Thursday, July 11th 2024
AMD Plans to Use Glass Substrates in its 2025/2026 Lineup of High-Performance Processors
AMD reportedly plans to incorporate glass substrates into its high-performance system-in-packages (SiPs) sometimes between 2025 and 2026. Glass substrates offer several advantages over traditional organic substrates, including superior flatness, thermal properties, and mechanical strength. These characteristics make them well-suited for advanced SiPs containing multiple chiplets, especially in data center applications where performance and durability are critical. The adoption of glass substrates aligns with the industry's broader trend towards more complex chip designs. As leading-edge process technologies become increasingly expensive and yield gains diminish, manufacturers turn to multi-chiplet designs to improve performance. AMD's current EPYC server processors already incorporate up to 13 chiplets, while its Instinct AI accelerators feature 22 pieces of silicon. A more extreme testament is Intel's Ponte Vecchio, which utilized 63 tiles in a single package.
Glass substrates could enable AMD to create even more complex designs without relying on costly interposers, potentially reducing overall production expenses. This technology could further boost the performance of AI and HPC accelerators, which are a growing market and require constant innovation. The glass substrate market is heating up, with major players like Intel, Samsung, and LG Innotek also investing heavily in this technology. Market projections suggest explosive growth, from $23 million in 2024 to $4.2 billion by 2034. Last year, Intel committed to investing up to 1.3 trillion Won (almost one billion USD) to start applying glass substrates to its processors by 2028. Everything suggests that glass substrates are the future of chip design, and we await to see first high-volume production designs.
Sources:
Business Korea, via Tom's Hardware
Glass substrates could enable AMD to create even more complex designs without relying on costly interposers, potentially reducing overall production expenses. This technology could further boost the performance of AI and HPC accelerators, which are a growing market and require constant innovation. The glass substrate market is heating up, with major players like Intel, Samsung, and LG Innotek also investing heavily in this technology. Market projections suggest explosive growth, from $23 million in 2024 to $4.2 billion by 2034. Last year, Intel committed to investing up to 1.3 trillion Won (almost one billion USD) to start applying glass substrates to its processors by 2028. Everything suggests that glass substrates are the future of chip design, and we await to see first high-volume production designs.
76 Comments on AMD Plans to Use Glass Substrates in its 2025/2026 Lineup of High-Performance Processors
Then again, those two were found guilty of illegal practices against AMD yet something tells me that they are still doing the same.
Worst, people conveniently “forgot” intel ilegal practices that almost killed AMD and instead, still want AMD to disappear.
Personally, I want Qualcomm to replace intel and go toe to toe with AMD.
Yes, i know, Qualcomm is as bad or worse than Intel, but still.
All that money is basically what has kept Intel afloat and allowed them to not lose even more marketshare, they've basically been selling chips at cost (or at the very least accepting much smaller profit margins than theyre used to) and giving OEMs huge sums of money to keep AMD chips out of the best laptop models (what Intel calls "Joint Development Funds" and what I call "bribery" and "cartelism") and have basically been resorting to every tactic BUT innovation to stave off AMD....and worst of all it has worked rather well for Intel.
Whatever, I won't buy that brand anyway.
It's irrelevant though unless it makes a real noticeable difference now.
For Intel vs AMD, we are looking at current sales, not existing market share. lol
And AMD has already taken Intel's lunch. Their swap in market cap is hilarious.
Silicon wafers are crystalline so not glass (like panes) even though they are both mostly made out of silicon (the element).
Also here it is not about the wafer but the substrate, on your picture it's the green part with the surface mounted components.
They are switching from organic substrate (reinforced resin) to glass that is better suited for chiplet's connections.
Still, if it is Samsung, I expect a release 2-3 years later after a metric crap ton of problems.
www.intel.com/content/www/us/en/newsroom/news/intel-unveils-first-integrated-optical-io-chiplet.html#gs.c23qu7