Intel has unveiled a new suite of advanced chip packaging technologies that could power next-generation artificial intelligence systems by integrating multiple dies into a single, massive package—far surpassing traditional silicon size limitations.

Visual concept by The Volt Post, inspired by Intel’s packaging technology presentation at IEEE ECTC 2025. This is a fictional representation for editorial and illustrative purposes only. Intel, EMIB, and Foveros are trademarks of Intel Corporation.
The announcement came during Intel’s keynote at the IEEE Electronic Components and Technology Conference (ECTC) 2025, where company executives showcased innovations designed to support AI chips with active silicon footprints exceeding 10,000 mm²—a dramatic leap over today’s monolithic chips that max out at approximately 800 mm² due to photolithography constraints.
Breaking the Reticle Barrier for AI Performance
The physical limit of a chip’s size has long been dictated by the photomask reticle field during manufacturing. But with AI models growing exponentially in size and complexity, single-die solutions are rapidly falling behind.
Intel’s response is to shift from building bigger chips to building bigger packages—bringing together multiple dies through high-density, high-speed interconnects, all inside one advanced system.
“What we’re seeing is the next evolution of system-level innovation,” said Babak Sabi, Intel Senior VP and GM of Assembly/Test Development. “AI demands new architecture, and packaging is the bridge to get us there.”
Key Packaging Technologies Unveiled
3D-Enabled EMIB (Embedded Multi-Die Interconnect Bridge)
Intel’s EMIB technology, which embeds high-speed silicon bridges in the substrate to connect dies side-by-side, is now going vertical. With 3D EMIB, chiplets can be stacked in layers, enabling denser interconnects and reduced signal latency.
2Modular Integrated Heat Spreader
Managing thermals in such large-scale packages is a critical challenge. Intel’s new heat spreader solution uses a modular, segmented design with stiffeners, allowing for efficient heat dissipation across uneven surfaces while maintaining mechanical stability.
Advanced Substrate and Hybrid Bonding
Intel is doubling down on hybrid bonding techniques, including Foveros Direct and Foveros R/B (Reconstituted and Bridge). These allow chiplets to be stacked with minimal spacing and bonded at the atomic level—dramatically improving bandwidth and reducing power draw.
Moreover, EMIB-T (Thermal EMIB) adds even more flexibility to chiplet placement and connectivity, allowing for custom AI-accelerator designs that include CPUs, GPUs, and memory blocks—even from different process nodes or vendors.
What It Means for AI Chip Design
With these tools, Intel is building a new generation of “package-level superchips”—systems so large and powerful that they can match the compute of traditional server clusters.
These innovations promise:
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Custom silicon integration: Mix-and-match chiplets for AI, graphics, or networking.
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Higher memory bandwidth: Up to 2.5 TB/s using High Bandwidth Memory (HBM) stacking.
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Better thermals: Modular cooling solutions across unusually large surfaces.
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Greater scalability: Add more compute with every layer or bridge.
“These aren’t just chips anymore,” said Sabi. “They’re systems in a package. It’s the future of AI compute.”
Rivalry With TSMC & NVIDIA Intensifies
Intel’s reveal is a clear shot at TSMC’s CoWoS-L and NVIDIA’s GB200 superchip architecture. While TSMC has long been the leader in advanced packaging, Intel is now aggressively positioning its Foundry Services unit to lure large AI customers with a competitive offering.
According to Intel, these packaging innovations are foundry-ready, meaning they will be made available to third-party customers—offering an alternative to the Taiwanese semiconductor giant’s dominance in chiplet-based AI architectures.
Deployment Timeline & Industry Implications
While these technologies are currently in the R&D or pilot phase, Intel aims to scale production over the next two years, targeting 2026–2027 deployments for large-scale AI platforms and high-performance computing (HPC) systems.
This transition marks a strategic pivot in Intel’s approach—not just as a chip designer, but as a system architect and packaging powerhouse capable of enabling AI at scale.
In Summary

Visual concept by The Volt Post, inspired by Intel’s packaging technology presentation at IEEE ECTC 2025. This is a fictional representation for editorial and illustrative purposes only. Intel, EMIB, and Foveros are trademarks of Intel Corporation.
Intel’s new approach to advanced packaging aims to overcome Moore’s Law limitations and redefine chip design for the AI era.





