TOKYO (Reuters) - Japan's NEC Electronics Corp has developed a technology to make advanced microchips with circuitry width of 55-nanometres, or billionths of a metre, the Nihon Keizai Shimbun business daily said on Sunday.
Finer circuitry decreases the size of a chip and cuts per-unit production costs. It also helps chips process data faster.
NEC Electronics, the world's eighth-largest semiconductor maker, aims to start manufacturing the chips on a commercial basis in 2007, the newspaper said.
Officials at NEC Electronics, 70 percent owned by Japanese electronics conglomerate NEC Corp, were not immediately available for comment.
On even more advanced 45-nanometre chips, NEC Electronics and seventh-ranked Toshiba Corp announced plans last month to co-develop the cutting-edge products so as to share hefty development costs and cut time to market.
Costs for development and production equipment are expanding rapidly as chip makers move to narrower circuitry, making it difficult for microchip producers, except for a few giants such as Intel, to shoulder the burden alone.
Intel, the world's largest chip maker, said on Thursday it would build a 45-nanometre chip factory, which would cost more than US$3.5 billion, in Israel — its second such plant after one being built in Arizona.
NEC Elec develops 55-nano chip technology: paper
By
Staff Writers
on Dec 5, 2005 8:38AM

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