10 µm process

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Template:Short description Template:Use dmy dates Script error: No such module "Sidebar". The 10 μm process (10 micrometer process) is the level of MOSFET semiconductor process technology that was commercially reached around 1971,[1][2] by companies such as RCA and Intel.

The 10 μm process refers to the minimum size that could be reliably produced: the half-pitch, which is the distance between two 1-metal lanes, center to center, and the gate length of a transistor; those two values used to be identical in early nodes. The smallest transistors and other circuit elements on a chip made with this process were around 10 micrometers wide.

Products featuring 10 μm manufacturing process

  • RCA's CD4000 series of integrated circuits began with a 20Script error: No such module "String".μm process in 1968, before gradually downscaling and eventually reaching 10Script error: No such module "String".μm in the next several years.[3]
  • Intel 1103, an early dynamic random-access memory (DRAM) chip launched in 1970, used an 8Script error: No such module "String".μm process.[4]
  • Intel 4004 CPU launched in 1971 was manufactured using a 10Script error: No such module "String".μm process.[5]
  • Intel 8008 CPU launched in 1972 was manufactured using this process.[5]

References

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External links

Preceded by
20 μm process
MOSFET semiconductor device fabrication process Succeeded by
6 μm process


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