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UMC's 0.13-Micron Technology Enables Next
Generation Semiconductor Applications with Innovative "Fusion"
Design Option
First Foundry to Integrate High Speed
and Low Power Transistors onto Single Chip Leveraging Industry's
Only True Low-K Dielectric Material
SUNNYVALE, Calif., April 16, 2001--UMC (NYSE: UMC), a world leading
semiconductor foundry, today announced that it is the first pure-play
foundry to offer a process that combines high speed and low power
logic transistors into one design, using its 0.13-micron technology
that leverages the first and only dedicated foundry process that
successfully integrates a true low-k dielectric material, at the
0.13-micron generation. This new logic process option, called Fusion,
addresses the processor speed requirements of next-generation semiconductor
products with the flexibility to simultaneously meet the most demanding
power budgets.
"With this innovation of combining high-speed and low-power
logic transistors into a single-chip design, we are offering chip
designers an additional degree of freedom; the ability to integrate
more functionality into a single design and thus enhance their ability
to more readily introduce next-generation products," said Jim
Ballingall, vice president of worldwide marketing for UMC. "Computing,
communications and consumer applications can all benefit from the
Fusion option, both wired and wireless, by alleviating the needs
for cooling fans or exotic packages, and, of course, enabling longer
times between battery recharges for portable applications."
Fusion is a subset of the logic offering of UMC's 0.13-micron technology.
The technology enables a variety of design options to be seamlessly
assembled together with logic in an SOC: analog and RF transistors,
high-performance passive components (varactors, inductors, resistors)
for analog and RF applications, and embedded DRAM and SRAM. The
low-K material in UMC's 0.13-micron process provides a performance
advantage of up to 30 percent over competing foundry processes for
wire speed delay and power reduction.
Fusion Design Support and Availability
UMC is providing extensive design support for customers wishing
to take advantage of its 0.13-micron Fusion option, including optimized
design libraries and low-cost silicon verification. The high-speed
standard cell library and memory compilers are available now from
Virtual Silicon, with the Fusion standard cell library and memory
compilers to be available in June. UMC's Silicon Shuttle? a program
whereby customers can verify their advanced designs and prototypes
in silicon and thus minimize risk and cost, with the Fusion option,
is planned for availability in July of this year.
Mahesh Tirrupattur, vice president of Pacific Rim operations for
Virtual Silicon said, "We are excited about extending our current
UMC library offering to include 0.13-micron Fusion option. This
provides IC designers with additional flexibility to execute their
designs. With Fusion, high speed and low power considerations are
no longer mutually exclusive."
Application Example: Next Generation Wireless IC's
UMC specified, developed, and production qualified 0.13-micron
technology to address SOC applications "across the board"
in computing, communication, and consumer markets. This breadth
of applicability is realized by deploying multiple options for active
and passive components, on a robust process technology platform.
As an example, UMC's 0.13-micron technology provides an excellent
solution for next-generation wireless handset applications where
the digital baseband and analog intermediate frequency (IF) functions
that are implemented into separate chips, in the current generation
handsets, will now be combined into a single SOC; merging logic,
analog, and embedded SRAM and DRAM memory. Within the logic section
of this SOC, the Fusion option presents a compelling solution, as
described below.
The baseband chips featured in low power mobile applications, such
as the second-generation (2G) cell phones that are in common use
today, use a single logic transistor optimized for low power consumption,
which means speed is sacrificed to minimize power consumption. Third
generation (3G) can't afford such compromise, as the 3G standards
such as W-CDMA, are driving significantly higher performance requirements,
with baseband processors that require several billion instructions
per second (BIPS), while simultaneously continuing the demand for
low power consumption to enable multi-hour "talk time"
(voice, data transmission, etc.) between battery recharges. Fusion
enables 3G applications to utilize the high-speed transistor for
performance-intensive digital signal processing tasks such as web
browsing, while functions where processor speed is not a stringent
requirement (such as memory storage, control logic, accessories
such as MP3 players, GPS, Imaging/Display functions, and Bluetooth
extensions) can be relegated to the low power transistor, all on
the same baseband IC.
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