SOI in and of itself doesn't fix anything, there is nothing broken with a bulk transistor.
The primary benefit from SOI is the elimination of junction capacitance, or at least the JC is greatly reduced as there is still some capacitance that sets up across the oxide.
Other benefits include, reduced short channel effects, elimination of thysistors (latching), and reduction of junction leakage.
SOI, though, comes with it's own set of headaches, including self-heating, kink-effects, and hysteresis (memoriziation -- exploited in some cases, called Z-RAM). These have their own design challenges.
Last edited by JumpingJack; 11-14-2010 at 09:44 AM.
One hundred years from now It won't matter
What kind of car I drove What kind of house I lived in
How much money I had in the bank Nor what my cloths looked like.... But The world may be a little better Because, I was important In the life of a child.
-- from "Within My Power" by Forest Witcraft
demon:or do u think, total new architecture will not be better then K10 ? :-D ...
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Old news.AT got them from AMD 1 year ago:
http://www.anandtech.com/Show/Index/...&sort=0&page=2
BTW,the code name for the die is Orochi. What is Orochi?According to AMD's roadmaps, Zambezi will use either 4 or 8 Bulldozer cores (that's 2 or 4 modules). The quad-core Zambezi should have roughly 10 - 35% better integer performance than a similarly clocked quad-core Phenom II. An eight-core Zambezi will be a threaded monster.
If AMD named the die after a legendary super powerful mythological eight headed /8 tailed dragon,you get a hint how wicked it isYamata no Orochi (八岐の大蛇?, lit. "8-branched giant snake")- a legendary 8-headed and 8-tailed Japanese dragon. 8 Cores/ 8 threads association comes to mind
.
Wicked.
Last edited by informal; 11-14-2010 at 10:02 AM.
if you set the problem up properly yes, it does fix issues with bulk transistors. it's not just about functionality. remember the whole performance aspect?
personally i would consider all of the non-ideal effects of modern transistors as a serious problem, kind like the ones you mentioned.
lower parasitic delay is a nice feature too. circuits with high fan outs will be faster on SOI.
http://leitl.org/docs/intel/IR-TR-2000-3-soi2000.pdf
However, the expected performance gain for PD-SOI diminishes dramatically for 50nm devices due to (i) aggressive reduction of junction capacitance for our bulk CMOS, (ii) the reduced impact of area junction capacitance with scaling, and (iii) increased history effect on delay for scaled Vdd.
@JF-AMD
I'm not sure where he got them ,but I won't be surprised if BD desktop gets in that ballpark.You said IPC goes up so 10+% range in int workloads is reasonable.
This is me contemplating my next system:
me: Hurray Bulldozer sounds like it's gonna rock think I'll buy that!
news: 32nm problems causes Bulldozer delays...
me:
![]()
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This would've mattered much more a year ago, with the same thought extending to BD as well.
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Thanks for the help (or lack thereof) in resolving my P3700 issue, FUGGER...
Oddly, bulk transistors have improved performance with every node, and has so since scaling began. There is nothing wrong with bulk transistor performance and improvement within the progression of Moore's Law, in fact bulk PMOS holds the record (well above SOI) for drive currents.
We are arguing semantics, saying it fixes something implies that it is broken and that is indeed not the case. HKMG is an example of a fix, because SiON scaling is broken, it stopped after 90 nm (bulk, SOI or otherwise). In fact, AMD's 45 nm transistors increased the SiON thickness from 1.3 nm to 1.4 nm, if I recall correctly.
One could turn the argument on it's ear, bulk technology fixes the problems with SOI (1/2 the self-heating, no floating body effect, yada yada yada). All things considered, SOI is a different way of isolating the transistor body from the substrate, and carries with it better parametrics in some areas and problematic issues in other areas. Engineering the best transistor on bulk will not yield the same result if that were simply transported to an SOI substrate and vice versa. Hence, these claims of 'better' this and 'higher' that of SOI over bulk need to be understood in the right context, simply engineering the best transistor on SOI then building the same transistor on bulk will always yield a better result on SOI.
IBM, when they were evangalizing SOI as the next best thing, claimed that scaling on bulk was dead, that SOI was the only option. Intel claimed that bulk would continue scaling and at lower costs. So far, bulk has indeed continued scaling -- even when IBM claimed it would not be possible after 90 nm.
Last edited by JumpingJack; 11-14-2010 at 10:50 PM.
One hundred years from now It won't matter
What kind of car I drove What kind of house I lived in
How much money I had in the bank Nor what my cloths looked like.... But The world may be a little better Because, I was important In the life of a child.
-- from "Within My Power" by Forest Witcraft
if intel is using soi for 22nm....they are not doing it fors and giggles. it must still have better advantages than it does negatives.
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I think Intel/AMD know what they are doing with regards to SOI...
All along the watchtower the watchmen watch the eternal return.
well, we will see... but to me this sounds a lot like here is bd1.1 or 1.2 BUT bd2 is coming very soon!
when they know that after this delay they really should have bd2 ready to begin with... NOW... and not "very soon" which will probably turn into "soon" and maybe even "in 2 years" in the end...
internally amd already talked about k10 after c2d launched... but yeah, your probably right
and it sounds like all this bd2 talk right now is very similar to what happened back then...
i mean bd1 isnt even out and amd is talking about bd2 already and that its coming soon? how anybody can find this reassuring is beyond me... thats a very strong hint at bd1 not doing that well if you ask me...
when you launch or prepare to launch a new product, its THE best, THE most awesome, THE fastest blablabla... you want to sell it and highlight how awesome it is... if you tell everybody your going to have something much better very soon, your ruining your own product launch... why would i buy a 6850 if i KNOW a 6950 is just around the corner that doesnt cost a lot more and performs a lot better?
30% advantage on average with 13% more heat, so average performance per watt is over 15% worse than intel... thats actually not bad for being a node behind...
about the price... well companies exist to make money, agreed? so companies always sell their products for as much as they can, agreed? so if a product sells for a very low price, it means there is either no demand or people simply arent willing to spend more on it because it doesnt do what they want it to do.
amd selling chips for low prices is not "good"
amd doesnt do that cause it loves the community... it does that because it HAS to lower prices that much to actually sell off their inventory and make money...
amds approach is not more advanced and successful because they sell their product for lower prices, thats a sign of them not being competitive.
and while performance per watt for six cores is actually not bad for being a node behind, its actually pretty impressive...
it doesnt make it a good thing though... think about where amd could be if they werent a node behind...
thx aberration and chumbucket for the infos
so how true is it that SOI is useless, or not as effective below a certain node? ive read that several times, even coming from amd people...
Well, this was an analyst meeting and surely the analysts would like to know what's to come in the next year or two, not just the following two quarters. Actually I think there is some double standards here; AMD either getsabout not giving out info on coming CPUs, when they actually do they get bashed because that indicates their current generation isn't up to speed? It's like saying Intel's Tick is bad because you know there's going to be a Tock soon enough.
On the GPU side I believe it's a bit easier to understand why there aren't that many mentionings about future products. GPUs are for gamers mainly, HPC's in some extent too, and gamers don't need info on the upcoming products two years in advance like server folks do. AMD wanted to show that BD will be followed by an enhanced BD in 2012 (roughly put more cores as I understood it) and a new generation BD in 2013 and that the enhanced version would be drop in upgrade for servers.
4 hours of "SOI jump start training" here:
http://cadence.mediasite.com/mediasi...9c4ce7d2f1d93a
Regards, Hans
~~~~ http://www.chip-architect.org ~~~~ http://www.physics-quest.org ~~~~
You are exactly right. This was an analyst meeting. You will not that we said very little about the follow on after Bulldozer other than give a placeholder on the roadmap (and core counts on server.) Beyond that we literally said nothing.
If Saaya had spent any time with the financial analysts they would know the types of information that the analysts would be looking for. And, if you want to be fair, Intel has said a lot more about Ivy Bridge and even Haswell than we have said about our future products beyond Bulldozer.
Hans,
Thanks for the link. Imagine that the SOI consortium would give such a nice presentation on all the greatness of SOI, I would have never have guessed. They nicely hit upon all the benefits, most I listed above. And even one had one slide on the design challenges, again on items I listed above.
Regards,
Jack
One hundred years from now It won't matter
What kind of car I drove What kind of house I lived in
How much money I had in the bank Nor what my cloths looked like.... But The world may be a little better Because, I was important In the life of a child.
-- from "Within My Power" by Forest Witcraft
fair enough, criticizing amd for talking about bd2 was wrong, my bad...
That was my point, HKMG fixes a fundamental issue that is indeed broken. Scaling of the gate oxide for SiON stopped after 90 nm. Gate oxides have not gone thinner, unless, of course you consider IBM's 65 nm 5 GHz monster, where they went to a 0.9 nm gate -- but they did that for the speed deamon approach. They paid the price in gate leakage.
Last edited by JumpingJack; 11-15-2010 at 09:06 AM.
One hundred years from now It won't matter
What kind of car I drove What kind of house I lived in
How much money I had in the bank Nor what my cloths looked like.... But The world may be a little better Because, I was important In the life of a child.
-- from "Within My Power" by Forest Witcraft
moore's law is not everything. transistor performance is still important as i have said previously.
furthermore, using intel's process as evidence that bulk is faster is not correct. drive currents are important but FO4 inverter delays are a much better metric because drive current does not factor in capacitance or voltage which are essential to delay. getting such PMOS drive currents required a lot of doping which can lead to higher dopant fluctuations. gate pitch on intel's 32nm process isnt all that impressive and neither is their SRAM cell size. speed did hurt size imo.
i'm not debating semantics. i am trying to clarify what i am saying because i dont want to look like a jackass. it's starting to look like an SOI v. HKMG argument which is dumbtarded. a problem does not have to be so straight forward. for example: "our process is not fast enough. how can we improve its performance?". that's a problem. SOI may be able to fix it. the problem does not have to be as extreme as gate leakage where functionality is slowly being destroyed.We are arguing semantics, saying it fixes something implies that it is broken and that is indeed not the case. HKMG is an example of a fix, because SiON scaling is broken, it stopped after 90 nm (bulk, SOI or otherwise). In fact, AMD's 45 nm transistors increased the SiON thickness from 1.3 nm to 1.4 nm, if I recall correctly.
also HKMG is performance oriented. you can make a functional transistor on 45nm or 32nm with polySi or SiON gate dielectrics. it just would not be impressive. eventually leakage would cause transistors to act like attenuators but that's ways off.
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