User:Electron9/List of semiconductor scale examples

Products featuring 10 µm manufacturing process

 * Intel 4004 CPU launched in 1971
 * Intel 8008 CPU launched in 1972

Products featuring 3 µm manufacturing process

 * Intel 8085 CPU launched in 1975
 * Intel 8088 CPU launched in 1979

Products featuring 1.5 µm manufacturing process

 * Intel 80286 CPU launched in 1982

Products featuring 1.0 µm manufacturing process

 * Intel 80386 CPU launched in 1985

Products featuring 0.8 µm manufacturing process

 * Intel 486 CPU launched in 1989
 * microSPARC I launched in 1992
 * First Intel P5 Pentium CPUs at 60 MHz and 66 MHz launched in 1993

Products featuring 0.6 µm manufacturing process

 * Intel 80486DX4 CPU launched in 1994
 * IBM/Motorola PowerPC 601, the first PowerPC chip, was produced in 0.6 µm.
 * Intel Pentium CPUs at 75 MHz, 90 MHz and 100 MHz

Products featuring 350 nm manufacturing process

 * Intel Pentium Pro (1995), Pentium (P54CS, 1995), and initial Pentium II CPUs (Klamath, 1997)
 * AMD K5 (1996) and original AMD K6 (Model 6, 1997) CPUs.
 * NEC VR4300, used in the Nintendo 64 game console
 * Parallax Propeller, 8 core microcontroller

Products featuring 250 nm manufacturing process

 * DEC Alpha 21264A, which was made commercially available in 1999
 * AMD K6-2 Chomper and Chomper Extended. Chomper was released on May 28, 1998
 * AMD K6-III "Sharptooth" used 250 nm
 * Mobile Pentium MMX Tillamook, released in August 1997
 * Pentium II Deschutes
 * Pentium III Katmai
 * Dreamcast CPU and GPU
 * Initial PlayStation 2's Emotion Engine CPU

Processors using 180 nm manufacturing technology

 * Intel Coppermine E- October, 1999
 * Intel Celeron (Willamette) - May, 2002
 * Motorola PowerPC 7445 and 7455 (Apollo 6) - January, 2002

Processors using 130 nm manufacturing technology

 * Motorola PowerPC 7447 and 7457 2002
 * IBM Gekko (Nintendo GameCube)
 * IBM PowerPC G5 970 - October 2002 - June 2003
 * Intel Pentium III Tualatin and Coppermine - 2001-04
 * Intel Celeron Tualatin-256 - 2001-10-02
 * Intel Pentium M Banias - 2003-03-12
 * Intel Pentium 4 Northwood- 2002-01-07
 * Intel Celeron Northwood-128 - 2002-09-18
 * Intel Xeon Prestonia and Gallatin - 2002-02-25
 * VIA C3 - 2001
 * AMD Athlon XP Thoroughbred, Thorton, and Barton
 * AMD Athlon MP Thoroughbred - 2002-08-27
 * AMD Athlon XP-M Thoroughbred, Barton, and Dublin
 * AMD Duron Applebred - 2003-08-21
 * AMD K7 Sempron Thoroughbred-B, Thorton, and Barton - 2004-07-28
 * AMD K8 Sempron Paris - 2004-07-28
 * AMD Athlon 64 Clawhammer and Newcastle - 2003-09-23
 * AMD Opteron Sledgehammer - 2003-06-30
 * Elbrus 2000 1891ВМ4Я (1891VM4YA) - 2008-04-27
 * MCST-R500S 1891BM3 - 2008-07-27
 * Vortex 86SX -

Chips using 90 nm manufacturing technology

 * Elpida 90 nm DDR2 SDRAM process


 * IBM PowerPC G5 970FX - 2004
 * IBM PowerPC G5 970MP - 2005
 * IBM PowerPC G5 970GX - 2005
 * IBM "Waternoose" Xbox 360 Processor - 2005
 * IBM/Sony/ Toshiba Cell Processor - 2005
 * Intel Pentium 4 Prescott - 2004-02
 * Intel Celeron D Prescott-256 - 2004-05
 * Intel Pentium M Dothan - 2004-05
 * Intel Celeron M Dothan-1024 - 2004-08
 * Intel Xeon Nocona, Irwindale, Cranford, Potomac, Paxville - 2004-06
 * Intel Pentium D Smithfield - 2005-05
 * AMD Athlon 64 Winchester, Venice, San Diego, Orleans - 2004-10
 * AMD Athlon 64 X2 Manchester, Toledo, Windsor - 2005-05
 * AMD Sempron Palermo and Manila - 2004-08
 * AMD Turion 64 Lancaster and Richmond - 2005-03
 * AMD Turion 64 X2 Taylor and Trinidad - 2006-05
 * AMD Opteron Venus, Troy, and Athens - 2005-08
 * AMD Dual-core Opteron Denmark, Italy, Egypt, Santa Ana, and Santa Rosa
 * VIA C7 - 2005-05
 * Loongson (Godson) 2Е STLS2E02 - 2007-04
 * Loongson (Godson) 2F STLS2F02 - 2008-07
 * MCST-4R - 2010-12
 * Elbrus-2C+ - 2011-11

Processors using 65 nm manufacturing technology

 * Intel Pentium 4 (Cedar Mill) – 2006-01-16
 * Intel Pentium D 900-series – 2006-01-16
 * Intel Celeron D (Cedar Mill cores) – 2006-05-28
 * Intel Core – 2006-01-05
 * Intel Core 2 – 2006-07-27
 * Intel Xeon (Sossaman) – 2006-03-14
 * AMD Athlon 64 series (starting from Lima) – 2007-02-20
 * AMD Turion 64 X2 series (starting from Tyler)- 2007-05-07
 * AMD Phenom series
 * IBM's Cell Processor – PlayStation 3 – 2007-11-17
 * IBM's z10
 * Microsoft Xbox 360 "Falcon" CPU – 2007–09
 * Microsoft Xbox 360 "Opus" CPU – 2008
 * Microsoft Xbox 360 "Jasper" CPU – 2008–10
 * Microsoft Xbox 360 "Jasper" GPU – 2008–10
 * Sun UltraSPARC T2 – 2007–10
 * AMD Turion Ultra – 2008-06
 * TI OMAP 3 Family – 2008-02
 * VIA Nano – 2008-05
 * Loongson – 2009
 * NVIDIA GeForce 8800GT GPU - 2007

Processors using 45 nm technology

 * Matsushita has released the 45 nm Uniphier.
 * Wolfdale, Yorkfield, Yorkfield XE and Penryn are current Intel cores sold under the Core 2 brand.
 * Intel Core i7 series processors, i5 750 (Lynnfield and Clarksfield).
 * Pentium Dual-Core Wolfdale-3M are current Intel mainstream dual core sold under the Pentium brand.
 * Diamondville, Pineview are current Intel cores with Hyper-Threading sold under the Intel Atom brand.
 * AMD Deneb (Phenom II) and Shanghai (Opteron) Quad-Core Processors, Regor (Athlon II) dual core processors, Caspian (Turion II) mobile dual core processors.
 * AMD(Phenom II) "Thuban" Six-Core Processor (1055T)
 * Xenon in the Xbox 360 S model.
 * Cell Broadband Engine in PlayStation 3 Slim model – September 2009.
 * Samsung S5PC110, as known as Hummingbird.
 * Texas Instruments OMAP 36xx.
 * IBM POWER7 and z196
 * Fujitsu SPARC64 VIIIfx series
 * The yet-to-be-further-specified Wii U IBM POWER7 based CPU

Chips using 32 nm technology

 * Intel Core i3 and i5 processors, released in January 2010
 * Intel 6-core processor, codenamed Gulftown
 * Intel i7-970, was released in late July 2010, priced at approximately USD$ 900
 * AMD FX Series processors, codenamed Zambezi and based on AMD's Bulldozer architecture, were released in October 2011. The technology utilised a 32 nm SOI process, two CPU cores per module, and up to four modules, ranging from a quad-core design costing approximately USD$130 to a $280 eight-core design.
 * Ambarella Inc. announced the availability of the A7L system-on-a-chip circuit for digital still cameras, providing 1080p60 high-definition video capabilities in September 2011

Chips using 22 nm technology

 * Toshiba announced that it was shipping 24 nm flash memory NAND devices on August 31, 2010.
 * Hynix Semiconductor announced that it could produce a 26 nm flash chip with 64 Gb capacity; Intel Corp. and Micron Technology had by then already developed the technology themselves. Announced in 2010.
 * Intel Core i7 and Intel Core i5 processors based on Intel's Ivy Bridge 22 nm technology for series 7 chip-sets went on sale worldwide on April 23, 2012.