Intel has announced the grand opening of its new semiconductor fab expansion at its D1X facility in Oregon. Costing $3 billion, the new Mod3 expansion delivers an «additional 270,000 square feet of clean room space to develop next-generation silicon process technologies». That'll come in handy for Intel's aggressive process node ramping plans.
Intel plans to rapidly introduce new process nodes over the coming years, from Intel 7 today to Intel 18A by the middle of the decade, and it's planning to invest heavily in its Intel-owned and operated manufacturing facilities to deliver on each of those.
The company's Oregon expansion is a big part of that; Intel says it contributes $19 billion to Oregon's GDP in 2019 alone. It's where Intel carries out most of its research on new process nodes, which are then finalised and copied at its other facilities around the globe.
«Since its founding, Intel has been devoted to relentlessly advancing Moore’s Law,» Pat Gelsinger, Intel CEO, says. «This new factory space will bolster our ability to deliver the accelerated process roadmap required to support our bold IDM 2.0 strategy. Oregon is the longtime heart of our global semiconductor R&D, and I can think of no better way to honor Gordon Moore’s legacy than by bestowing his name on this campus, which, like him, has had such a tremendous role in advancing our industry.»
Therefore Intel is renaming the campus to Gordon Moore Park, after the company's founder and namesake of Moore's Law—that which states that transistor density doubles every two years or thereabouts.
This Oregon expansion has been in the works since 2019. That's actually before current CEO Pat Gelsinger took charge and we, as customers, really felt the crunch of the chip
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