[Technology Report]
It's Not Just A Matter Of Size For Components
Roger Allan
ED Online ID #14441
January 11, 2007
Copyright © 2006 Penton Media, Inc., All rights reserved. Printing of this document is for personal use only.
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Compactness and efficiency. Greater functionality
at lower costs. These features—mainstays of the
component world—are possible thanks to a steady
stream of improved materials and manufacturing
methods. Displays for large-screen TVs, outdoor
signs, and high-definition TV (HDTV) home theaters have set record diagonal sizes, a trend that
isn't slowing. Cell phones and other handheld
devices are experiencing similarly significant display developments. Yet as prices drop to all-time
lows at both ends of the scale, we've seen performance levels (brightness, resolution, clarity, color quality, and power dissipation) jump for all sizes.
Sensors, mostly of the microelectromechnical-system (MEMS)
variety, continue their march into mass-market applications like
cell phones, consumer electronics, laptops and notebooks, and
digital cameras. Key drivers have been CMOS and CMOS-like
manufacturing processes, better design tools, higher manufacturing yields, and improved manufacturing standards.
Yet MEMS sensors still lack actuators like switches, relays,
valves, and pumps. These functions are inherent to MEMS, a technology borne of its useful mechanical silicon properties. Microfluidics has shown some promising improvements as MEMS actuators, witnessed by a few announcements last year. But
manufacturing approaches need development, and there must be
higher yields before it can make a significant impact.
Once such things come to pass (and that may be soon), a complete closed-control system-on-a-chip (SoC) will become a reality.
The same chip that senses input variables, whether in the ambient
environment or within a circuit, will be able to process that signal,
analyze it, and deliver a decision-making signal to an actuator.
The greatest sensor gains were made in imaging. Lower-cost,
denser, higher-resolution, brighter, and better color image sensors
are constantly evolving. Adoption of CMOS manufacturing technology and clever pixel layouts have been crucial.
CMOS image sensors will take over more applications from
charge-coupled device (CCD) image sensors, which have had
exclusivity in the high-performance realm. Though they still
cost more than CMOS image sensors—a price gap that's narrowing—CCD imagers will continue to dominate niche high-performance markets.
Traditional Components Go To Chip Form
Traditional
resistor, capacitor, and inductor components continue the trend
toward chip form. They're available in small sizes that can handle
highest-ever power levels and span the widest range of values.
Advances in metal-electrode face (MELF) thin-film and MEMS
technologies have been key enablers. Most discrete components
are now available in surface-mount technology (SMT) form for compatibility with modern wave-soldering equipment and to comply
with the European Union's Restrictions on Hazardous Substances
(RoHS) lead-free initiative.
Calls for denser packages with smaller profiles are creating a
need for 3D packages. Various chip- and board-level interconnect
schemes are competing for the 3D space, with the hottest two
being package on package (PoP) and wafer-level packaging (WLP).
Tighter packing densities of higher-performance ICs creates the
inevitable problem of greater heat-dissipation levels. In other
words, what do you do with them and how do you remove the heat
away from the hot spots on a chip, board, or system? The industry
is working on materials that provide better heat transfers, improving heatsinking, and using liquid cooling methods.
High-Speed Interconnects Key To System Scalability
Board- and system-level interconnects such as PCI Express, 10G
Ethernet, Serial RapidIO, and InfiniBand all benefit from improved
packaging and low-level interconnect schemes. The switch from
parallel to serial will be complete this year at the high end, where
performance is paramount.
Fabric interconnects are critical to scalability and improved
reliability. Pin reduction in these serial interconnects is crucial.
Otherwise, parallel alternatives would have fallen down on a
number of fronts trying to meet system demands.
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