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Editing 10 nm lithography process

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Intel's 10nm process is roughly 1.7x the raw logic density of the next densest 10nm process, albeit due to aggressive pattering techniques they also have the most complex process available to date. The process can support multiple threshold voltages, and features 12-metal interconnect layers with the bottom two made of cobalt. This is the first time cobalt is used in a high volume production node. Because of the ever shrinking geometries the wires get smaller each node.
 
Intel's 10nm process is roughly 1.7x the raw logic density of the next densest 10nm process, albeit due to aggressive pattering techniques they also have the most complex process available to date. The process can support multiple threshold voltages, and features 12-metal interconnect layers with the bottom two made of cobalt. This is the first time cobalt is used in a high volume production node. Because of the ever shrinking geometries the wires get smaller each node.
 
[[File:intel interconnect 10 nm.jpg|left|200px]]
 
[[File:intel interconnect 10 nm.jpg|left|200px]]
At 10nm the wires become so small that the barrier layer takes up most of the interconnect, resulting in less space for the copper itself. As the cross section of the wire gets smaller the resistance rises exponentially. Cobalt aims to address this issue, it does not diffuse in the surrounding material, so the barrier layer can be reduced. And even though it has a higher resistance than copper in bulk, it has up to two times lower resistance in very small wires. This can be attributed to the larger wires because of the reduced barrier layer and the larger grain size, which reduces the electron scattering. It also has 10x better resistance to electron-migration.  
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At 10nm the wires become so small that the barrier layer takes up most of the interconnect, resulting in less space for the copper itself. As the cross section of the wire gets smaller the resistance rises exponentially. Cobalt aims to address this issue, it does not diffuse in the surrounding material, so the barrier layer can be reduced. And even though it has a higher resistance than copper in bulk, it has up to two times lower resistance in very small wires. This can be attributed to the larger wires because of the reduced barrier layer and the larger grain size, witch reduces the electron scattering. It also has 10x better resistance to electron-migration.  
  
 
Intel will leverage their initial 10nm process for their {{intel|Cannon Lake|l=arch}}-based microprocessors which are used exclusively for mobile. They will then utilize their second generation, "10nm+" process, for {{intel|Ice Lake|l=arch}}-based processors which will be used for the mainstream and server platform.
 
Intel will leverage their initial 10nm process for their {{intel|Cannon Lake|l=arch}}-based microprocessors which are used exclusively for mobile. They will then utilize their second generation, "10nm+" process, for {{intel|Ice Lake|l=arch}}-based processors which will be used for the mainstream and server platform.

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