- Joined
- Sep 26, 2021
- Posts
- 6,654
- Main Camera
- Sony
Announced today, looks like:
www.tsmc.com
To me, this is fairly foreign. I predated the actual use of finfets, so we were always able to craft our own transistors (just by crossing a polysilicon over an arbitrarily shaped active region). Not sure whether or not non-foundry fabs (i.e. Intel) limit to pre-formed transistors like this. Right now, presumably, designers who need, say, something like a 2-2 FET would combine two 1-2 FETs, or whatever. (The first digit is the number of gates, the second is the number of fins per gate).
It would be a very interesting EDA problem to figure out how to select each transistor, though presumably Apple mostly uses a cell library and just performs swaps of low, medium, or high power cells as necessary. Given the number of circuit designers they have working there, i assume they design their own macrocells for things like static RAM, but who knows.

TSMC FINFLEX™ – Ultimate Performance, Power Efficiency, Density and Flexibility - Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company Limited
Many product designs are a series of compromises. Take for example, electric vehicles, wouldn’t it be great to have a 1000-mile or 1600-kilometer range in an EV? But consider what compromises would need to be made to achieve this goal. The battery would be massive and heavy, leading to an...
To me, this is fairly foreign. I predated the actual use of finfets, so we were always able to craft our own transistors (just by crossing a polysilicon over an arbitrarily shaped active region). Not sure whether or not non-foundry fabs (i.e. Intel) limit to pre-formed transistors like this. Right now, presumably, designers who need, say, something like a 2-2 FET would combine two 1-2 FETs, or whatever. (The first digit is the number of gates, the second is the number of fins per gate).
It would be a very interesting EDA problem to figure out how to select each transistor, though presumably Apple mostly uses a cell library and just performs swaps of low, medium, or high power cells as necessary. Given the number of circuit designers they have working there, i assume they design their own macrocells for things like static RAM, but who knows.