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Home NEWS Science News Science

USC ISI & Intel Custom Foundry collaborate to spur microelectronics innovation

Bioengineer by Bioengineer
May 30, 2019
in Science
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The partnership through ISI MOSIS service will offer multi-project-wafer runs for the microelectronics community, integrating MOSIS manufacturing services w/ Intel’s high-performance device fabrication technology

USC Viterbi’s Information Sciences Institute (ISI) and the Intel Corporation’s custom foundry organization today announced a collaboration to design, fabricate and package integrated circuits (ICs) through USC ISI’s MOSIS unit.

The collaboration combines MOSIS’s industry-leading integrated circuit manufacturing expertise with Intel’s high-performance complementary metal-oxide semiconductor (CMOS) fabrication and packaging technology. It positions ISI and Intel Custom Foundry (ICF) to lead a new era of high-performance microelectronic manufacturing for the U.S. and global IC community.

“This is a significant event for the U.S. microelectronics community,” said MOSIS co-director John Damoulakis. “For the first time, the U.S. Government, R&D laboratories, companies, and academia will have access to Intel’s advanced fabrication and packaging technologies economically through MOSIS.”

MOSIS will offer multi-project-wafer runs for prototype integrated circuits, as well as dedicated runs for low-volume production.

“The Intel-supported ecosystem will undoubtedly contribute significantly to microelectronics resurgence and innovation in the U.S.,” said MOSIS co-director James Whalen.

ISI’s Interim Director Craig Knoblock echoed this statement: “There is intense, heavily-funded microelectronics activity in the Asian-Pacific region, and unless the U.S. offers the right ecosystem to innovators, there is a danger that the U.S. may fall behind in the next generation of electronic products and applications.”

ICF’s Vice President Kapil Wadhera added: “The collaboration between Intel and MOSIS ensures that U.S. innovators have at their disposal proper IC design and fabrication technologies to rapidly and cost effectively realize their inventions for the U.S. industrial base, and to compete with their counterparts across the globe.”

About the Technology

The ICF-MOSIS collaboration involves the use of Intel’s 22nm CMOS FinFET (e.g., 22FFL) technology to fabricate either digital or analog/mixed-signal (AMS) ICs for a variety of applications spanning the digital and RFCMOS domains.

Intel’s 22FFL technology is a unique 22nm FinFET process optimized for logic, RF and millimeter wave applications supporting superior performance to planar technologies with both ft and fmax above 300 GHz and 450 GHz. The technology combines high-performance, ultra- low-power logic, RF transistors, and single-pattern back-end flow.

Ultra-low-power logic devices have been developed reducing bit cell leakage by 28X compared to regular SRAM 6T cells. Intel’s 22nm FinFET technology comes with many different options for IC design and fabrication. This technology is designed to accommodate a variety of applications, which often require different overall performance characteristics.

MOSIS’s customers would not only have access to Intel’s advanced fabrication, but also to Intel’s advanced packaging technologies.

###

Media Contact
Amy Blumenthal
[email protected]
https://viterbischool.usc.edu/news/2019/05/usc-isi-and-intel-custom-foundry-collaborate-to-spur-microelectronics-innovation/

Tags: Computer ScienceHardwareSuperconductors/SemiconductorsTechnology/Engineering/Computer ScienceTelecommunications
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