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A natively flexible 32-bit Arm microprocessor

Author

Listed:
  • John Biggs

    (Arm Ltd)

  • James Myers

    (Arm Ltd)

  • Jedrzej Kufel

    (Arm Ltd)

  • Emre Ozer

    (Arm Ltd)

  • Simon Craske

    (Arm Ltd)

  • Antony Sou

    (PragmatIC Semiconductor Ltd)

  • Catherine Ramsdale

    (PragmatIC Semiconductor Ltd)

  • Ken Williamson

    (PragmatIC Semiconductor Ltd)

  • Richard Price

    (PragmatIC Semiconductor Ltd)

  • Scott White

    (PragmatIC Semiconductor Ltd)

Abstract

Nearly 50 years ago, Intel created the world’s first commercially produced microprocessor—the 4004 (ref. 1), a modest 4-bit CPU (central processing unit) with 2,300 transistors fabricated using 10 μm process technology in silicon and capable only of simple arithmetic calculations. Since this ground-breaking achievement, there has been continuous technological development with increasing sophistication to the stage where state-of-the-art silicon 64-bit microprocessors now have 30 billion transistors (for example, the AWS Graviton2 (ref. 2) microprocessor, fabricated using 7 nm process technology). The microprocessor is now so embedded within our culture that it has become a meta-invention—that is, it is a tool that allows other inventions to be realized, most recently enabling the big data analysis needed for a COVID-19 vaccine to be developed in record time. Here we report a 32-bit Arm (a reduced instruction set computing (RISC) architecture) microprocessor developed with metal-oxide thin-film transistor technology on a flexible substrate (which we call the PlasticARM). Separate from the mainstream semiconductor industry, flexible electronics operate within a domain that seamlessly integrates with everyday objects through a combination of ultrathin form factor, conformability, extreme low cost and potential for mass-scale production. PlasticARM pioneers the embedding of billions of low-cost, ultrathin microprocessors into everyday objects.

Suggested Citation

  • John Biggs & James Myers & Jedrzej Kufel & Emre Ozer & Simon Craske & Antony Sou & Catherine Ramsdale & Ken Williamson & Richard Price & Scott White, 2021. "A natively flexible 32-bit Arm microprocessor," Nature, Nature, vol. 595(7868), pages 532-536, July.
  • Handle: RePEc:nat:nature:v:595:y:2021:i:7868:d:10.1038_s41586-021-03625-w
    DOI: 10.1038/s41586-021-03625-w
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