IBM says it has developed “sub-1-nanometer” chip technology called NanoStack, designed to increase transistor density beyond prior demonstrations. IBM reports the approach can pack nearly 100 billion transistors on a die sized for a fingernail, roughly doubling the density of its earlier 2-nm test chip that was shown in 2021. TechRadar describes the technology as achieving a footprint around 0.7 nm, while both sources frame it as a record-setting step in scaling.
NanoStack uses a three-dimensional nanosheet-based transistor architecture. Instead of relying only on shrinking transistors laterally, IBM stacks and staggers CMOS devices along the z-axis. In the demonstrated structure, each transistor uses multiple very thin nanosheets (with the dimensions and spacing reported by IBM) and then bonds two such devices into a single vertical structure using an ultra-thin dielectric process. IBM says this structure allows different materials and device components for the top and bottom tiers.
IBM also reports internal benchmarking versus its 2-nm technology, claiming up to about 50% higher performance at the same power or up to about 70% lower power for the same performance, along with improved SRAM scaling.