Intel released nine research papers at IEDM 2022 that lay the groundwork for future chip designs as the company looks to deliver on its promise of developing processors with over a trillion transistors by 2030.

The research includes new 2D materials for transistors, new 3D packaging technology that narrows the performance and power gap between chiplet and single-die processors to a nearly-imperceptible range, transistors that 'don't forget' when power is removed, and embedded memories that can be stacked directly on top of transistors and store more than one bit per cell, among other innovations.


Intel's Components Research (CR) Group lays the initial groundwork for the company's future technologies, but not all of these initiatives will result in products that ship to market. Those that do come to market would typically arrive in five to ten years.

The group has an incredible track record of innovations that have already come to market, like FinFET, which revolutionized transistor design for the entire industry, strained silicon, Hi-K metal gate, and many others. Intel already has several other technologies on its roadmap, including RibbonFET Gate All Around (GAA) transistors, PowerVia back-side power delivery, EMIB, and Foveros Direct, which all hail from this research group.

The group submitted nine research papers at this year's 68th-Annual IEEE International Electron Devices Meeting, and below, we'll cover a few of them in slightly more detail. However, Intel hasn't yet presented the papers at the conference, so this is broad coverage of the topics.


The pace of transistor density increases continues roughly in line with Moore's Law, but the economics of today's chips are not improving at the same pace — the price per transistor is rising as we move to denser nodes. In addition, poor scaling of some chip elements, like analog and caches, complicates matters further. As such, the industry is moving en masse to chiplet-based designs for high-performance chips.

The overriding goal of any chiplet-based design is to preserve the best attributes of the power consumption and performance (latency, bandwidth) of the data pathways inside of a single-die monolithic processor while tapping the economic benefits of using a chiplet-based approach, like increased yield from smaller dies fabbed on a leading-edge process and the ability to use older, cheaper nodes for some of the other functions that see lesser density improvements.

As such, the battleground for semiconductor supremacy is shifting from the speed of the transistors to the performance of the interconnects, with new technologies like silicon interposers (EMIB) and hybrid bonding techniques coming to the forefront to improve economics.

However, these approaches still result in inevitable performance, power, and cost tradeoffs, which Intel's new 'Quasi-Monolithic Chips' (QMC) 3D packaging tech looks to solve. As the name implies, Intel's QMC aims to offer nearly the same characteristics as the interconnects that are built right into a single die.

QMC is a new hybrid bonding technique that features sub-3 micron pitches and results in a 10X increase in power efficiency and performance density over the research Intel submitted at last year's IEDM. That previous paper covered an approach with 10-micron pitches, which was already a 10X improvement. As such, Intel has found a pathway to a 100X improvement in just a few years, showing that the company's work in hybrid bonding is accelerating rapidly. QMC also enables multiple chiplets to be stacked vertically atop one another, as seen in the graphic above.

This paper outlines incredible interconnect densities of hundreds of thousands of connections per square millimeter and power consumption (measured in picojoules per bit - Pj/b) that rivals what we see in monolithic processors. In addition, the new paper outlines several new materials and processes that would be used to manufacture such devices, paving the way for real-world devices.


Intel's process roadmap already dips below the nanometer scale to the Angstrom scale, and even though the node naming conventions have long ago lost their relation to actual physical measurements of the transistors, it is clear that a radical new approach will be needed for continued scaling. Most of the industry is betting on a shift to 2D atomic channels in the future, but as with all new tech, there will be many steps to such a radical change.

Today's chip materials, like silicon, are comprised of three-dimensional crystals, which means atoms are bonded in all three dimensions, thus presenting a fundamental limit to shrinking. In contrast, 2D materials are attractive because all of the atoms are bonded in one plane, thus enabling features to be built with as small as three atoms of thickness.

Enter Intel's research into 2D materials that it could use for 3D GAA transistors. As a refresher, current GAA designs consist of stacked horizontal silicon nanosheets, with each nanosheet surrounded entirely by a gate. This 'gate-all-around' (GAA) technique reduces voltage leakage that prevents switching off the transistors. This is becoming more of an issue as transistors shrink — even when the gate surrounds the channel on three sides, as we see with FinFET transistors.

Intel brands its GAA design as RibbonFET, which is currently planned to arrive in the first half of 2024. However, moving beyond RibbonFET will require further innovations, and this 2D research fits the bill of a potential pathway.

Intel's paper describes a Gate All Around (GAA) stacked nanosheet structure with channel materials (nanosheets/nanoribbons) that measure a mere three atoms thick and can operate at room temperature with low leakage current.

The thinness of 2D channel materials makes establishing an electrical connection to a nanoribbon a daunting task, so Intel also modeled electrical contact topologies for 2D materials. This is a key step to understanding the properties of the 2D materials and how they function, thus allowing the company to accurately model further advancements.