
IDC: Chip shortages due to lack of investment in right fabs
Not enough money going into 40nm+ process nodes
why not move up the technology to 28nm or 14nm?
why 40nm? can't car vendors move up with technology advancement?
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why not move up the technology to 28nm or 14nm?![]()
IDC: Chip shortages due to lack of investment in right fabs
Not enough money going into 40nm+ process nodeswww.theregister.com
why 40nm? can't car vendors move up with technology advancement?
Until the automotive companies or Tier 1 auto suppliers get into the fabless business, it's the main auto IC manufacturers to whom you need to ask this question.why 40nm? can't car vendors move up with technology advancement?
I can believe this for higher-end digital chips to support ADAS / zone controllers / infotainment, but not for lower-end chips or mixed-signal controllers or analog chips.The trend I'm seeing, and this is confirmed by the EDA folks, is that system companies are doing their own chips and this now includes the car companies. These chips will in fact be FinFET based thus saving power and getting better performance.
Automobile manufacturers can be penny wise or lacking logical thinking ability from time to time. I can't forget GM's ignition switch scandal that caused at least 124 people's deaths.I can believe this for higher-end digital chips to support ADAS / zone controllers / infotainment, but not for lower-end chips or mixed-signal controllers or analog chips.
What's the expected design/one-time-mask-set cost for, say, a 16nm chip these days? $10M? (I'm just making a very uneducated guess here; semiengineering showed an IBS graph of $106M at 16nm but that's for an "advanced design" and includes software costs; the auto companies aren't going to spend more on software complexity just because they make a chip on 16nm instead of 40nm) Toyota allegedly sells around 10 million vehicles per year. Do the math, see what kind of sales price the price-per-transistor is more important than the one-time costs.
Someone (not me) could do a nice PhD thesis by taking a few totaled cars from different vendors in the latest model year, and doing some teardowns to measure die sizes and feature sizes, and trying to apply some cost modeling to look for some cost-saving opportunities in the future.
It's hard to get the full picture. Was there an absolute or a relative supply shortage? Daniel had a post where he pointed out that there was a step-function surge in demand for semiconductor products during Covid. Who could have predicted it? Now, even if there was a spare capacity for, say, 14nm it could not have been utilized without a delay. Someone had to redesign those chips which would require additional investments which might be difficult to justify given a very uncertain market picture. Everything is much more obvious in hindsight![]()
IDC: Chip shortages due to lack of investment in right fabs
Not enough money going into 40nm+ process nodeswww.theregister.com
why not move up the technology to 28nm or 14nm?
why 40nm? can't car vendors move up with technology advancement?
Let's ask the question a bit differently. If someone (automotive IC manufacturers / Tier 1 automotive suppliers / automotive companies) is going to design new ICs with die that is manufactured at the foundries, which process node should they use, to maximize their profits, while constraining an appropriate level of functionality/reliability, and achieving certain supply chain goals (e.g. they want to be able to obtain new parts from this design for the next N years), given the situation today? (no hindsight from Jan 31 2022)It's hard to get the full picture. Was there an absolute or a relative supply shortage? Daniel had a post where he pointed out that there was a step-function surge in demand for semiconductor products during Covid. Who could have predicted it? Now, even if there was a spare capacity for, say, 14nm it could not have been utilized without a delay. Someone had to redesign those chips which would require additional investments which might be difficult to justify given a very uncertain market picture. Everything is much more obvious in hindsight![]()
Let's ask the question a bit differently. If someone (automotive IC manufacturers / Tier 1 automotive suppliers / automotive companies) is going to design new ICs with die that is manufactured at the foundries, which process node should they use, to maximize their profits, while constraining an appropriate level of functionality/reliability, and achieving certain supply chain goals (e.g. they want to be able to obtain new parts from this design for the next N years), given the situation today? (no hindsight from Jan 31 2022)
And what questions do we need to answer in order to make this decision? (e.g. type of IC, some kind of complexity metric, expected annual volumes, environmental requirements, number of years N, etc.)
why 40nm? can't car vendors move up with technology advancement?
The challenge has been eNVM on these nodes; 40nm eFlash qual for Auto was in 2018 (https://www.tsmc.com/english/dedicatedFoundry/technology/specialty/eflash), and the cycle time for auto components is ~3 years for the platform certification and then a ~10 year support lifetime commit from the manufacturer. So anyone that was designing a "new car" platform in 2019 would not have considered anything less than 40nm as appropriate if including eNVM. Renesas worked on porting their MONOS Flash to 28nm, and that was supposed to be ramping in 2020 (https://www.renesas.com/us/en/about...boration-next-generation-green-and-autonomous) - no idea if that panned out. N28/22 for Wireless / IoT applications with eNVM was focused on STT-MRAM or RRAM rather than eFlash, and the former has challenges with magnetics (so not going into any ECU), and the latter performance / endurance may not meet the spec of the part (incl temp range). If one were designing a new part in 2021/22 expected to launch in '24-'25 timeframe, then I would agree that 28nm is a good option, but their capacity is not limitless either - that's why they are expanding into Japan, to support the Sony ISP business.TSMC 28nm. Cheap and easy to design to and plenty of capacity, the biggest CMOS node for TSMC.
My question is that if a shortage of cheap $3 semiconductor parts can cause a assembly line to shut down for a month or cause a car company to lose billions dollar in sales, will that change the "too expensive" calculation?Too expensive. Anything 1m/year< will never leave 130nm-180nm because of lot sizes.
For most of mortals, a tapeout on 200mm is the only thing they can hope for in their lifetime.
Design of physical IP on immersion nodes is too expensive too. It's not what 10 years old pirated Cadence can do, nor what Indian, or Bangladeshi VHDL outsourcing shops specialise on.
This sounds correct to me.Too expensive. Anything 1m/year< will never leave 130nm-180nm because of lot sizes.
For most of mortals, a tapeout on 200mm is the only thing they can hope for in their lifetime.
Design of physical IP on immersion nodes is too expensive too. It's not what 10 years old pirated Cadence can do, nor what Indian, or Bangladeshi VHDL outsourcing shops specialise on.
Well stated! It's quite the conundrum, an illogical one, perhaps like this case:My question is that if a shortage of cheap $3 semiconductor parts can cause a assembly line to shut down for a month or cause a car company to lose billions dollar in sales, will that change the "too expensive" calculation?
I'd state it slightly differently: somewhere in the 2022 - 2025 range perhaps was when the capacity was going to run out, but because of the large disruption in 2021, we ran into capacity problems early. (signal processing / control systems analogy: impulse disturbance causes a controller to hit saturation early when it was close to saturation anyway)Question
I get why auto ICs are exposed to 200mm stagnant capa, but it's not new, it's decades-old. At some point, and 2021 was the point, the 200mm capa was going to run out. What was the plan then?
TSMC 28nm. Cheap and easy to design to and plenty of capacity, the biggest CMOS node for TSMC.
My question is that if a shortage of cheap $3 semiconductor parts can cause a assembly line to shut down for a month or cause a car company to lose billions dollar in sales, will that change the "too expensive" calculation?
Makes sense; has anyone done a teardown of a Tesla to go over IC content?Tesla built it's own supply chain, and was able design chips that consolidate multiple functions. So a Tesla will have fewer, higher value, chips in it, and those are being fabricated on newer nodes.
Where is Willy Shih reporting on this when you need him?So the world can meet lets say 80% of the auto IC demand, and it is a hard limit the way bitcoin has a hard limit. I'm not 100% convinced of this but it seems like a working theory, and I can easily picture how it happened, like bankrupcy, a little bit at a time then all at once.
There's this concept of a "black start" that Texans have been learning about since Feb 15 last year. It's when all the power plants trip, and there is no power to even start the thing that starts the power plant. It takes 2-3 months to start one little thing, to start a bigger thing, to start a still bigger thing. Meanwhile, 25 million Texans have to walk to safety, and maybe half freeze.
Looks kind of like that for 20% of the auto industry.