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Processor Fabrication: How a CPU is Built
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While it’s nice to just look at the finished product itself, sometimes it’s useful to go back and look at how it’s made.  Especially today in the silicon industry, where both major players in the x86 desktop market are having issues with their top end products.  Another large member of the industry, IBM, is also finding the going at 90nanometer a lot harder than they predicted.  Today on Sudhian, we’ll take a look at just how a processor goes from essentially sand to a fully functioning integrated circuit, and all the steps in between.


The Basic Materials


Everyone is generally aware that the major component of CPUs today is silicon.  In basic terms, that’s what sand on the beach is too.  Of course, there are a bunch of other elements in there as well, which is why you don’t see Intel or AMD just buying up beachfront property for use in their fabs.  Instead, very carefully selected silicon, only the purest stuff available is used.  You don’t make some of the most complicated manufactured products on the planet with crummy, cheap materials.  Especially considering what it is they do to that silicon before it even comes close to being the final product that’s currently heating your case. 


Another basic material used in the process of creating a processor is metal.  You’ll see later on where this comes in.  While up until recently, aluminum has been the metal of choice for inside the processor itself, copper is taking over for modern processes.  There are a few reasons for this.  Aluminum is more prone to electromigration in current high power designs compared to copper, where the individual atoms move out of place creating holes in the connections.  As you can guess, holes don’t conduct electricity very well.  This is why many “Northwood” Pentium4’s suffered from “Sudden Northwood Death Syndrome” or SNDS when overclockers first started applying massive amounts of voltage to them.  That was Intel’s first experience with using copper interconnects, and it obviously needed some tweaking.  Copper interconnects can also be made much smaller, an important fact when we start talking about feature size in nanometers.  Lastly, copper has less resistance, allowing electrons to pass through quicker. 


There are also many different chemicals used for creating the designs in the silicon itself, and doping it to create different properties.  This we’ll explain as we get to it.


Preparation


After amassing the raw materials required, some of them require a large amount of preparation.  One of those is the main component, silicon.  First, it has to be chemically purified, and turned into electronic grade material.  For this to turn into the base of your integrated circuit, you also need it to be a uniform solid, instead of essentially grains of sand. 

This is done by melting down the silicon, and putting it into a large, heated, quartz bucket.  From this, very carefully a first seed crystal is inserted into the melt by a wire.  From high school chemistry, you should know that many solids follow a crystalline structure.  Silicon is one of these.  In order for a high performance microprocessor to come from this silicon, the whole base must be defect free, and be a single crystal.  By being rotated and pulled out very slowly, an ingot of silicon is created, the whole mass following the orientation of that first seed. 

Up until recently, these ingots were 200mm in diameter.  Now however, Intel and others have invested in creating 300mm wide ingots.  Making a bigger ingot while retaining those necessary properties obviously is more difficult, but has been solved by having enough money thrown at it.  Building a current 300mm fab is approximately 3.5 billion dollars for the output in wafers that is required by Intel, along with the equipment to make rather complicated microprocessors (compared to simpler DRAM).  A similar 200mm fab costs around 1.5 billion. 

The difference in costs is due to being on the bleeding edge of technology.  Since a change in wafer size only occurs once a decade (or more), being the first to try it out does get expensive.  The payoffs you’ll learn later show why this is money well spent.  There are other methods for making silicon ingots, but the CZ method described above was the one taught in my electrical engineering courses.





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