Infineon Introduces Test Chip To Eliminate VIA Defects
AMD Unveils X1900 G5 Mac Edition Upgrade
Infineon Introduces Test Chip To Eliminate VIA Defects
Infineon has become the first semiconductor manufacturer in the world to introduce a method that can avoid one of the most common causes of defects in the production of highly integrated semiconductor circuits: the electrical failure of VIA contacts. "VIA" stands for "vertical interconnect" and refers to the contact between two metal layers in integrated circuits. Infineon developed the new method in collaboration with the Regensburg University of Applied Sciences (FH Regensburg) as part of its Automotive Excellence program, launched some three years ago to meet the automotive industry’s exacting quality requirements.
Today's integrated circuits contain millions of transistors that are interconnected by several layers of metal wiring. The components known as “VIAs” connect the metal conductors between the layers. They are extraordinarily small: A VIA, manufactured according to 0.13µm technology has diameter of just 200 nanometers, which makes it about 300 times thinner than a human hair. A modern microcontroller of around half a square centimeter in size contains well in excess of ten million VIAs. There is no possibility to optically or electronically control or measure the quality of a VIA during the manufacturing process. Electrical failure of a single VIA can, in the most extreme case, impair the functionality of the entire microcontroller, causing suboptimal performance, even in applications that are critical to safety.
The VIA array test chip is typical of the holistic methodology employed by Infineon in the Automotive Excellence program. Infineon is the first semiconductor manufacturer in the world to develop a method that can reliably identify potential VIA failures with high probability. The findings clearly locate the corresponding sources of defects in the production chain and eliminate or circumvent them from the outset. The VIA test chip allows Infineon to reduce its VIA defects by a factor of around 10.
The test chip maps an arrangement of more than half a million VIA cells, with each cell containing both the VIA to be evaluated and the associated control electronics. The electrical resistance and voltage drop are measured and then used as parameters to establish whether a VIA is defective, and, if so, where the source of the defect lies.
Infineon is currently using the VIA test chip primarily for components being manufactured in 0.5µm and 130-nanometer technology, e.g. the AUDO NG microcontroller, which uses 130-nanometer embedded flash technology. Infineon is confident that the VIA test chip will also be suitable for future technologies such as 90 and 65 nanometers.
Source: Infineon
AMD Unveils X1900 G5 Mac Edition Upgrade
AMD today announced the ATI Radeon X1900 G5 Mac Edition graphics card that represents a high-performance PCI Express graphics upgrade card for the Power Mac G5 Quad and Power Mac G5 Dual.
At an estimated street price of US $349, the ATI Radeon X1900 G5 Mac features 36 pixel shader processors, 256 MB of video RAM and delivers over 37 gigabytes per second of memory bandwidth. It features two DVI ports that are capable of supporting two 30-inch Apple Cinema HD Displays.
More specs:
- System Requirements: Apple Power Mac G5 PCI Express based system; 512MB of system memory
- Radeon X1900 GT graphics processing unit
- 256MB GDDR3 memory; 256-bit memory interface
- Supports Mac OS X 10.4.7 or higher
- Dual integrated dual-link DVI for high-resolution digital displays; VGA mode support on DVI outputs (with adapter); drive two displays simultaneously with independent resolutions and refresh rates
- Two dual-link DVI-I; 9-pin S-video and composite video output; VGA support through adapter
- Display Modes: up to 2560x1600 by DVI; up to 2048x1536 by VGA; SDTV (analog): 480i | 525i and HDTV (analog or digital): 480p | 720p | 1080i | any custom resolution by TV-out
Source: AMD
Write a comment below. No registration needed!