Doing some reading on AMCC and here are the links for people trying to get up to speed.
Vitesse's 6 inch GaS wafers vs. AMCC SiGE
techweb.com
Rivals vow process duel in Sonet ICs Loring Wirbel
Colorado Springs, Colo. - Traditional telecom IC rivals are turning up the heat in their summer battle for 2.5- and 10-Gbit/second Sonet markets. As Vitesse Semiconductor Inc. brings up the world's first commercial 6-
inch gallium arsenide fab here, competitor Applied Microcircuits Corp. is expanding its CMOS and bipolar Sonet offerings and is readying plans to build or buy silicon-germanium process technology.
The July fireworks are the latest twist in a decades-old debate about how far silicon can intrude into the multi-GHz space formerly reserved for GaAs. By using standard MESFET techniques and traditional CMOS manufacturing equipment, Vitesse is out to prove that any mixed-signal circuit at 2 GHz and above can be more cost-effective in GaAs than in silicon, particularly as wafers move from 4 to 6 inches in diameter.
But Dave Rickey, president of Applied Microcircuits (AMCC, San Diego), said that by planning for SiGe process technologies at its next fab,When will this facility be built the company will have a mix of process options to carry it from tens of MHz to at least 40 GHz. That kind of clout has the potential to extend applications to the Sonet OC-768 (40-Gbit/s) market.
The argument is far more than an academic dispute among process chauvinists. The telecom market is ballooning to pull in more than standard Sonet and asynchronous transfer mode chips at 2.5-(OC-48) and 10-Gbit (OC-192) rates. OEMs are clamoring for specialized chip sets to handle packet-over-Sonet, wavelength-division multiplexing interfaces for Sonet and proprietary interfaces using Sonet speed hierarchies.
At Vitesse (Camarillo, Calif.), the size of the market opportunity in data communications and telecommunications is beginning to dwarf all other business. The ASICs for supercomputing applications that once defined Vitesse's raison d'etre are now all but gone, with that market sector accounting for less than 5 percent of the company's business. Per-pin tester chips for ATE markets make up another 20 to 25 percent, but Vitesse president Lou Tomasetta predicted that within three years, the company will be 85 percent reliant on communication markets, making Vitesse for all practical purposes a communications-IC company.
Process options
AMCC has experienced a similar ride in recent months and has outsourced submicron CMOS Sonet designs to augment its own bipolar processes. But as telecom backbone speeds exceed OC-48 rates, AMCC will need to plan for new process options. Rickey said he has been a strong proponent of SiGe since joining the company in February 1996, and he is planning on a SiGe processing line for the company's next fab, likely to be built in San Diego's Sorrento Valley area.
SiGe experienced a renaissance in interest in the early 1990s, primarily for RF applications, as IBM Corp. teamed with Analog Devices Inc. to produce a common suite of high-speed designs. After Analog Devices backed out of the deal in 1993, IBM Microelectronics continued pursuing SiGe work for both multi-GHz wireless and high-speed mixed-signal wireline designs. The company reported new breakthroughs in production manufacturing at the end of 1997.
IBM is reported to be working with National Semiconductor Corp., Harris Corp. and Tektronix Inc. on SiGe development, though its partners are saying little about the nature of the work. When IBM acquired DSP specialist CommQuest Inc. (Encinitas, Calif.), it made clear that SiGe would be applied to both the baseband and IF/RF portions of CommQuest's Communication Application Specific Processor (CASP) architecture.
Sources say AMCC is talking with IBM about possible joint SiGe work. Rickey would not confirm that. But the AMCC president did say that internally developed SiGe will be a part of AMCC's road map in any event, as a central aspect of the company's play in broadband telecom markets.
Rickey said that AMCC has no intention of using SiGe in all-digital devices but that the process will play a role in high-speed mixed-signal devices with very large digital blocks, such as OC-192 transceivers incorporating some Sonet frame-processing functions. Even at OC-48 speeds, SiGe could play a role in mixing serializer/deserializer blocks with wave-division multiplexing (WDM) front ends. That way, Rickey said, even if WDM at OC-48 speeds pushes out the market for OC-192 chips, SiGe can play a role in both market sectors.
At last week's Analog and Mixed-Signal Applications Conference in San Jose, Calif., P.K. Vasudev, director of analog ASICs at National Instruments Inc. (Austin, Texas), suggested that IBM's advances in SiGe over the last year proved that the process technology has turned the corner, not just for high-frequency analog but also for a wide variety of applications with large blocks of digital circuits.
Vasudev, who oversaw the development of five generations of submicron CMOS at Sematech, said that SiGe "is ready to be a mainstream contender." Even if the process costs more per wafer than standard bipolar or CMOS, he said, the advantages in performance and device integration are "well worth it. This can place silicon directly against gallium arsenide in a much wider range of applications."
But Vitesse's Tomasetta asserted that the move to production volumes of 6-inch wafers in Colorado Springs gives SiGe advocates a tougher target to hit.
"Look, the entire industry is FET-driven, not bipolar transistor-driven, and not reliant on specialized mask steps," Tomasetta said. "The big advantage we have is that our competitors don't believe we can bring up yield fast enough in the new fab. But we're past the prototype phase for Fab 2. We expect to realize $15 million to $20 million in revenue in the current quarter from products coming out of Colorado."
The fab relies on standard equipment familiar in silicon fabs, including a mix of I-line and deep-UV steppers, standard Applied Materials metal-deposition equipment and chemical-vapor-deposition equipment used primarily for annealing. Bob Cutter, vice president and general manager of the Colorado Springs fab, said the facility was designed to use single-wafer-processing cluster-tool equipment.
At 109,000 square feet, the facility has a 15,000-square-foot Class 1 clean room. During the first phase of operation, the fab is capable of 500 to 600 wafer starts a week. Vitesse also has options on acreage to the west to build a back-end test facility.
Currently, Vitesse has transferred both the H-GaAs 3 and H-GaAs 4 process from Camarillo to Colorado, and the bulk of devices in the latter, 0.5-micron process will move to Colorado Springs. The newer fab is the only facility capable of manufacturing the future H-GaAs 5, a process slated for 0.3-micron feature sizes and 3.3-V interfaces.
Vitesse will use 2.5-Gbit/s applications in both data communications and telecom as a common driver for Colorado designs. For telecom, that means OC-48 Sonet, usually with a WDM front end. OEMs are using WDM as a means of pushing out the need to move to native 10-Gbit OC-192 fiber infrastructure. But Greg Borodaty, product marketing manager for telecom, said that WDM has become an important driver for OC-192 as well, since OEMs now assume some level of color-based channelized multiplexing will be done in all optical-transmission systems.
"We're already in most of the designs of the Ciena clones," Borodaty said. "Now we need to optimize for metropolitan WDM applications, and for true optical routing and switching without optoelectronic conversions."
On the simplest level, Vitesse will expand its base of physical-layer chips for OC-48 and OC-192 Sonet. But to support true optical-layer services, the company will add specialized components for protocol monitoring, section termination, crosspoint switching and forward-error correction.
In the works are a protocol-monitoring device that performs all Sonet operations, administration, monitoring and performance (OAM&P ) specs, including B1 error monitoring and J0 Sonet overhead byte monitoring. Also coming are a 2 x 2 crossbar switch intended as an all-optical signal splitter.
"This won't lead to a true optical cross-connect, but it will allow asynchronous switches that act like cross-connects," Borodaty said. Similar designs already are planned for the 10-Gbit OC-192 Sonet rate.
Existing members of the VSC816x multiplexer/demux family will move to 3.3-V interfaces by year's end. Tomasetta predicted that, as OEMs move to optical cross-connect and routing functions for Internet backbones, simple WDM devices will shrink in size, power dissipation and cost to become the equivalent of stackable Ethernet switches for the edge of the wide-area network. In theory, that could mean that low-voltage 816x mux parts will become a high-volume product.
Plenty of opportunity
In the meantime, the Gigabit Ethernet and Fibre Channel markets will provide plenty of opportunity to take on the capacity that the Colorado fab allows. Michael Millhollan, vice president and general manager of data communications at Vitesse, said the company already has outsourced some CMOS chips for simple Fibre Channel port bypass functions, but sees GaAs as the driver for integrating multiple functions for port cards in the future. Examples include combo optical receiver-transimpedance amp chips; chips that mix a limit amp, decision circuit, clock recovery and demux; and combination mux/laser-driver chips.
In ATM, Vitesse still is considering how far up the protocol stack in the digital portion of the design to go. For physical-layer devices, Vitesse references the PMC-Sierra Suni chips for OC-3 designs but will offer its own designs for native 2.5-Gbit User Network Interface functions. The number of markets where 2.5-Gbit mixed-signal designs can be used for both WAN and LAN is unprecedented, Millhollan said.
"We see a harmonic convergence of sorts at 2.5 Gbits, which helps to drive higher volumes through design reuse," he said. Rickey of AMCC pointed out that his company is moving in the same direction, with the SiliconHiway architecture introduced in May representing the first step toward common 2.5-Gbit designs (see May 6, page 1).
Vitesse is bullish enough about the 6-inch fab as guidepost to its transition to communications that it took the board of directors through the plant last week to demonstrate the predictability of the manufacturing process. Tomasetta predicted that "if current trends continue, we could one day be realizing $400 million to $500 million out of this facility."
IBM/AMCC partnership
techweb.com
iGe deal between AMCC, IBM includes design tools Loring Wirbel
San Diego - As anticipated, Applied Microcircuits Corp. signed a supply deal with IBM Microelectronics last month (see July 20, page 1) that gives it 48 months of access to IBM's most advanced methods of producing silicon germanium circuits, potentially including SiGe devices that employ copper interconnect.
The agreement also calls for IBM to lead a joint effort to define common design methodologies for SiGe circuits. IBM's various SiGe partners will have access to those methodologies.
Brent Little, director of strategic marketing at AMCC, said the deal does not give IBM's ASIC group access to AMCC's macro cores for high-speed Sonet functions. Rather, the companies will collaborate on transistor- and gate-level design techniques, and on back-end functions appropriate for a process that places 65-GHz heterojunction bipolar transistors on a standard CMOS substrate. The end result would be a general-purpose mixed-signal design system optimized for SiGe.
Open Q This article makes it sound that AMCC isn't really ready to take on the GaS folks yet, until more basic work is done. We know that Vitessse has the 6 inch fab up, but maybe next year will be different? Anybody know when AMCC will really start to ship SiGe chips???Thanks in advance.
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