Tuesday November 27, 4:48 PM
Toshiba, NEC Electronics to team up on 32-nm chips
TOKYO, November 27 (Reuters) - Japanese chip makers Toshiba
Corp. and NEC Electronics Corp. said on Tuesday
they would jointly develop 32-nanometre chips to better keep up
with rivals.
The companies will decide in 2008 how and if they will
jointly produce the chips, they said.
Chip makers are racing to move to tinier circuit sizes to cut
production cost per chip function and enable powerful electronics
that run for hours without killing the battery. But the shift
also forces changes in fundamental materials and processes and
exposes chip makers to huge initial costs.
Samsung Electronics Co. , IBM , Chartered
Semiconductor Manufacturing Ltd. , Infineon Technologies
, STMicroelectronics and Freescale
Semiconductor have said they would work through 2010 to develop
and produce 32-nanometre chips. A nanometre is a billionth of a
metre.
Japanese chip makers have yet to map out how to share the
estimated 100-200 billion yen development costs to make the leap
to the next generation of chips.
Actual production would require new equipment such as
immersion steppers, which are multi-million dollar machines that
use purified water between the lens and the silicon wafer to draw
thin circuit lines onto microchips.
Toshiba and NEC Electronics, which plan to mass produce
45-nanometre or 40-nanometre chips by early 2009, had also
approached Fujitsu Ltd . Spokesman Etsuro Yamada declined
to comment on whether or not Fujitsu would join the group, only
saying that Fujitsu was considering various options.
Shares of Toshiba closed up 0.5 percent at 860 yen, while NEC
Electronics fell 3.8 percent to 3,040 yen, both underperforming
Tokyo's electrical machinery subindex , which rose 1.26
percent.
(Reporting by Mayumi Negishi)
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