Defense program pushes microchip frontiers
Abstract
The very-high-speed integrated circuit (VHSIC) program of the Department of Defense will have a significant effect on the expansion of integrated circuit technology. This program, which is to cost several hundred million dollars, is accelerating the trend toward higher-speed, denser circuitry for microchips through innovative design and fabrication techniques. Teams in six different American companies are to design and fabricate a military useful 'brassboard' system which would employ chips developed in the first phase of the VHSIC program. Military objectives envisaged include automatic monitoring of displays in tactical aircraft by means of an artificial intelligence system, a brassboard used in airborne electronic warfare system, and antisubmarine warfare applications. After a fivefold improvement in performance achieved in the first phase, the second phase is concerned with a further 20-fold increase. The entire VHSIC program is, therefore, to produce a 100-fold gain over the state of the art found when the program started.
- Publication:
-
High Technology
- Pub Date:
- May 1985
- Bibcode:
- 1985HiTec...5...49J
- Keywords:
-
- Chips (Electronics);
- Chips (Memory Devices);
- Defense Program;
- Military Technology;
- Research And Development;
- Vhsic (Circuits);
- Microminiaturization;
- Microprocessors;
- Packing Density;
- Production Engineering;
- Technological Forecasting;
- Electronics and Electrical Engineering