https://www.hpcwire.com/2022/08/11/google-program-to-free-chips-boosts-university-semiconductor-design/

August 11, 2022

A Google-led program to design and manufacture chips for free is becoming 
popular among researchers and computer enthusiasts.

The search giant’s open silicon program is providing the tools for anyone to 
design chips, which then get manufactured. Google foots the entire bill, from a 
chip’s conception to delivery of the final product in a user’s hand.

Google’s Open MPW program includes an open-source design toolkit from a company 
called EFabless, which also manages the program.

Enthusiasts and researchers have to submit their chip design, which then gets 
manufactured in the factories of SkyWater on the 130nm process. The submission 
deadline for the latest Open MPW program is September 12.

Open MPW’s popularity can be measured by the number of projects using Efabless’ 
EDA tools. Chips from about 240 open-source silicon projects via Efabless’ 
tools will be manufactured in Skywater’s factories, Mike Wishart, CEO of 
Efabless.

“The total projects posted on our site are like 570. That has gone extremely 
well. It’s diverse, from 25 countries,” Wishart said.

Efabless had about 160 tapeouts in 2021, and had no tapeouts in 2020.

Efabless provides a simple design EDA tool to make chips, which is mostly about 
dragging and dropping the core elements inside a chip. An open-source PDK 
(process design kit) prepares the chip for fabrication in factories.

The Open MPW program added recent partners, including the U.S. Department of 
Defense, which last month poured $15 million into the project to get 
open-source chips made on SkyWater’s 90nm process. GlobalFoundries also joined 
the alliance and will also manufacture chips on the 180nm node.

The manufacturing technology provided through the project is very old, but it 
is cost-effective. Intel, Apple and others make expensive chips on the more 
advanced processes such as 5nm, which uses cutting-edge technology and provides 
the fastest computing in devices.

Open MPW is popular in academia and research, and for those experimenting or 
testing chips and need small batches, Wishart said.

“Our incentive is to make it simple for more and more people and grow a 
community around those executing designs… [on] nodes that are more accessible 
to them and therefore lower costs,” Wishart said.

Typically, chips can be expensive to manufacture, and factories are open to 
corporations. But Open MPW makes factories available to researchers and 
students.

“There was an unmet need in academia, that was overwhelming and not appreciated 
because they didn’t know what they could get,” Wishart said.

The open-source toolkits cover the full concept of chip development, from 
conceptualization to delivery of parts. Some universities may have deals with 
chip factories, but students at the undergraduate, master’s and PhD programs 
still have poor awareness of chip fabrication.

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