The FAMES Pilot Line launched its first Open-Access Call today. A dedicated workshop in Brussels generated strong interest from across Europe’s semiconductor industry. A great number of potential users participated to learn more about how to submit a User Request to access the pilot line’s cutting-edge microelectronics R&D technologies and services.
Initiated in December 2023 by the Chips Joint Undertaking (Chips JU) and coordinated by CEA-Leti, FAMES envisions a strategic leap in semiconductor innovation, while reinforcing Europe’s industrial leadership.
Design houses, fabless companies, foundries, integrated device manufacturers, material & tool suppliers, universities and research centers can submit User Requests by responding to the two-month-long Open-Access Call, starting today, or by submitting a Spontaneous User Request throughout the year. Participants whose requests are selected will have access to FAMES technologies as they become available. Open-Access Calls will take place each spring through 2028, with an updated portfolio of available FAMES technologies.
Users of the pilot line will have access to:
- Two types of PDKs
- Pathfinding PDKs for FD-SOI advanced-node performance evaluation,
- PDKs giving access to silicon, via multi-project wafers (MPW),
- Specific process steps, modules, integration flows, and demonstrator results, and
- Education and training on FAMES technologies.
The Open Access Committee, representing the consortium’s 11 Partners, will review and select applicants’ proposals. Pricing will depend on the specifics of each R&D project.
“It is essential that these new technologies can be adopted by EU chip stakeholders. For that reason, FAMES has been strategically structured to leverage them, in order to support all sectors of the EU’s semiconductor value chain,” said Sébastien Dauvé, CEO of CEA-Leti.
‘Imagining New Solutions’
Leveraging the pilot line technology sets enables:
- Further developing customized FD-SOI, eNVM, RF, 3D and PMIC-based solutions to address company-specific needs,
- Developing innovative designs using FAMES’ pathfinding PDKs,
- Testing the unique capabilities of the pilot line’s specific circuit designs through MPW opportunities,
- Generating new IP through advanced developments on the pilot line,
- Imagining new solutions for specific markets inspired by FAMES’ demonstrators, and
- Training future talent and involving competent individuals in the FD-SOI European ecosystem.
The technology sets will enable FAMES to leverage highly differentiating FD-SOI-based solutions. These solutions will strengthen the EU’s semiconductor ecosystem’s response to rapidly growing demand for low-power, high- connectivity and robustly secure integrated circuits driven by the automotive, IoT, and smart mobile-device markets.
‘Beyond Just a Pilot Line’
“We see this initiative, which we expect to go beyond just a pilot line, as a vision for a sustainable, resilient, and innovative Europe. It will bring together industry, SMEs, start-ups, and research institutions, and build an open-access ecosystem that transforms ideas into impactful solutions, fostering collaboration and innovation at every level,” said Jari Kinaret, executive director of the Chips JU, an EU public-private partnership dedicated to advancing the EU semiconductor ecosystem.
Specifically, the pilot line envisions new market opportunities for low-power microcontrollers (MCU), multi-processor units (MPU), cutting-edge AI and machine-learning devices, smart data-fusion processors, RF devices, chips for 5G/6G, chips for automotive markets, smart sensors & imagers, trusted chips, and new space components.
‘Pan-European Technology Infrastructure’
Nokia, a member of the FAMES External Industrial Advisory Board, said the consortium has the “experience, technological expertise, vision and openness to expand the technology platform further into a pan-European technology infrastructure.”
“The pilot line’s progress will be essential for Nokia’s system-on-chip (SoC) PiCo research program,” added Derek Urbaniak, head of SoC development, of Mobile Networks at Nokia. “Nokia’s PiCo research group looks forward to receiving results and reports from the FAMES consortium, and possibly to utilize their pilot lines and services for our own validation work and product development.”
Antonio Fuganti, head of Cross Programs within Advanced Electronics & Semiconductors at Stellantis, which also is a member of the FAMES External Industrial Advisory Board, said: “This initiative will significantly impact the development of chips and applications in Europe. By bringing together industry, SMEs, and research institutions, it provides an opportunity to accelerate the transition from research to industrial application, enhancing competitiveness.”