Infineon Technologies Joins the X Initiative
February 17 2004 - 11:01PM
PR Newswire (US)
Infineon Technologies Joins the X Initiative Successfully
Fabricates 130-nm X Architecture Test Silicon MOUNTAIN VIEW,
Calif., Feb. 18 /PRNewswire-FirstCall/ -- The X Initiative today
announced that leading European chip maker, Infineon
Technologies(NYSE: IFX; FSE: IFX), has joined the semiconductor
supply-chain consortium. Infineon has tested its X Architecture
manufacturing readiness with the successful fabrication of a 130-nm
test chip and plans to further validate production designs using
theinnovative interconnect architecture in 2004. The X Architecture
represents a new way of orienting a chip's microscopic
interconnecting wires using diagonal pathways, as well as the
traditional right-angle, or "Manhattan," configuration. By enabling
designs with significantly less wire and fewer vias (the connectors
between wiring layers), the X Architecture can provide significant
improvements in chip performance, power consumption and cost.
Infineon fabricated the X Architecture test chip at
itsCorbeil-Essonnes facility using its 130-nm production flow and
leveraged the technology of other X Initiative members. Cadence
Design Systems provided the test structure design, DuPont
Photomasks and the Infineon maskhouse produced the X Architecture
masks, and Nikon's equipment was employed for photolithography.
Infineon's successful test chip reconfirms the readiness of the
design-to-wafer supply chain established through open collaboration
among the X Initiative members. "The X Architecture represents an
innovative interconnect architecture that promises to boost the
performance potential of our chips," said Infineon's Vice President
of Technology Development, Josef Winnerl. "With our products
fueling the world's high-end wireless communications devices, we're
constantly looking for new ways to improve chip performance, reduce
overall power consumption and cut costs. We plan to leverage the
benefits of X Architecture implementation in 2004." The
pre-production phase of the design-to-silicon roadmap for the X
Architecture -- laid out by the X Initiative in 2002 -- was
completed in October 2003 with the announcement of functional
silicon results by Toshiba. More recently, UMC became the first
pure-play foundry to join the X Initiative anddeclared its
availability to accept X Architecture designs for fabrication at
the 180-nm, 150-nm and 130-nm process nodes. The focus of the X
Initiative's collaborative supply-chain preparation is now to
enable broad adoption of the X Architecture forproduction
manufacturing at both leading-edge (130-nm, 90-nm) and future
(65-nm, 45-nm and below) manufacturing nodes. First production
chips are expected in 2004. "We welcome Infineon, our newest
member, as we progress toward broad adoption of the XArchitecture,"
said Aki Fujimura, X Initiative steering group member and CTO, new
business incubation at Cadence Design Systems, Inc. "Infineon's
130-nm test chip result primes the company to harness the proven
benefits of the X Architecture for its current products and
next-generation devices." About the X Architecture The X
Architecture, the first production-worthy approach to the pervasive
use of diagonal interconnect, reduces the total interconnect, or
wiring, on a chip by more than 20 percent and via-counts by more
than 30 percent, resulting in simultaneous improvements in chip
performance, power and cost. For the past 20 years, chip design has
been primarily based on the de facto industry standard "Manhattan"
architecture, named for its right-angle interconnects resembling a
city-street grid. The X Architecture rotates the primary direction
of the interconnect in the fourth and fifth metal layers by 45
degrees from a Manhattan architecture. The new architecture
maintains compatibility with existing cell libraries, memory cells,
compilers and IP cores by preserving the Manhattan geometry of
metal layers one through three. About the X Initiative The X
Initiative, a group of leading companies from throughout the
semiconductor industry, is chartered with accelerating the
availability and fabrication of the X Architecture, a revolutionary
interconnect architecture based on the pervasive use of diagonal
routing. The X Initiative's five-year mission is to provide an
independent source of education about the X Architecture, to
facilitate support and fabrication of the X Architecture through
the semiconductor industry supply chain, and to survey usage of the
X Architecture to track its adoption. Representing leaders spanning
the entire design-to-silicon supply chain, X Initiative members
include: Applied Materials, Inc.; ARM; Artisan Components, Inc.;
ASML Netherlands B.V.; Cadence Design Systems, Inc.; Dai Nippon
Printing (DNP); DuPont Photomasks, Inc.; Etec Systems, Inc., an
Applied Materials, Inc. company; GDA Technologies, Inc.; HPL
Technologies, Inc.; Hoya Corporation; IN2FAB Technology Ltd.;
Infineon Technologies AG; JEOL, Ltd.; KLA-Tencor Corporation; Leica
Microsystems AG; Matsushita Electric Industrial Co., Ltd.; MicroArk
Co. Ltd.; Monterey Design Systems, Inc.; Nikon Corporation; NuFlare
Technology Inc.; PDF Solutions, Inc.; Photronics, Inc.; Prolific
Inc.; RUBICAD Corporation; Sagantec; Sanyo Electric Co., Ltd.;
Silicon Logic Engineering, Inc.; SiliconMap, LLC.; Silicon Valley
Research Inc.; STMicroelectronics; Sycon Design, Inc.; Tensilica,
Inc.; Toppan Printing Co.; Toshiba Corporation; Trecenti
Technologies, Inc.; UMC; Virage Logic, Inc.; Virtual Silicon
Technology, Inc.; and Zygo Corporation. Membership is opento all
companies throughout the semiconductor supply chain. Materials can
be found at http://www.xinitiative.org/. About Infineon Infineon
Technologies AG, Munich, Germany, offers semiconductor and system
solutions for the automotive and industrial sectors, for
applications in the wired communications markets, secure mobile
solutions as well as memory products. With a global presence,
Infineon operates in the US from San Jose, CA, in the Asia-Pacific
region from Singapore and in Japan from Tokyo. In fiscal year 2002
(ending September), the company achieved sales of Euro 5.21 billion
with about 30,400 employees worldwide. Infineon is listed on the
DAX index of the Frankfurt Stock Exchange and on the New York Stock
Exchange. Further information is avail able at
http://www.infineon.com/ . Cautionary Note Regarding
Forward-looking Statements This release contains forward-looking
statements (including, without limitation, information regarding
semiconductor design, production and performance improvements
resulting from the X Architecture, the compatibility of the X
Architecture with current technology, the future success of X
Architecture technology and the ability of certain of the X
Initiative members to support the X Architecture) that involve
risks and uncertainties that could cause the results of X
Initiative members and other events to differ materially from
managements' current expectations. Actual results and events may
differ materially due to a number of factors including, among
others: future strategic decisions made by the X Initiative
members; failure of the X Architecture to enable the production of
designs that are feasible and competitive with current designs or
future alternatives; future strategic decisions made by X
Initiative members or others that inhibit the development of the X
Architecture; demand for advanced semiconductors that are developed
using the X Architecture; cost feasibility of the production of
semiconductors designed using the X Architecture; and the rapid
pace of technological change in the semiconductor industry. The
matters discussed in this press release also involve risks and
uncertainties described in the most recent filings of the X
Initiative members with the Securities and Exchange Commission. The
X Initiative members, individually or collectively, assume no
obligation to update the forward-looking information contained in
this release. DATASOURCE: Infineon Technologies AG CONTACT: Sherrie
Gutierrez of MCA, +1-650-968-8900, or , for Infineon Technologies
AG Web site: http://www.xinitiative.org/ Web site:
http://www.infineon.com/
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