Is 3D chip technology the next growth engine for performance improvement?
Philip Emma, Eren Kurshan

TL;DR
This paper explores the potential of 3D chip technology as a promising avenue for continuing performance improvements in computing systems, addressing its opportunities, challenges, and implications for future system design.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive analysis of 3D chip technology's potential to revolutionize system integration, design, and scalability beyond traditional Moore's Law limitations.
Findings
3D technology can significantly enhance device integration on chips.
3D systems pose unique challenges and opportunities for future design.
3D technology may lead to new paradigms in system architecture.
Abstract
The semiconductor industry is reaching a fascinating confluence in several evolutionary trends that will likely lead to a number of revolutionary changes in how computer systems are designed, implemented, scaled, and used. Since Moores Law, which has driven the evolution in systems for the last several decades, is imminently approaching real and severe limitations, the ability to create three-dimensional,3D, device stacks appears promising as a way to continue to integrate more devices into a chip.While on the one hand, this nascent ability to make 3D technology can be interpreted as merely an extension of Moores Law, on the other hand, the fact that systems can now be integrated across multiple planes poses some novel opportunities, as well as serious challenges and questions. In this paper, we explore these various challenges and opportunities and discuss structures and systems that…
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Taxonomy
Topics3D IC and TSV technologies
