もっと詳しく

IT House News on May 17th, in order to emphasize the important role of light in the process of advancing scientific progress, UNESCO designated May 16th every year as the “International Day of Light”. On May 13, ASML in aPublic account articleChina said,Existing technology can achieve 1nm process, Moore’s Law can continue to be in effect for ten years or more.

ASML said that in the field of semiconductors, Moore’s Law, a forward-looking inference born in 1965, plays a role like light, guiding every innovation and breakthrough in chip manufacturing. Moore’s Law has continued to evolve over the past 50+ years. Moore’s original prediction of making complex chips at minimal cost has also been paraphrased into various formulations over the course of the evolution, and the law is now most often expressed as a multiple of the number of transistors a semiconductor chip can accommodate. In 1975, Moore revised his prediction:The time to double the number of transistors rose from the initial one year to two years.

IT Home understands that Moore believes that,Increasing die area, shrinking component size, and optimizing device circuit design are three important factors in doubling the number of transistors.

Over the past 15 years, many innovative approaches have kept Moore’s Law alive and well, according to ASML.Looking at the development path of the industry as a whole, they will keep Moore’s Law going for the next decade and beyond. In terms of components,Current technological innovations are sufficient to advance the chip process to at least the 1nm node, including gate-all-around FETs, nanosheet FETs, forksheet FETs, and complementary FETs and many other forward-looking technologies. In addition, improvements in lithography system resolution (expected to shrink by a factor of 2 every 6 years or so) and edge placement error (EPE) as a measure of accuracy will further drive chip size reductions.

ASML says Moore’s Law will continue to work as long as we have ideas.

.
[related_posts_by_tax taxonomies=”post_tag”]

The post ASML: Existing technology can achieve 1nm process, Moore’s Law can continue to be in effect for ten years or more appeared first on Gamingsym.