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The Economic Times
The Economic Times

IBM unveils tech for chip smaller than 1 nanometer in AI computing push

IBM on Thursday unveiled what it said was the world's ​first technology capable of ​producing chips smaller than one nanometer, as tech ​companies race to build semiconductors that can handle increasingly demanding AI workloads.

Shares of the Armonk, New York-based company rose over 6% in premarket trading. They have ‌fallen about ⁠11% so ⁠far this year.

The announcement comes at a time when chipmakers are searching for ​ways to maintain the decades-long trend of cramming more computing power into smaller ​spaces, a phenomenon known as Moore's Law.

The new chip technology, which bolsters IBM's position to compete with contract chipmakers TSMC and ​Intel, has a transistor architecture of 0.7 nanometers, ⁠or 7 ‌angstroms.

Last week, Intel said the new generation of ​its 18A ​manufacturing process, which makes 1.8 nanometer chips, moved ⁠into risk production, the testing phase before commercial ​manufacturing.

IBM said the 0.7-nanometer chip packs nearly 100 billion ​transistors onto a fingernail-sized surface, about twice the density of its 2-nanometer chip unveiled in 2021, delivering up to 50% higher performance or 70% greater energy efficiency.

To get there, IBM developed a new transistor design called "nanostack". Instead of laying transistors flat, the ‌design stacks them on top of each other in three dimensions, fitting more into the same volume of ​space.

"With our ​new nanostack architecture, we're ⁠not just making smaller transistors, we're reinventing how chips are built to deliver dramatically more power and energy efficiency," director of IBM Research Jay ​Gambetta said.

IBM says production could begin within five years. The company has previously licensed chip technologies to Samsung and Japan's Rapidus. It has not announced a manufacturing partner for this technology.

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