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Definition: chip manufacturing


The making of an integrated circuit (IC), widely known as a "chip." As of 2022, the top 10 chip manufacturers are:
 Rank  Company            Headquarters

  1    TSMC               Taiwan
  2    Samsung            South Korea
  3    UMC                Taiwan

  United States
  4    Global Foundries   New York State
  5    Intel              California
  6    Qualcomm           California
  7    Micron             Idaho
  8    Broadcom           California
  9    NVIDIA             California
 10    Texas Instruments  Texas


Quite Incredible
The chip is perhaps the most amazing manufacturing process the world has ever conceived. The actual working area of state-of-the-art chips is a sliver of silicon about the size and thickness of a postage stamp, except the stamp is a hundred times thicker! Containing billions of transistors that act like on/off switches, the transistor is the chip's fundamental component. At the opposite end, chips with a mere couple hundred thousand transistors are found in appliances, toys and myriad everyday items, and they can be as small as the head of a pin and retail for less than a dollar. It all starts with the design of the circuits, which carry electrical pulses from one transistor to another. See SoC.

To learn about the different types of chips, see chip. To get a glimpse of the activity that takes place inside, see active area. See foundry and process technology.




Transistors to Gates to Circuits
Pulses cause transistors to open or close, and the current flowing through one affects the opening or closing of another and so on. Transistors are wired together in Boolean logic gates. Gates make up circuits, and circuits make up CPUs, GPUs and microcontrollers. For simplification in this example, the gates are illustrated as mechanical switches. See transistor, Boolean Logic, CPU, GPU and microcontroller.







FROM LOGIC TO PLUMBING
Circuits were originally designed by humans. Today, logic functions reside in electronic libraries, and designers pick and choose from a menu. However, new circuits have to be designed by humans, gate by gate.

Computers make computers. The computer converts the logical circuits into a plumber's nightmare of transistors, diodes and resistors. These are turned into "photomasks," which are the lithographic plates used to create the patterns on the chip. Depending on the type of chip, thousands, millions or billions of transistors are interconnected.




Chips are built by creating subterranean layers in the silicon, and a different photomask is created to isolate each layer to be worked on. There may be dozens of photomasks to make one chip and hundreds of steps, both machine and human. From beginning to end, it can take several weeks to make a finished chip.



Inspecting the Plumbing
People are always more flexible than computers and can find flaws that might go undetected by software analysis. (Image courtesy of Elxsi Corporation.)




CHIPS ARE JUST ROCKS
The base material of a chip is usually silicon, although materials such as sapphire and gallium arsenide are also used. Found in quartz rocks, the silicon is purified in a molten state and then chemically combined (doped) with other materials to alter its electrical properties. The result is a silicon crystal ingot that is either positively (p-type) or negatively charged (n-type). Slices of the ingot approximately 1/30th of an inch thick are cut from this "crystal salami" that is 3.9" to 17.7" in diameter to become "wafers," which is the starting point of chip making.






Drawing the Ingot
The silicon ingot is being drawn from a scalding furnace containing molten silicon. High-speed saws slice the ingot into wafers about as thick as a dime, which will then be ground thinner and polished like a mirror. (Image courtesy of Texas Instruments, Inc.)




BUILDING THE LAYERS
Circuit building starts out by adhering a layer of silicon dioxide insulation on the wafer's surface. The insulation is coated with film and exposed to ultraviolet light through the first photomask, hardening the film and insulation below it. The unhardened areas are etched away exposing the silicon base below. By shooting a gas under heat and pressure into the exposed silicon (diffusion), a sublayer with different electrical properties is created beneath the surface.




Through multiple stages of masking, etching, and diffusion, the sublayers on the chip are created. The final stage lays the top metal layer (usually aluminum), which interconnects the transistors to each other and to the outside world. For more about the masking stages, see reticle.




Inspecting Wafers
The technician is wearing a "bunny suit" but not a mask, because the wafers have already been manufactured. (Image courtesy of Hewlett-Packard Company.)



Each chip is tested on the wafer. Bad chips are marked for elimination while the good ones are sliced out, placed into packages and connected by tiny wires or solder balls. The package is then sealed and tested as a complete unit (see chip package).




Chip making is extremely precise. Operations are performed in a "clean room," since air particles can mix with the microscopic mixtures and easily render a chip worthless. Depending on the design complexity, more chips can fail than succeed.





Packaging the Chip
This machine bonds the chips to the metal structure that will be connected to the pins of the chip housing and carry the signals to and from the circuit board. (Image courtesy of Texas Instruments, Inc.)




The Future
There is a never-ending thirst to build more and more transistors onto a single chip. In the early 1980s, the IBM PC's 8088 CPU had 25 thousand. In the 2020s, CPU chips have tens of billions of transistors for computers and smartphones. See feature size, process technology and Versal.

From a CPU to an Entire System
Just as the chip eliminated cutting apart the transistors only to be reconnected in patterns, increasingly, more functions are built onto the same chip, creating a complete system-on-chip (see SoC).

It's Science Fiction - Wrap Your Mind Around This
A single chip with an active transistor area the size of a postage stamp, only much thinner, can contain more than 50 billion interconnected transistors in multiple layers. That equates to more than 100 million transistors per square millimeter, or about the same space as the head of a pin. See active area.

Building the Transistor
Although the following illustrations show one transistor, all the transistors in every chip on the wafer go through these stages at the same time. The following diagrams are conceptual because actual transistors are even more elaborate.





























Even More Sophisticated
The previous 12 illustrations showing the building of one transistor are very simplified. Today's state-of-the-art transistors are much more complex, witness the architecture of this single transistor, which is used in the most advanced chips (see FINFET).






Dressing for Work
The fabrication of the tiny transistor is an extremely precise one. The slightest contaminants in the air can render the transistor and chip useless. Putting on the "bunny suit" is an elaborate procedure. (Image courtesy of Intel Corporation.)










No Germs in these Rooms
You won't catch the flu working in a chip fabrication plant, at least not in the clean room. Bunny suits and clean rooms are required to produce high yields of chips with as few defects as possible. (Images top to bottom courtesy of Texas Instruments, Inc., Motorola, Inc. and Microchip Technology Inc.)






The World Depends on Chips
In the 2020s, people are beginning to realize how important the semiconductor industry is to the global economy. Chris Miller's book covers the history of the industry and the issues facing a world where chip manufacturing is dominated by companies outside the U.S.





To explore the variety of topics in this reference, see What's in this encyclopedia.