Could We Break Moore’s Law? The Broadcom CTO Thinks We Will




/ 10 years ago

Broadcom_2757552b

Anyone who has spent some time in the computer industry will be familiar with Moore’s law, which states that the number of transistors on a computer chips doubles ever two years. This will in turn make them smaller, cheaper and more powerful, or will it?

We’re getting to a point now where the number of transistors we can fit on a chip via smaller and smaller manufacturing processes is reaching a theoretical limit, beyond which the laws of physics won’t allow the chip to function as transistors can only be made so small.

“We’ve been spoiled by these devices getting cheaper and cheaper and cheaper in every generation. We’re just going to have to live with prices levelling off.” said Henry Samueli, Chief Technology Officer at Broadcom

With demand for more and more chips each year, with greater performance, and technology to research and construct smaller and smaller chips, costs are inevitably spiralling and Samueli thinks that chips getting cheaper and cheaper has to stop at some point. He is absolutely right too. With Broadcom putting 15nm chips into production next year, and in  three generation’s time they’ll be working with 5nm chips. At 5nm the transistors will be just ten atoms wide, beyond that the laws of physics prevent further advancement.

“You can’t build a transistor with one atom. As of yet, we have not seen a viable replacement for the CMOS transistor as we’ve known it for the last 50 years,” said Samueli.

Moore’s Law will have to be broken, at some point in the near future chips will no be able to use smaller transistors and they won’t be getting cheaper, although I don’t doubt that they’ll still be getting more powerful.

Thank you Telegraph for providing us with this information.

Image courtesy of Telegraph.


Topics: , , , , ,

Support eTeknix.com

By supporting eTeknix, you help us grow and continue to bring you the latest newsreviews, and competitions. Follow us on FacebookTwitter and Instagram to keep up with the latest technology news, reviews and more. Share your favourite articles, chat with the team and more. Also check out eTeknix YouTube, where you'll find our latest video reviews, event coverage and features in 4K!

Looking for more exciting features on the latest technology? Check out our What We Know So Far section or our Fun Reads for some interesting original features.

eTeknix Facebook eTeknix Twitter eTeknix Instagram eTeknix Instagram
  • Be Social With eTeknix

    Facebook Twitter YouTube Instagram Reddit RSS Discord Patreon TikTok Twitch
  • Features


Send this to a friend
})