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Intel to stick to 10nm on 3 gens of CPUs


DKT27

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So 10nm will become the second process node to feature three processor families.

 

A report on financial orientated website The Motley Fool says that Intel is planning to launch three processor families manufactured on the 10nm process node. If true this will be the second time Intel has produced three processor families on the same node. On the current 14nm node Intel has made Broadwell, Skylake, and we learnt about six months ago that a 'stopgap product' called Kaby Lake would be released later in 2016.

 

The first Intel 10nm architecture processor will be Cannonlake and should arrive in H2 2017. We have heard about Cannonlake before and seen it mentioned on some roadmaps. Another interesting thing about Cannonlake is that it is expected to bring the first consumer processors that go beyond quad-core.

 

Following Cannonlake The Motley Fool writer has been tipped by sources that Intel will produce a 10nm chip called Icelake. Icelake will be launched in H2 2018. Then the final 10nm chip to be launched by Intel will follow a year later and be known as Tigerlake. That's Tigerlake launched in H2 2019. If all those plans fall in place we should be looking at Intel's first 7nm architecture processor launch in H2 2020.

 

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Will Intel get back to producing two products per process node with 7nm? Of course it's too early to say but "If all goes well for the company, then 7-nanometer could be a two-product node, implying a transition to the 5-nanometer technology node by the second half of 2022. However, the source that I spoke to expressed significant doubts that Intel will be able to return to a two-years-per-technology cycle," reports The MotleyFool.

 

Keeping the above timescales in mind, Intel investors, like the Motley Fool reporter, are a little worried that Chipzilla could be overtaken by the likes of TSMC. "Taiwan Semi claims that it will go into high-volume manufacturing on its 10-nanometer technology (which should have slightly better density characteristics than Intel's 14-nanometer technology) in late 2016/early 2017." TSMC plans to begin mass production of its 7-nanometer node during H1 2018. This is very interesting for the competitive landscape, and don't forget that Samsung is galloping ahead with its semiconductor manufacturing plans giving Intel rivals even more options.

 

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Nothing, because beyond 7nm there are many problems that are still unsolved, and potentially unsolvable. Quantum effects start to bite. Electro-migration, quantum tunneling.

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