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Editing 7 nm lithography process

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== Industry ==
 
== Industry ==
now four companies are currently planning or developing a 7-nanometer node: [[Intel]], [[TSMC]], [[Samsung]] and [[SMIC]].
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Only three companies are currently planning or developing a 7-nanometer node: [[Intel]], [[TSMC]], and [[Samsung]].
  
 
{{node comp|node=7 nm}}
 
{{node comp|node=7 nm}}
  
 
=== Intel ===
 
=== Intel ===
==== Intel 7 ====
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==== P1276 ====
===== Intel 7 Ultra =====
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Intel's 7-nanometer process (renamed as Intel 4), '''P1276''', will enter risk production at the end of 2022 and ramp in 2023. On February 8 2017, Intel announced a $7B investment in Arizona's Fab 42 which will eventually produce chips on a 7 nm process. On March 23 2021, Intel announced a $20B investment for two fabs in Arizona, which will produce chips on a 7nm process.
[[File:raptor-lake-v-f-curve-improvements.png|thumb|right|New V-F Curve for the Enhanced Intel 7 process.]]
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Intel introduced an '''enhanced version of the Intel 7 process''' in late 2022 with the introduction of the company's 13th Generation Core processors based on the {{intel|Raptor Lake|l=arch}} microarchitecture. Nicknamed '''"Intel 7 Ultra"''' internally, the new process is a full PDK update over the one used by Alder Lake, their 3rd generation SuperFin Transistor architecture. Intel says this process brings transistors with significantly better channel mobility. At the very high end of the V-F curve, the company says peak frequency is nearly 1 GHz higher now. The curve itself has been improved, shifting prior-generation frequencies by around 200 MHz at ISO-voltage, or alternatively, reducing the voltage by over 50 mV at ISO-frequency.
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Intel has not disclosed the details of the process but the company's current CEO claims it will feature a density that is 2x that of Intel's 10-nanometer node. Intel's prior CEO, Brian Krzanich, mentioned that 7-nanometer will have "2.4x the compaction ratio" of 10 nm. This puts the 7-nanometer node at around 202-250 million [[transistors per square millimeter]].
  
 
=== TSMC ===
 
=== TSMC ===
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