IBM has unveiled chip technology that could help extend Moore’s Law another decade

IBM has built a new prototype chip with around 100 billion transistors on an area the size of a fingernail, which is twice the density of the company’s previous state-of-the-art technology announced in 2021. The design could pave the way for faster and more energy efficient computers for years to come.

For more than half a century, chipmakers have been able to make ever more powerful computers by following the key principle of Moore’s Law: Cram more transistors onto the chip. To do this, they shrank transistors—the tiny switches that perform computations—to incrementally smaller sizes. But in the last 15 years, transistors have gotten close to the point where quantum mechanics starts to interfere with their function: just a few dozen nanometers in size. They can’t get smaller.

So to fit more transistors on a chip, engineers across the industry are eyeing a pivot to an approach familiar to urban planners: build up. On Thursday, IBM announced it has created a chip that uses this strategy. The new architecture, known as a nanostack, vertically stacks transistors in two layers on a silicon chip.

“It’s not just an incremental step,” Jay Gambetta, the director of IBM Research, said during a press conference on Tuesday. “It’s a meaningful leap forward.” Within a decade, Gambetta expects, chips with nanostacking will be widely used in data centers, where their improved efficiency could help the facilities better manage their energy consumption.

“Absolutely, it’s transformational,” says Dan Hutcheson, vice chair of TechInsights, a technology analysis company. “This puts another 10, 15 years on the roadmap.” 

Compared with IBM’s previous state-of-the-art architecture, the company reports, chips built with this new approach can do as much as 50% more work in the same amount of time and be up to 70% more energy efficient. 

The architecture offers a general way of laying out transistors, and IBM will partner with semiconductor manufacturers to make the actual chips. It anticipates that chip designers will deploy the design in many different types of chips, including GPUs and CPUs. “I expect to have many conversations with designers about how they can use this technology,” Huiming Bu, IBM’s vice president of global semiconductor R&D, said in the press conference announcing the new design. 

A layer cake

Engineers created IBM’s new chip layer by layer, like a cake. They start by fabricating transistors on one layer of silicon. Then they place a silicon layer on top of these devices, and they fabricate another layer of transistors directly on top of that. Finally, they create the electrical connections between the two layers of transistors. This kind of vertical stack, which combines two types of transistors, is known as a complementary field-effect transistor, or CFET, explains Qing Cao, a professor of materials science and engineering at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, who was not involved with the work. 

The company isn’t the only one pursuing this general approach. The biggest chip manufacturers—Intel, Samsung, and TSMC—and the competing research lab Imec in Belgium have been investigating CFETs. IBM says its design is distinguished by the fact that the transistors in the second layer do not sit directly on top of the first layer’s transistors; rather, they are staggered, which the company says simplifies wiring, among other advantages. 

CFETs like those in IBM’s nanostack architecture contrast with another common approach to making two-tiered chips, such as AMD’s 3D V-Cache and Huawei’s forthcoming LogicFolding technology, Cao says. In those approaches, engineers fabricate the transistors on each layer of the chip independently before bonding the two together. IBM’s new method allows for more precise alignment of the layers, which is important for performance because transistors are so tiny, says Cao. 

Nanostacking builds on an approach called nanosheet technology, which has been used to make current state-of-the-art transistors since around 2022. A transistor is essentially a hose through which electrons flow, with a valve that can turn the flow on or off. Inside the transistor, electrons move through a patch of the silicon called a channel. In IBM’s nanostack approach, the channel consists of three nanosheets that are each 15 atoms thick, spaced nine nanometers apart. 

Every chip generation gets a name. IBM refers to its nanostack technology as “sub-nanometer” or “0.7 nanometer,” following a longtime industry convention where each generation is named for a smaller and smaller length. But “0.7 nanometer” is a marketing term and does not correspond to any physical characteristics of the chip. The distance between transistors “has been staying at about 40 nanometers for quite a long period of time,” says Cao. 

Putting it into production

Looking ahead, chipmakers can try increasing transistor density by building on more tiers, as Bu suggested in the press conference. However, they will face practical challenges, according to Cao. Manufacturing introduces errors, which means a certain number of chips are faulty upon creation. “Here you’re building another layer on top, so if either top layer or bottom layer fail, your entire chip is going to fail,” says Cao. The resulting failure rate will be higher than for single-layer chips, and that will be costly.

Another central challenge is what Cao calls “the thermal budget.” Essentially, it means that engineers need to figure out how to build each layer without melting the connections to the one underneath. This means keeping manufacturing processes below 400 °C. IBM figured out how to make the second stack at low enough temperature, although the company is mum about its methods. 

Academics are also on the case. Cao’s group, for example, has created a method for stacking transistors layer by layer where the second layer is created with processes below 200 °C. They manage this by using a type of transistor known as the junctionless transistor, which can be created without a typically required step called doping—a process that injects non-silicon atoms into silicon to tune the material’s properties. Doping is usually the hottest part of fabricating transistors. Cao thinks from a thermal management perspective, his approach could be easier to scale up to multiple tiers, although his demonstration is just a proof of principle.

But Cao thinks IBM’s work is “transformative” because it demonstrates how to stack transistors “on a full wafer using a state‑of‑the‑art manufacturing line.” The new approach pushes the industry forward, he says: “I’m interested in what’s their killer application.”

Read More
Sophia Chen

Latest

Bungie Laying Off ‘Most of the Destiny Team and Some Marathon Team’

by William D'Angelo , posted 18 hours ago / 1,392 Views Sony Interactive Entertainment Studio Business Group CEO Hermen Hulst has announced PlayStation is laying off employees at Bungie. This includes "most of the Destiny team and some Marathon team members." Sony Interactive Entertainment teams that also support Bungie's operations have been hit with layoffs.

PlayStation CEO Says Goal for Cheaper Japan-Only PS5 Was Done to Revitalize Japanese Market

by William D'Angelo , posted 20 hours ago / 1,465 Views The President and CEO of Sony Interactive Entertainment (SIE) Hideaki Nishino in an interview with Famitsu said selling the cheaper Japan-only PlayStation 5 is being done to revitalize the PlayStation business in the country.  He also stated that due to the exchange rates caused

Josh Hokit reveals 7-figure sum he expects to have earned in the UFC by the end of 2026

It has been a controversial year for Josh Hokit — but also a lucrative one. The former American football player has become the latest fighter looking to gain prominence in the UFC with a polarizing persona. It looks to have worked for ‘The Incredible Hok’ so far, as he has already broken into the top

Detroit Lions Star football player facing LIFE in prison for Kidnapping Charges in Florida

Detroit Lions Star football player facing LIFE in prison for Kidnapping Charges in Florida Detroit Lions cornerback Terrion Arnold was arrested June 24 in Tampa, Florida, on four counts of kidnapping and four counts of armed robbery. Prosecutors allege Arnold coordinated the robbery and assault of his personal driver and two associates after accusing the

Newsletter

Don't miss

Bungie Laying Off ‘Most of the Destiny Team and Some Marathon Team’

by William D'Angelo , posted 18 hours ago / 1,392 Views Sony Interactive Entertainment Studio Business Group CEO Hermen Hulst has announced PlayStation is laying off employees at Bungie. This includes "most of the Destiny team and some Marathon team members." Sony Interactive Entertainment teams that also support Bungie's operations have been hit with layoffs.

PlayStation CEO Says Goal for Cheaper Japan-Only PS5 Was Done to Revitalize Japanese Market

by William D'Angelo , posted 20 hours ago / 1,465 Views The President and CEO of Sony Interactive Entertainment (SIE) Hideaki Nishino in an interview with Famitsu said selling the cheaper Japan-only PlayStation 5 is being done to revitalize the PlayStation business in the country.  He also stated that due to the exchange rates caused

Josh Hokit reveals 7-figure sum he expects to have earned in the UFC by the end of 2026

It has been a controversial year for Josh Hokit — but also a lucrative one. The former American football player has become the latest fighter looking to gain prominence in the UFC with a polarizing persona. It looks to have worked for ‘The Incredible Hok’ so far, as he has already broken into the top

Detroit Lions Star football player facing LIFE in prison for Kidnapping Charges in Florida

Detroit Lions Star football player facing LIFE in prison for Kidnapping Charges in Florida Detroit Lions cornerback Terrion Arnold was arrested June 24 in Tampa, Florida, on four counts of kidnapping and four counts of armed robbery. Prosecutors allege Arnold coordinated the robbery and assault of his personal driver and two associates after accusing the

NCAA New Eligibility Rules and When To Get Concerned with Alabama Recruiting on The Joe Gaither Show

Let's fire up a Wednesday edition of "The Joe Gaither Show on BamaCentral" as we welcome Theo Fernandez back to the program. We discuss the NCAA's new eligibility rules, Labaron Philon getting drafted and Alabama football recruiting. The show begins with the NCAA's new rules on eligibility. Will the 5-in-5 rule be an effective way to get

Business Insurance-AZ Achieves Record Response Times for 2026 Arizona Construction Bids

Business Insurance-AZ achieves milestone response speeds for commercial construction bids across Arizona, accelerating documentation delivery to keep local projects moving forward without delay. Phoenix, AZ, June 06-2026, ZEX PR WIRE — Business Insurance-AZ has achieved record-breaking processing speeds and response times for commercial construction bids throughout Arizona, directly supporting the state’s massive infrastructure and advanced manufacturing boom

Business delegation visits Kazakhstan to strengthen economic and trade cooperation

Astana, Kazakhstan, Jun 2, 2026 - (ACN Newswire) - A business delegation led by the Chief Executive of the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region (HKSAR), John Lee, and organised by the Hong Kong Trade Development Council (HKTDC), began its visit to Astana, the capital of Kazakhstan, on 1 June. During the visit, a total of 43

13 Real Business Trip Stories That Prove Work Travel Collects More Stories Than Miles

Real business trips almost never go the way the itinerary promised. They start with a confidently-packed suitcase and an eight-page agenda, and somewhere between the airport gate and the hotel breakfast they quietly turn into something nobody could have invented — equal parts comedy, chaos, and unscheduled adventure. These 13 real business trip moments are exactly that kind of work-trip plot