Intel Opens D1X-Mod3 Fab Expansion; Moves Up Intel 18A Manufacturing to H2’2024
by Ryan Smith on April 11, 2022 1:00 PM ESTIntel for the last few years has been undergoing a major period of manufacturing expansion for the company. While the more recent announcements of new facilities in Ohio and Germany have understandably taken a lot of the spotlight – especially given their importance to Intel’s Foundry Services plans – Intel has been working even longer on expanding their existing facilities for their own use. The company’s development of next-generation EUV and Gate-All-Around-style transistors (RibbonFET) not only requires creating and refining the underlying technology, but it also just flat out requires more space. A lot of it.
To that end, Intel today is holding a grand opening in Oregon for the Mod3 expansion of D1X, the company’s primary development fab. The expansion, first announced back in 2019, is the third such mod (module) and second expansion for Intel’s main dev fab to be built since D1X’s initial construction in 2010. And in keeping with tradition for Intel fab launches and expansions, the company is making something of an event of it, including bringing Oregon’s governor out to show off their $3 Billion investment.
But fanfare aside, the latest mod for the fab is a genuinely important one for Intel: not only does it add a further 270,000 square feet of clean room space to the facility – expanding D1X by about 20% – but it’s the only fab module that’s big enough to support the High Numerical Aperture (High NA) EUV tool that Intel will be using starting with its 18A process. ASML’s forthcoming TWINSCAN EXE:5200 EUV tool is designed to be their most powerful yet, but it’s also quite a bit larger than the NXE 3000 series EUV tools Intel is using for their first generation EUV processes (Intel 4/Intel 3). It’s so big that D1X’s ceiling is too low to fit the machine, never mind the floor supporting its weight.
Size Comparison: ASML Normal & High NA EUV Machines
As a result, Mod3 has been built, in no small part, to fit this massive machine. Intel isn’t expecting to take delivery of the machine for a couple more years, but they had to start preparations years in advance just to get to this point.
Meanwhile, although D1X-Mod3 is only being officially declared open today, Intel has already been moving critical tools into Mod3 since last August. Consequently, today’s opening is something of a ceremonial launch for the mod, as parts of it are already setup (if not already in use). Still, even with that head start, according to Intel the company expects to be moving in tools for another year, especially as they bring in the remaining, lower-priority tools.
Coincidentally, our own Dr. Ian Cutress had a chance to see D1X in all of its glory late last year, when he toured the facility. At the time Intel was already in the final stages of finishing the Mod3 expansion, as well as bringing up EUV machines as part of the development of the Intel 4 and Intel 3 process nodes, Intel’s first EUV nodes. So for more information on D1X and what goes on there, be sure to check out that article.
Finally, along with formally opening the Mod3 expansion, Intel today is also using the opportunity to rename the 450-acre campus that D1X sits on. Intel’s Ronler Acres campus has been the center of Intel’s fab R&D efforts for decades, and along with D1X, also houses Intel’s older D1 development fabs, such as D1B, D1C, and D1D. So, in reflection of all of the important R&D that goes on at the site, Intel is renaming it after co-founder Gordon Moore, one of the instrumental figures behind the development of Intel’s earliest technologies. The newly renamed campus will now go by Gordon Moore Park at Ronler Acres, or Gordon Moore Park for short. And despite the many (many) things that have been named after Moore over the years, from laws and buildings to awards and medals, this is the largest thing named after Moore (yet), as it’s the first time a whole campus has been named after the luminary.
Intel Roadmap Update: Intel 18A Moved Up to H2 2024
Alongside briefing the press about the D1X-Mod3 opening, Intel also used their latest press event to get everyone up to speed on the latest updates on Intel’s development roadmap. Strictly speaking, nothing here is new – all of this was first announced during Intel’s 2022 Investor Meeting back in February. However this is the first time Intel has engaged the technical press, rather than investors, on the current state of its development efforts.
The big news here is that Intel is formally moving up the start date for manufacturing on the Intel 18A node. Intel’s second-generation “angstrom” node was originally expected in 2025; but now the company is bumping that up by half a year, to the second half of 2024.
As a result, Intel’s roadmap now looks like this:
With the company already gearing up for its first EUV process, Intel 4, later this year, Intel’s roadmap starts looking very compressed beginning in the second half of 2023. The second half of that year will see Intel 3 go into production, which is Intel’s enhanced EUV process. Meanwhile, potentially as soon as 6 months after that, Intel 20A goes into production. 20A is Intel’s first “angstrom” node, which incorporates their gate-all-around-style “RibbonFET” FinFets, as well as PowerVias.
But, if all goes according to plan, 20A will seemingly be a relatively short-lived node due to the movement of 18A. Intel’s second-generation angstrom node, which will incorporate an updated ribbon design and other improvements to Intel’s GAA manufacturing technology. Since 18A remains the farthest node out on Intel’s manufacturing roadmaps, the company is remaining relatively mum on everything new that 18A will entail, but it remains the point where Intel plans to re-establish unquestioned leadership of the chip making industry.
According to Intel, 18A development has been moving so well that the company’s R&D operations are now on or ahead of all of their development milestones, giving the company confidence that they can begin manufacturing products based on the process node in late 2024, instead of 2025 as first planned.
One consequence of bringing in 18A, however, is that it means Intel is now definitely going into initial production of 18A without all of their High NA machines. 18A remains the process node where High NA machines will debut, but as the TWINSCAN EXE 5200 is still not expected to be in place until 2025, that means Intel will now have to use their existing 3000 series machines to kickstart 18A production. Until this latest development, Intel had been presenting High NA machines and 18A as being tied at the hip, so whether that was always the actual case or not, now that is clearly not the case.
What that means for 18A production, in turns, remains to be seen. Since Intel can use their normal (non-HA) machines for 18A, then presumably the biggest advantages of the High NA machines were throughput, allowing Intel to process wafers with little (or not) multi-patterning thanks to High NA’s greater accuracy. Seemingly, the most likely outcome is that Intel will be able to produce 18A in 2024, and maybe even in decent volumes, but that they won’t be able to go into Intel-scale high volume manufacturing until the first High NA machine is available in 2025.
And, as always, it should be noted that Intel’s manufacturing roadmap dates are the earliest dates that a new process node goes into production, not the date that hardware based on the technology hits the shelves. So even if 18A launches in H2’24 as it’s now scheduled, it could very well be a few months into 2025 before the first products are in customer hands, especially if Intel launches in the later part of that window. All of which, given the large size of these launch windows and Intel’s own history, is a likely bet, as Intel has rarely launched new products/technologies early in a release window.
Finally, Intel’s development briefing also included confirmation that Intel is employing a purely internal “test risk reduction” node as part of their development process for their PowerVia technology. The purpose of the test node is to decouple the full risk of 20A by allowing Intel to develop and test PowerVias separately from RibbonFETs. In this case, the test node uses Intel’s well-established FinFET technology on the front-end, while employing a test version of PowerVia on the backend. No such node has been announced for RibbonFETs, but even if one doesn’t exist, not having to debug first-generation PowerVia on 20A alongside the RibbonFETs is still a simplification of the process, as it allows Intel to pursue both elements semi-independently, and learn from both of them in the process.
This is a significant change from how Intel has developed major new manufacturing nodes in the past, and even they are the first to admit as such. Intel’s 10nm problems were caused in large part by bundling too many technology changes together all at once, combined with a very aggressive reduction in feature size. Separating these things into smaller, more frequent manufacturing node updates was one way Intel is mitigating this risk in the future. And now with an internal test node for PowerVia development, they’re aiming to do even more risk mitigation in order to be able to roll out both RibbonFETs and PowerVia together in the first half of 2024 as part of Intel 20A.
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usiname - Tuesday, April 12, 2022 - link
With tdp of 300w I dont see how this cpu will have more than 8p cores and 48e coresGondalf - Wednesday, April 13, 2022 - link
If they clock lower with an high single core turbo your 300 W will be an idiocy. More cores, lower average clock speed.FunBunny2 - Monday, April 11, 2022 - link
"Finally what's the use when the PC itself is seeing weird changes such as Windows 11 going more for BGA Touchscreen dumpster rather than poweruser based UX like Windows 7."there was a time, some years ago, when some wag (no longer remember who; might have been Dvorak) allowed as how there were three killer apps for the PC
- spreadsheets
- word processing
- spreadsheets
today we might add a fourth
- email
either way, a 486 with a decent bit of wifi will do for most folks.
mode_13h - Tuesday, April 12, 2022 - link
> today we might add a fourth> - email
When was that written? 1995?
Web, online shopping, and social media are obviously killer apps. Sure, you can do them on a phone, but they're all better on a PC.
And that's leaving out the granddaddy of them all, which is gaming. There are gaming and education apps that don't port well to consoles or phones.
> a 486 with a decent bit of wifi will do for most folks.
No. The web is a moving target. What CPU power it took to brows the web of the 1990's over dialup (or a 1 mbps cable modem, for the lucky) will no longer cut it. A Raspberry Pi is lightyears faster than any 486, and it's still painful for certain things.
I think this little troll post backfired on you. It seems as if you remember nothing of the past 2 decades.
DanNeely - Tuesday, April 12, 2022 - link
That sounds vaguely familiar, and Dvorak was my only regular source of tech industry snark in the 90s so him being the author seems plausible.Calin - Tuesday, April 12, 2022 - link
486 is theoretically limited to 4 GiB of addressable memory. However, you would be hard pressed to find a mainboard supporting 64MiB, with 32 MiB a more credible alternative.So, while the 486 could be fast enough (which I doubt), it will most certainly not have enough memory.
mode_13h - Tuesday, April 12, 2022 - link
I had a Pentium Pro with 128 MB of RAM, but I forget whether it was FPM or EDO. I ran a few of my own benchmarks on it, and I think it managed about 90 MB/sec for read/write. On any 486, it should've been some fraction of that. So, even if you could pack it with say 2 GB of RAM, actually using it would've been another thing entirely.I think the first machine I had with 2 GB was a Pentium 4, which ran at 3.2 GHz compared to the 33 MHz of a typical 486.
lmcd - Tuesday, April 12, 2022 - link
Do you reflect at all before you post garbage like this? I half expected to see a Bengazi reference thrown in for good measure.kwohlt - Tuesday, April 12, 2022 - link
Once AMD goes big.Little in 2 years or so, and every CPU manufacturer, from Intel, AMD, Qualcomm, Mediatek, and Apple are all using big.little, will people who have no formal training or real world experience in CPU design still be calling the entire industry of competing companies and engineers 'idiots'?And you're mad Windows 11 accommodates touch? I like using a touch screen convertible device.
name99 - Tuesday, April 12, 2022 - link
He may be unbalanced, but he's not that wrong.It remains unclear that E-core is a great match for the desktop.
E-core clearly has massive value going downward (iPhone, iPad, laptop; but also Apple Watch and HomePod mini).
And E-core probably has a useful role in the data center for servers whose primary job is to move data around with minimal manipulation thereof (things like memcached servers).
But on the desktop? Look at how Apple dialed BACK the number of E-cores for M1 Pro and Max. It's surely significant that the company with the most experience of these things made that decision?
Now there is a possible direction E-cores could go, which is to provide a sea of generic throughput computing. This is essentially the bet that Tenstorrent (Jim Keller's new crowd) are making. And you could imagine such a sea of generic throughput being useful for NPU, GPU and ISP type applications. But that's a hell of a bet and it's unclear that it will pan out; Intel made a similar bet with the first version of Larrabee as GPU, and, well, we all know how that went -- it's hard for generic compute to compete against specialized HW once the problem domain is well-enough specified...
So for Intel to launch, say 8P- + 24E-cores is a hell of a bet that enough important SW companies figure out, in just a year or two, a way to extract value from a flock of chickens. The industry, more or less, has been working on this problem since at least Transputers and the BBN Butterfly, with limited success, so it seems unlikely that we'll see the relevant breakthrough soon.