IBM Touts World’s First Sub-1 Nanometer Chip Technology - Investor's Business Daily

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IBM has just dropped a bombshell in the semiconductor world, unveiling the planet's first sub-1 nanometer (0.7 nm) chip technology. This isn't just a tiny tweak; it's a monumental leap forward, powered by a revolutionary 'nanostack' architecture that crams nearly 100 billion transistor onto a chip the size of a fingernail, promising a massive boost in performance and energy efficiency crucial for the exploding demands of artificial intelligence. This breakthrough comes as the industry grapples with the physical limits of traditional chip scaling, often referred to as the impending end of Moore's Law. IBM nanostack design, which vertically stacks and staggers transistor in three dimensions, pushes past current nanosheet technology, offering up to 50% more performance or 70% greater energy efficiency than its 2 nm predecessor unveiled in 2021. This kind of raw computational power and reduced energy consumption is vital, especially as generative AI and cloud infrastructure continue to strain existing data centers. While this cutting-edge 0.7 nm technology is still a research achievement, IBM anticipates a path to production within the next five years, extending the semiconductor roadmap for at least another decade into what they call the 'angstrom era'. The company, which licenses its designs rather than manufacturing them, is already collaborating with partners like Japan's Rapidus on current 2 nm scaling and will leverage advanced tools like ASML High NA EUV lithography, signaling a collaborative push to bring this atomic-scale innovation to the forefront of computing.