Title :
Solid state: Economics and politics dominate the industry; nonetheless, application-specific and power-logic circuits spark new trends
Author_Institution :
IEEE Spectrum, New York, NY, USA
Abstract :
Trends in the semiconductor industry that became apparent in 1985 prompted some rethinking of strategies in the semiconductor industry. Rather than compete with Japan in basic chips and try to buck slow commodity sales, US semiconductor houses resorted to their strong suit-innovation-in an effort to develop a major future market: application-specific ICs. A related shift in design was seen in several areas: mixing power and logic functions on an integrated chip, mixing analog and digital functions, and mixing bipolar and MOS circuits. All of these approaches were attempts to make chips that perform more functions better than chains of commodity chips linked to do the same job. The changes brought about by price wars on commodity chips are surveyed, as are the inroads being made by GaAs circuits.
Keywords :
integrated circuit manufacture; monolithic integrated circuits; semiconductor device manufacture; BiMOS circuits; GaAs circuits; analogue functions; application-specific ICs; commodity chips; digital functions; industry trends; integrated chip; logic functions; power functions; semiconductor industry; strategies; Companies; EPROM; Gallium arsenide; Industries; Logic gates; Production; Random access memory;
Journal_Title :
Spectrum, IEEE
DOI :
10.1109/MSPEC.1986.6370964