Intel Showcases Tiny Yet Revolutionary Lakefield SOC With Foveros Technology – 3D IP Design To Optimize Performance And Efficiency

Alex Casas
Intel Fellow Wilfred Gomes, a member of Intel’s Silicon Engineering Group, holds a processor with the advanced packaging technology called Foveros. It combines unique three-dimensional stacking with a hybrid computing architecture that mixes and matches multiple types of cores for different functions. (Credit: Walden Kirsch/Intel Corporation)

The fingernail-size Intel chip with Foveros technology is a first-of-its-kind and will be used to power the next-generation Lakefield SOC. With Foveros, processors are built in a totally new way: not with the various IPs spread out flat in two dimensions, but with them stacked in three dimensions.

Intel Combines "Tremont" Cores With Scalable 10nm "Sunny Cove" Cores To Optimize Performance

Think of a chip designed as a layer cake (a 1-millimeter-thick layer cake) versus a chip with a more-traditional pancake-like design. Intel’s Foveros advanced packaging technology allows Intel to “mix and match” technology IP blocks with various memory and I/O elements – all in a small physical package for significantly reduced board size. The first product designed this way is “Lakefield,” the Intel Core processor with Intel hybrid technology.

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Industry analyst firm The Linley Group recently named Intel’s Foveros 3D-stacking technology as “Best Technology” in its 2019 Analysts’ Choice Awards. “Our awards program not only recognizes excellence in chip design and innovation but also acknowledges the products that our analysts believe will have an impact on future designs,” said Linley Gwennap, of The Linley Group.

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For its part, Lakefield represents an entirely new class of chips. It delivers an optimal balance of performance and efficiency with best-in-class connectivity in a small footprint – Lakefield’s package area measures just 12-by-12-by-1 millimeters. Its hybrid CPU architecture combines power-efficient “Tremont” cores with a performance scalable 10nm “Sunny Cove” core to intelligently deliver productivity performance when needed and power-sipping efficiency when not needed for long battery life. These benefits offer original equipment manufacturers more flexibility for thin-and-light form factor PCs, including the emerging dual-screen and foldable screen PC categories.

Recently, three designs have been announced that are powered by Intel's Lakefield SOC and were co-engineered with Intel. In October 2019, Microsoft previewed the Surface Neo, a dual-screen device. And later that month at its developer conference, Samsung announced the Galaxy Book S. Unveiled at CES 2020 and expected to ship midyear is the Lenovo ThinkPad X1 Fold.

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