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Main Authors: Emma, Philip, Kurshan, Eren
Format: Preprint
Published: 2024
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Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2409.14527
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author Emma, Philip
Kurshan, Eren
author_facet Emma, Philip
Kurshan, Eren
contents The semiconductor industry is reaching a fascinating confluence in several evolutionary trends that will likely lead to a number of revolutionary changes in how computer systems are designed, implemented, scaled, and used. Since Moores Law, which has driven the evolution in systems for the last several decades, is imminently approaching real and severe limitations, the ability to create three-dimensional,3D, device stacks appears promising as a way to continue to integrate more devices into a chip.While on the one hand, this nascent ability to make 3D technology can be interpreted as merely an extension of Moores Law, on the other hand, the fact that systems can now be integrated across multiple planes poses some novel opportunities, as well as serious challenges and questions. In this paper, we explore these various challenges and opportunities and discuss structures and systems that are likely to be facilitated by 3D technology. We also describe the ways in which these systems are likely to change. Since 3D technology offers some different value propositions, we expect that some of the most important ways in which 3D technology will likely impact our approach to future systems design, implementation, and usage are not yet obvious to most system designers, and we outline several of them.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2409_14527
institution arXiv
publishDate 2024
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Is 3D chip technology the next growth engine for performance improvement?
Emma, Philip
Kurshan, Eren
Emerging Technologies
The semiconductor industry is reaching a fascinating confluence in several evolutionary trends that will likely lead to a number of revolutionary changes in how computer systems are designed, implemented, scaled, and used. Since Moores Law, which has driven the evolution in systems for the last several decades, is imminently approaching real and severe limitations, the ability to create three-dimensional,3D, device stacks appears promising as a way to continue to integrate more devices into a chip.While on the one hand, this nascent ability to make 3D technology can be interpreted as merely an extension of Moores Law, on the other hand, the fact that systems can now be integrated across multiple planes poses some novel opportunities, as well as serious challenges and questions. In this paper, we explore these various challenges and opportunities and discuss structures and systems that are likely to be facilitated by 3D technology. We also describe the ways in which these systems are likely to change. Since 3D technology offers some different value propositions, we expect that some of the most important ways in which 3D technology will likely impact our approach to future systems design, implementation, and usage are not yet obvious to most system designers, and we outline several of them.
title Is 3D chip technology the next growth engine for performance improvement?
topic Emerging Technologies
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2409.14527