Chiplet Adoption: Understanding the Benefits of Packaging

Category Technology

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Chiplet adoption has been slow due to the lack of technical standards for packaging, but the industry is now embracing an open-source standard called Universal Chiplet Interconnect Express in order to make it easier to combine chiplets and promote chipmakers' freedom in fast-moving fields such as AI, aerospace, and automaking.


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Packaging. It may sound boring, but it’s an essential part of building computer systems. Now companies are defining what that looks like for a new generation of machines.

For decades, chipmakers have improved performance by making transistors smaller and cramming more of them onto chips. The popular name for the trend is Moore’s Law. But that era is ending. It’s gotten immensely expensive to further shrink transistors and manufacture the complex chips that today’s high-tech industries demand.In response, manufacturers are turning to smaller, more modular "chiplets" that are designed for specific functions (such as storing data or processing signals) and can be linked together to build a system. The smaller a chip, the fewer defects it’s likely to contain, making manufacturing less expensive.

Universal Chiplet Interconnect Express was endorsed by several companies in February 2020

Companies including Advanced Micro Devices and Intel have been marketing systems based on chiplets for years. But whether chiplets can help the industry maintain performance gains at the pace of Moore’s Law will depend on packaging, which entails placing them side by side or stacking them, forming fast, high-bandwidth electrical connections between them, and encasing them in protective plastic.

So far, chiplet adoption has been hindered by the lack of technical standards for packaging. That’s changing: the industry has embraced an open-source standard called Universal Chiplet Interconnect Express. In theory, standards will make it easy to combine chiplets made by different companies, which could give chipmakers more freedom in fast-moving fields like AI, aerospace, and automaking.

The first computer to use chiplets was a supercomputer from Ciba Specialty Chemicals in the 1990s

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