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Intel Shows 2.5D FPGA at ISSCC

By   02.07.2017 0

SAN FRANCISCO – Intel gave the most detailed look at its lower cost alternative to 2.5D packaging in a paper on its Stratix X FPGA at the International Solid State Circuits Conference (ISSCC) here. In the same session, AMD showed its Zen x86 processor sports a 10 percent smaller die than Intel’s latest 14nm CPUs.

The Stratix X uses Intel’s Embedded Multi-die Interconnect Bridge (EMIB) to link the FPGA with four external transceivers. The bridge is made using silicon die mounted in a BGA substrate which is significantly smaller than the silicon substrates used in the CoWoS process developed by TSMC and used by rival FPGA vendor Xilinx and GPU designer Nvidia.

EMIB uses a combination of 55 micron micro-bumps and 100+ micron flip-chip bumps to support up to 24 transceiver channels with 96 I/Os each. They deliver 2 Gbits/second/pin at 1.2 pJ/bit/die using a proprietary protocol.

Currently, the bridge links four 28 GHz serdes to the FPGA. Intel has a road map to faster serdes and other kinds of external chips, said David Greenhill, an Intel engineer who presented the paper at ISSCC.

The packaging technology drew several questions from a crowded session. Responding to a question from a Xilinx engineer, Greenhill said the Intel team doesn’t foresee any issues dealing with thermal challenges migrating the design to 56G serdes.

Intel announced the technology more than two years ago as an offering in its foundry service. So far, it has not announced any other users of EMIB. The 14nm Stratix X packs 2.8 million logic elements into a 560mm2 fabric running at a gigahertz.

Next page: Zen squeezes x86 area and power

0 comments
Post Comment
realjjj   2017-02-07 06:36:44

Sony showed a 3-layers stacked CMOS image sensor (sensor, DRAM and logic). http://www.sony.net/SonyInfo/News/Press/201702/17-013E/index.html

 

Any chance you can clarify this statement: "The company now has two eight-core designs running with simultaneous multithreading at 3.4 GHz."

rick merritt   2017-02-07 10:34:16

@realjjj That's what I heard the paper presenter say, and assume he meant the company has taped out two different eight-core Zen chips that are both running at 3.4 GHz.

realjjj   2017-02-07 19:21:06

Thanks.

It might be relevant that they mention two designs, both 8 cores with SMT. The assumption is that they would use the same die in both server and desktop.

Opteron   2017-02-08 09:48:01

Two Zen-dies with 8cores wont make any sense. I'd interprete AMD's statement like they taped out one x86 8core (Zen/SummitRidge) and one ARMv8 8core. The K12 project was postponed but is not dead.

chipmonk0   2017-02-08 16:48:00

is only the latest in a long line of innovations in Adv. Packaging that have been coming out of Phoenix, AZ over the last quarter century and have transformed the industry.

1. Electroplated solder bump flip chip technology ( metallurgy, wafer plating & chip assembly processes ) overall 1/3 as expensive as IBM's earlier C4 process, now the industry standard

2. Computer Vision and Image Processing based Flip Chip Bonding Robot ( 1/2 as expensive as IBM's electro mechanical system ), now the industry standard

3. world first micro - pillar Sn capped flip chip, fine pitch ( 45 um ) & thermo compression bonding tool and process ( now essential to TSV based 3d stacks ), by 1995 robotic line operating at 1,000 uph

4. world first GaAs flip chip used in PAs for Mobile Phones in '96, using above u Pillar flip chip solved both electrical and thermal issues and REDUCED COST over traditonal wire bonded variety, now essential to fast data xfer ( video ) in Smart Phones

5. Organic substrates for flip chip micro processors, proliferation by '99 made possible by new Fabs designed to maintain high yield and reliability even at high volumes ( 2 million units per week ), same design now used by vendors in Far East, application Processors in Smart Phones

6. Sn / SAC capped Copper pillar bumps at 150 um pitch for Micro processors

7. Preliminary research for Wafer Level Packaging

Fabless Co.s up and down CA have benefited GREATLY from above Adv. Packaging technologyies that were originally developed in Phoenix by 2 major IDMs and then recycled via OSATs.

8. Now even OSATs like Amkor and DECA based in Phx are making significant ( theoretically sound thus robust & cost effective ) contributions to next generation of Adv. Packaging.

9. FOLKS IN Si VALLEY INTERESTED IN ADV. PACKAGING FOR HIGH BANDWIDTH DATA TRANSFER BETWEEN PROCESSOR & MEMORY :

WATCH THIS SPACE !!

FOR A LOW COST TECHNOLOGY ALTERNATIVE TO EXPENSIVE TSV BASED STACKED PACKAGING ( which to the cognoscenti is not much better than technology of the Popular Mechanics ilk, easy to dream up and sketch by the dilletanti, hard to realize, hence terribly expensive ).

COMING SOON FROM PHOENIX, AZ TO BOOST SILICON VALLEY UP TO THE NEXT LEVEL OF INTEGRATION

 

 

 

rick merritt   2017-02-09 16:42:15

@chipmonk0  Quite an impressive list!

So, you piqued my interest. When you are ready to give some details, you can find me at rick.merritt@aspencore.com

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