Heterogeneous Integration - Chiplets
By GSA
Chiplets are a hot topic in the semiconductor industry, and to many represent a paradigm change for chip designers and chip consumers alike. Rather than a traditional single piece of monolithic silicon with many functions and features, a chiplet contains one or a very limited set of functions and features. Multiple chiplets are then assembled into a MCM (multi-chiplet module).
Chiplets can offer multiple advantages over monolithic silicon, including:
- Chiplets can be designed in the optimum process node (performance, power, cost) for the particular function and/or feature
- Size and yield – as monolithic silicon reaches reticle limitations, chiplets are much easier and cheaper to manufacture
- The ability to manufacture with and integrate diverse and potentially incompatible semiconductor materials, such as GaN, SiC, Ga2O3, and others
- Chiplets can be re-used over multiple products and projects
- Enables choice: allows chipmakers/OEMs to select the right combination of chiplets for their needs, rather than be forced to choose a potentially less-optimum monolithic chip
- Lower NRE (non-recurring engineering) costs for chiplet designs, potentially enabling smaller volume applications
- Lowers the entry barrier to designing and selling silicon
- Allows semiconductor IP to be sold in silicon form
- Quickens time to market
Homogenous chiplet MCMs, or MCMs containing chiplets from only a single manufacturer, have been mass-market deployed – an example would be the AMD Ryzen Zen 3 processors. Homogenous chiplets share many of the advantages mentioned above – however, as they remain the domain of a single chip supplier, they don’t offer all the advantages (and issues) that heterogenous chiplets do. A heterogenous chiplet MCM contains chiplets from multiple manufacturers, often made in different facilities on different process nodes. Heterogenous chiplets might include a combination of CPU, GPU, NPU, FPGA, and/or special purpose chiplets. Chip consumers (OEMs, brands, etc.…) can assemble the optimum selection of chiplets into a heterogenous chiplet MCM for their needs, and chiplet suppliers can manufacture their chiplets in the ideal location/node for price, performance, and area. While heterogenous chiplets seem to have multiple advantages over traditional monolithic silicon and even homogenous chiplets, they still have not been mass-market deployed. This white paper will explore the commercial, interface, packaging, and security issues heterogenous chiplets face, along with recommendations for the industry’s successful deployment of heterogenous chiplets.
To read the full article, click here
Related Chiplet
- Automotive AI Accelerator
- Direct Chiplet Interface
- HBM3e Advanced-packaging chiplet for all workloads
- UCIe AP based 8-bit 170-Gsps Chiplet Transceiver
- UCIe based 8-bit 48-Gsps Transceiver
Related Technical Papers
- Workflows for tackling heterogeneous integration of chiplets for 2.5D/3D semiconductor packaging
- Five Workflows for Tackling Heterogeneous Integration of Chiplets for 2.5D/3D
- Advancing Trustworthiness in System-in-Package: A Novel Root-of-Trust Hardware Security Module for Heterogeneous Integration
- Complex Heterogeneous Integration Drives Innovation In Semiconductor Test
Latest Technical Papers
- Taking 3D IC Heterogeneous Integration Mainstream
- CATCH: a Cost Analysis Tool for Co-optimization of chiplet-based Heterogeneous systems
- Three-dimensional photonic integration for ultra-low-energy, high-bandwidth interchip data links
- Defect Analysis and Built-In-Self-Test for Chiplet Interconnects in Fan-out Wafer-Level Packaging
- ARCAS: Adaptive Runtime System for Chiplet-Aware Scheduling