I didn't even know that 180nm was still a thing but clearly it is because apparently the cost difference is like USD 100M for 180nm vs USD 10B or more for the latest tech?
Is it true that we will likely have these 180nm chips for things like light bulbs for the foreseeable future?
Yes, actually 180 nm still represents a sizable amount of the market, in terms of volume! In more niche applications where chips contain lots of analog functionlity, you can still find plenty of designs being done in 180, 130, 110, and 65 nm. Most corporate designs don't disclose this, but I'd venture to guess the majority of integrated circuits in your home are made on these larger "process nodes". I work in 65nm and 130nm, for example. Free to ask if you want to know more!
I work in a similar market, and we're only just starting to phase out these larger nodes and move to 22nm simply for wafer availability.
It doesn't benefit from 22nm - analog blocks generally don't scale down at all, they have to be a particular size to achieve particular current handling, inductance etc. requirements. But we need the production line availability.
I'm not OP, but perhaps you, or somebody else here, could answer my question, albeit one that is slightly off-topic. In the recent years, in part courtesy of cryptoindustry investment, there were many advancements in zero-knowledge mathematics and applied cryptography. I've been on-and-off researching computational approaches to liquid democracy[1], on the off-chance that we may one day apply it in my country, Ukraine, and I came to conclusion that open hardware-as-public good are table stakes to that end. The modern computers are way too complex, and the trust in them is at an all-time low. To bring computation into politics—it's a tall order. However, if we could buy a fab, design some hardware transparently, allow inspections from civil groups and scientists, maybe that could work... What kind of costs are we looking at for establishing something like 130nm process, and would it be possible to buy out the necessary IP, too, so that everything could be done in the open?
Does this even work longterm? I'd like to think transparent-by-design hardware manufacturing is not a pipe dream, but if that's the case, I would hate to give it too much thought.
The initiative started in Germany, where the research institute IHP already provides an open source 130nm PDK and associated foundry, but interest is spreading. Here's the abstract from that talk:
"The European Chips Act aims to double Europe’s share in global semiconductor manufacturing to 20% by 2030. However, most current investments focus on leading-edge nodes and pilot lines, which – while important – are not sufficient to achieve broad capacity scaling. At the same time, demand for mature nodes (≥65 nm) remains strong: over two-thirds of chips in automotive and industrial sectors still rely on nodes ≥90 nm, and this trend is expected to persist through 2030. This contribution introduces the concept of a Transparent Reference Fab – a fully open, scalable semiconductor fabrication model designed to serve as a blueprint for sovereign and trustworthy chip manufacturing in Europe. Unlike traditional pilot lines, the Transparent Reference Fab is production-ready and replicable. It includes open access to process design kits (PDKs), equipment configurations, process recipes, and operational know-how. The fab targets mature nodes, especially 65 nm CMOS, and is intended to be built on existing infrastructure to reduce time-to-market and technical risk. We argue that such a model can significantly multiply Europe’s production capacity by enabling private and public actors to replicate the reference fab across regions. This approach would not only strengthen Europe’s position in strategic semiconductor supply chains but also foster innovation, education, and security through transparency. The paper presents the strategic rationale, technical architecture, and implementation path, positioning the Transparent Reference Fab as a critical instrument for European resilience and competitiveness."
I previously came across OpenTitan, but it's hardware design only, right? It doesn't actually concern itself with bringing up transparent manufacturing process?
For example, I couldn't find anything about the costs necessary to bring up a fab?
A project that addresses that issue is betrusted: https://betrusted.io/
Their plan for fab trust is not to bring up a fab,but to design for inspectability: https://bunnie.org/iris/
I happen to own a Precursor, and indeed used it for some experiments, but it's unfortunately limited by Xilinx Spartan-7 availability, which is one of the few FPGA's that have been reverse-engineered, and they probably don't make it anymore... Another one that has been RE'd is Lattice ECP5 but it's in the same category. I'm pretty sure you couldn't make 50 million devices like that. I know they've been looking into alternatives, but haven't caught up yet.
I work in custom CMOS image sensor design, targeting scientific imaging applications like electron microscopes, X-ray microscopy, and detectors for high-energy physics. Our designs aren't that cost sensitive from a unit cost perspective, because we are at most probably making several thousand of the chips. So the cost per chip can effectively range from 10-100$ at this scale, after yield losses. But the fixed costs of engineering and 'mask creation' for process nodes can range from 300k$ for nodes around 180 nm, to over 500k$ for 65nm, and above 1m$ for 28nm and below.
We can save money during initial prototyping, by creating a small test structure as small as 1mmm^2, which reduces the cost of a prototype run to 5k$ - 10k$. Some services that provide this are MOSIS [0] in the US, and Europractice [1] in the EU. But when we go to a full production run, there's no way to get around creating a 'full reticle' design, as image sensors have a physical dimension determined by focal plan size requirement of imaging application. For example, in digital camera, if a sensor is 'full frame' then it obviously has to be 36mm x 24mm, regardless of if the process node would have let you shrink it. And if you make a serious mistake, then you need to do another production run, which means you pay the 300k$ - 1m$ once again.
In terms of the circuit functionality, image sensors require a mixture of analog and digital design, but in this area, even many of the digital circuits are custom designed, rather than relying on foundry-provided 'standard cells' and an automatic place-and-route flow.
Oh thanks, this is really interesting.
Is there a limit to how far you can scale down your node to build the full frame image sensor: is 180nm the largest feasible node?
Modern commercial image sensors are made in process nodes down to 28nm [0], and for visible light have pixels measuring 0.7-1.5 μm. At [0] there a diagram which gives a feel for what technology nodes are available and used for different applications. For example, RF ICs and power management ICs also typically use larger process nodes, and not just for reasons of cost. In fact a larger node, doesn't necessarily even mean older. For example, many technologies allowing better power handling capabilities in integrated circuits have come exclusively to larger nodes.
Regarding node sizes for image sensors, TSMC built a 28nm fab recently for Sony exclusively to make their latest sensors. There was actually a HN post about that a couple years ago [1]. Also, it's important to note that in many applications, the image sensor layer is now actually stacked, with a layer of DRAM (in 45 nm, for example) between, and a ISP (image signal processor) chip on the bottom made in a smaller digital process. You can see an image of that stack up here [2].
More thank light bulbs.
As you have correctly pointed it out, its a matter of economics: 180nm is CHEAP!
So a lot more things become economically viable, think of all the weird specialized ASICs that used to be to expensive to build.
Not only that, but 180nm/130nm is the only option that is OpenSourced, as of now.
Transistor Libraries for ICs (or, PDKs) have long been proprietary. I'm only aware of IHP and Sky130, which are actually banking on Fossi or Libre Silicon design.
Is it true that we will likely have these 180nm chips for things like light bulbs for the foreseeable future?