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TAMPERE, FINLAND – The first system on chip developed by the Finnish SoC Hub consortium has been taped out. The project partners will focus next on improving the design, automation and performance of the SoC. The chip will be ready for deployment in early 2022. The Ballast chip is the first in a series of three chips. TSMC will manufacture it.

The Finnish SoC Hub has set out to develop the domain of SoC design as a pioneer in Europe and to enhance Finland’s competitive position. The SoC Hub initiative, coordinated by Tampere University, Finland, and Nokia, was launched last year.

“The SoC has been developed using the same methods that are used in industrial production, such as design for testability, extensive verification and focusing on system-level integration instead of single modules,” said Ari Kulmala, professor of practice in SoC design at Tampere University.

According to Kulmala, the chip can also be tested by external stakeholders, as it includes a development kit, and it can be integrated into a range of other systems.

One of the goals of the SoC Hub project is to enable rapid prototyping for new ideas in the internet of things, machine learning and 5G and 6G technologies in silicon, for example.

The chip is manufactured using TSMC’s recent 22nm ultra-low leakage process, which is suited for IoT and Edge devices. Ballast contains several different RISC-V CPU cores, a digital signal processor, an AI accelerator, rich sensor-like interfaces and an extension interface to FPGA. A full software stack – including drivers, software development tools and chip debugging support – has also been implemented. The chip supports both real-time operating systems and Linux simultaneously.

“It has been a pleasure to work with the SoC Hub team. They have been extremely quick to develop the chip, and the quality of the work has been top class,” said Bas Dorren, director of business development at imec.IC-link, part of imec.

“A great deal of work has been done to enable seamless collaboration between the university and company partners. Several early career researchers have participated in designing Ballast and have therefore had the opportunity to apply the knowledge they acquired from their studies in an industrial project,” said Timo Hämäläinen, head of the Computing Sciences Unit at Tampere University.

In the project funded by Business Finland, three SoCs will be taped out by the end of 2023. Use cases for the chips will be planned together with the project consortium.

“In the next phases of the project, we will be able to focus even more on the systematics, automation and performance of the SoCs. Despite having achieved our first goal, we continue moving forward right away. The time to invest in SoC development is now, not tomorrow,” said Hämäläinen.

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