UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. — The Semiconductor Research Corporation (SRC)’s Joint University Microelectronics Program 2.0 (JUMP 2.0), a consortium of industrial partners in cooperation with the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA), has announced the creation of a $32.7 million, Penn State-led Center for Heterogeneous Integration of Micro Electronic Systems (CHIMES).
Madhavan Swaminathan, head of electrical engineering and William E. Leonhard Endowed Chair in Penn State College of Engineering’s School of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, will direct the center. CHIMES is one of seven centers funded through the JUMP 2.0 initiative for improving the performance, efficiency, and capabilities of electronic systems for emerging commercial and defense applications.
“The global semiconductor industry is projected to become a trillion-dollar industry by 2030 — driven primarily by computing, data storage, wireless and automotive applications — which is incredible considering that it took 55 years to reach half a trillion dollars in size and will take less than 10 years to double,” Swaminathan said. “Such phenomenal growth requires new and transformative logic, memory and interconnect technologies to overcome the inevitable slowdown of traditional dimensional scaling of semiconductors.”
This is the focus of CHIMES, according to Swaminathan. Fourteen university partners — including Georgia Tech; Columbia University; Cornell University; Arizona State University; George Washington University; Massachusetts Institute of Technology; Rice University; Stanford University; University of California, Davis; University of California, Los Angeles; University of California, San Diego; University of Colorado; and University of Illinois, Chicago — will collaborate to advance heterogenous integration, the efficient and effective integration and packaging of semiconductor devices, chips and other components.
“We are creating an opportunity to drive a diverse and integrated consortium, focused on innovations in the semiconductor space,” said Lora Weiss, senior vice president for Research at Penn State. “These technologies push the envelope of traditional chip systems, using breakthrough components, production methods and platforms. Penn State continues to be a driver of global solutions in this industry, working closely with the government, industry and academic leaders in the field.”
According to Swaminathan, packaging has always focused on heterogenous integration — or coupling separate components into a single unit — but the technology has recently and significantly advanced.
“Now we have the ability to electrically interconnect a diversity of transistors and integrated circuit components, blurring the line between what is on-chip and what is off-chip,” Swaminathan said. “We will research and develop new technologies to overcome barriers — by minimizing the space between transistors, developing cooling mechanisms, improving energy efficiencies and much more — to establish the integration and miniaturization of microsystems comprising of both electronic and photonic components.”
CHIMES participants will explore 23 research tasks under four synergistic themes, which include system-driven functional integration and aggregation; monolithic 3D densification and diversification on silicon platform; ultra-dense heterogeneous interconnect and assembly; and materials behavior, synthesis, metrology and reliability.