From WikiChip
Difference between revisions of "intel/microarchitectures/nehalem (client)"
m (At32Hz moved page intel/microarchitectures/nehalem to intel/microarchitectures/nehalem (client)) |
(Lynfield is actually Lynnfield) |
||
Line 62: | Line 62: | ||
− | === | + | ===Lynnfield=== |
* 296 mm² | * 296 mm² | ||
* 774,000,000 transistors | * 774,000,000 transistors |
Revision as of 05:46, 4 October 2018
Edit Values | |
Nehalem µarch | |
General Info | |
Arch Type | CPU |
Designer | Intel |
Manufacturer | Intel |
Introduction | August, 2008 |
Phase-out | March, 2010 |
Process | 45 nm |
Instructions | |
ISA | x86-64 |
Succession | |
Nehalem was the microarchitecture for Intel's 45 nm process for desktops and servers as a successor to Penryn. Nehalem is named after the Nehalem River. Nehalem was replaced by the Westmere microarchitecture in 2010.
Process Technology
45 nm Manufacturing Fabs | |
---|---|
Fab | Location |
D1D | Hillsboro, Oregon |
Fab 32 | Chandler, Arizona |
Fab 28 | Kiryat Gat, Israel |
Penryn-based microprocessors were manufactured on a 45 nm process. Intel's 45 nm process is the is the first high-volume manufacturing process to introduce High-k + metal gate transistors.
Scaling:
Core | Nehalem | Δ | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
65 nm | 45 nm | |||
Metal Layers | 8 | 9 | ||
Gate Pitch | 220 nm | 180 nm | 0.82x | |
Interconnect Pitch | 210 nm | 160 nm | 0.76x | |
SRAM bit cell (HD) | 0.570 µm² | 0.346 um² | 0.61x | |
SRAM bit cell (LP) | 0.680 µm² | 0.382 um² | 0.56x |
Die Shot
Bloomfield
- 263 mm²
- 713,000,000 transistors
- 45 nm process
- 4 cores
Lynnfield
- 296 mm²
- 774,000,000 transistors
- 45 nm process
- 4 cores
Nehalem-EX
- 648 mm²
- 2.300,000,000 transistors
- 45 nm process
- 8 cores
Facts about "Nehalem - Microarchitectures - Intel"
codename | Nehalem + |
designer | Intel + |
first launched | August 2008 + |
full page name | intel/microarchitectures/nehalem (client) + |
instance of | microarchitecture + |
instruction set architecture | x86-64 + |
manufacturer | Intel + |
microarchitecture type | CPU + |
name | Nehalem + |
phase-out | March 2010 + |
process | 45 nm (0.045 μm, 4.5e-5 mm) + |