Microelectronics
Prof. Dr. Michael Kraft
Lecture 1:
Introduction, History and
Market
History of Computing
Babbage Difference Machine (1832)
– Mechanical computer
– 25000 parts, cost £17470
London Science Museum
Z3 by Konrad Zuse
Electro-mechanical computer, 1941
World's first working programmable, fully automatic digital computer
– Z3 was built
with 2000
relays,
implementing
a 22-bit word
length that
operated at a
clock
frequency of
about 5–10 Hz
– Program code
and data were
stored on
punched film
ENIAC First Electronic Computer
ENIAC contained 17,468 vacuum tubes, 7,200 crystal diodes, 1,500
relays, 70,000 resistors, 10,000 capacitors and around 5 million hand-
soldered joints.
First “general purpose computer”
– digital, and capable
of being
reprogrammed
to solve "a large class
of numerical
problems"
– Used for to calculate
artillery firing tables
for the United States
Army's Ballistic
Research
John Mauchly and
J. Presper Eckert, 1946
ENIAC Vacuum Tubes
ENIAC ‘Boards’ and Operators
First Transistor - 1947
'Point Contact Transistor' made from Germanium
– T-R-A-N-S-I-S-T-O-R: Resistor which can amplify electrical signals as they are
transferred
AT&T Bell Laboratories: William Shockley, Walter Brattain and John
Bardeen
1956: Nobelpreis in physics
Transistor Patent
First “Pocket Radio” - 1954
Texas Instruments:
– "To sell a pocket radio at that point, it was our opinion that it would have to
list at $50,“ Jonsson recalled. But four transistors times $16 wouldn't do it,
so we had to design a manufacturing process so much better than any other
at the time we could sell them for $2.50 each. We figured if we could get
$10 for four transistors, the manufacturer could put the rest of the parts
together for $17 or $18, sell a $50 radio, and still have a little left over for
himself after paying a dealer. Well, we came up with the technique, and
Regency bought the idea, and that radio went on the market at $49.95."
1957:
Competition
from Sony:
sells much
better
Design ‘Regency’
Adjustable
capacitor
Antenna
Battery
Speaker
‘Regency’ Circuit Diagram
First Silicon Transistor - 1954
Teal Gordon: 10 May 1954 at the Institute of Radio Engineers (IRE) National
Conference on Airborne Electronics, in Dayton, Ohio:
"Some New and Recent Developments in Silicon and Germanium," an inauspicious
title. The germanium transistor was no longer news. Industry-wide research had
been conducted for some time on the use of silicon for transistors, because of its
ability to withstand higher temperatures. However, as far as anyone knew, no one
had been able grow silicon crystals with the characteristics needed for a workable
transistor.
Speaker after speaker at the conference denied the near-term feasibility of the
silicon transistor. Teal, next to last on the agenda, took his turn. TI cofounder Erik
Jonsson recalled that Teal, "a quiet man," put everyone to sleep until, at the end of
his speech, he calmly remarked, "Contrary to what my colleagues have told you
about the prospects for silicon transistors, I happen to have a few here in my
pocket". Teal's announcement that someone from TI was standing in the back of the
auditorium with literature on the new device
caused a stampede. "The poor last speaker was in
trouble,“ Jonsson remembered. "He had no audience
left.“
Advantages of Si:
Operating temp up to 150°C
Higher output power
First Integrated Circuit- 1954
Jack Kilby, Texas Instruments
– http://www.ti.com/corp/docs/company/history/tihistory.htm
1 Transistor, 1 capacitor, 3 resistors on one Germanium chip
Nobel prize 2000
Planar Technology - 1959
Much more effective fabrication
– MESA – process suitable for volume production
PNP Bipolar Transistor made from Silicon
Collector (Substrate)
Base with Al contact
Emitter with AL
contact
First Commercial Planar
Integrated Circuit - 1959
Fairchild Electronics - Jean Hoerni und Robert Noyce: Planar Technology
Fairchild – One Bit digital memory (flipflop) in resistor-transistor-logic (RTL)
– 4 transistors, 5 resistors – Integration of more elements relatively simple
– Advent of „Small Scale Integration“ : SSI
Planar technology: doping by
diffusion of other layers/elements
First MOSFET - 1962
Metal-Oxide Semiconductor Field-Effect Transistor
Radio Corporation of America (RCA)
'General Purpose Chip' with 16 transistors
RTL Logic - 1963
Fairchild '907': RTL Logic: 4 Transistors, 5 resistors
'Buried Layer' under collector reduces resistance ⇒ higher speed
Isolation of transistor
groups
First Analogue IC- 1963
Fairchild: Operational Amplifier (OpAmp) mA 702
First integrated difference amplifier
OpAmp Bestseller - 1965
Fairchild: OpAmp mA 709 – Designed by Robert ('Bob') Widlar
– 14 transistors, 15 resistors
– Still being fabricated
– Gain ~70000
– Price: $100 1968, today 0.5$
Competition only in 1968
mA 741 from Texas Instruments
Emitter Coupled Logic - 1966
Motorola ECL Technology
Metal layer
– Gate with 3 inputs
– Bipolar transistors
and resistors
One metal layer
1st IC designed with CAD - 1967
Fairchild: MICROMOSAIC
– ca. 150 AND, OR, NOT gates
– Generated from a pool
of transistors by
‘application specific‘
metallization
– 'Mask programmable
transistor array'
4 mm
256 Bit Static RAM - 1970
Fairchild: 4100
– With decoder
– 2.5mm x 3mm
– Used in ILLIAC IV
computer (NASA)
1024 Bit Dynamic RAM - 1970
Intel Corporation
– Founded 1968 by ex-Fairchild
employees (Bob Noyce,
Gordon Moore)
– 4 x more bits on the
same area as
static RAMs
First Micro-Processor - 1974
Intel 4004 (Marcian E. Hoff)
– First ‘computer” on a chip
– Advent of ‘large scale
integration‘ – LSI
– 2300 MOSFETs
– 4 bit
– 108 kHz clock freq.
First EPROM - 1971
Intel 1702
– 2 kbit (256 x 8)
– UV erasable
– 3.7 mm x 4.1 mm
– Costumers could
programme mC
8080 Universal Processor - 1974
Intel 8080
– 5000 Transistors
– 6 mm technology
– 2 MHz clock
– 8 bit
– 4mm x 5 mm
– Still produced in
license by 12
companies
TI Competition - 1974
TI IMS 1000
Micro Computer
– CPU 4 bit
– 256 RAM (right)
– 1 kbit ROM (left)
Used in pocket
calculators and
other consumer
goods
8 bit DAC - 1974
Precision Monolithic
DAC08CPU 4bit
– First hybrid IC
– 140 ns settling time
– Bipolar technology
– Still being produced
– 1.6 mm x 2.2 mm
AMD Fast mP - 1974
AMD Advanced Micro Devices
Bit slice processor: several
processors work on wider
data word
Bipolar transistors:
– High power consumption
– But much faster than CMOS
(at this time)
– 10 MHz clock
Programmable Array Logic (PAL) -
1977
MMI (Monolithic
Memories Inc
Programmable logic
with fuses
PAL16L8
65536 Bit Dynamic RAM - 1977
IBM starts chip
business relatively
late
Innovation:
– Memory chip with
redundancy
– Bump bonds
Motorola 16 Bits - 1979
Motorola 68000
NMOS transistors
16 bits but emulate
32 bits
50x faster than 8080
– Multiplier on chip
Optical Mouse- 1980
Xerox
16 optical detectors
recognize the
movement of
illuminated
background surface
Intel 80286 - 1982
6 -12 MHz
16 bits
120000 transistors
1.5 mm technology
Intel Pentium - 1993
60 MHz
32 bits
3.1 mio transistors
0.8 mm technology
Intel Pentium IV - 2000
1.5 GHz
42 mio transistors
0.18 mm technology
Intel Pentium - 2009
1.5 GHz
2.9 billion transistors
0.022 mm technology
Moore’s Law
In 1965, Gordon Moore noted that the number of transistors on a chip
doubled every 18 to 24 months
He made a prediction that semiconductor technology will double its
effectiveness every 18 months
Moore’s Law
Transistor Number
Microprocessors
Die Size
Clock Frequency
Technology Nodes
Moore’s Law will come to an end (at least by simple scaling)
Power Dissipation
Power/Heat: Major Problem
S. Borkar, IEEE Micro 1999
P. Gelsinger: μProcessor for the New Millenium, ISSCC 2001
Power Density
Power density too high to keep junctions at low temp
Technology Roadmap
Semiconductor Market
The semiconductor market will continue to grow
Semiconductor Market Expansion
Increasing semiconductor penetration in electronics
Future Challenge: Technology Cost
Capital expenditure for constructing a new fab is increasing
Major factor for financing and future profit
Example Stepper ASML
Price Tag: 100 Mio EUR!!
Future Challenge: ROI Risk Process
Process technology developing costs are continuously
increasing
Future Challenge: ROI Risk Product
Design complexity and cost increase rapidly
Short time to market
Ways To Overcome The Challenges
ITRS
ITRS: International Technology roadmap for Semiconductors
– http://www.itrs.net/
ITRS
System aspect roadmap