a few years as the "mainstream CPU", then return to Skylake lineage just so we have the illusion of significantly increased IPC? Because that's exactly what happened last time.
 

schmuckley

Platinum Member
Aug 18, 2011
2,335
1
0
Google for 5ghz cpu wall

silicon can't handle more than ~5Ghz

ftfy..Oh no?

llyyjn.png



Tell that to Pamela Anderson…
LOL
 
Last edited:
Dec 30, 2004
12,553
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it's like 100 or 200 ghz or something with germanium. 2 orders of magnitude.

Intel is working on using it. meeting resistance. sorry I'm so general I have trouble remembering source details.
 

ThatBuzzkiller

Golden Member
Nov 14, 2014
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Yeah, and we're talking about chips here. Your input has been entirely incorrect and irrelevant.


Assert whatever you want ...

Nothing will change the fact that transistor density is solely dependent on the transistor dimensions ...
 

Ken g6

Programming Moderator, Elite Member
Moderator
Dec 11, 1999
16,722
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it's like 100 or 200 ghz or something with germanium. 2 orders of magnitude.

Intel is working on using it. meeting resistance. sorry I'm so general I have trouble remembering source details.

Is that another way of saying they're running into heat issues? :sneaky:
 

Ajay

Lifer
Jan 8, 2001
16,094
8,114
136
Assert whatever you want ...

Nothing will change the fact that transistor density is solely dependent on the transistor dimensions ...

How many times do you need to be told that that isn't true before you will understand??? There are actual design rules that limit the maximum xtor density. It's limited in the PDK and hence, the actual CPU/SoC design.