Silvermont

Silvermont is a microarchitecture for low-power Atom, Celeron and Pentium branded processors used in systems on a chip (SoCs) made by Intel. Silvermont forms the basis for a total of four SoC families:

  • Merrifield and Moorefield   consumer SoCs intended for smartphones
  • Bay Trail  consumer SoCs aimed at tablets, hybrid devices, netbooks, nettops, and embedded/automotive systems
  • Avoton  SoCs for micro-servers and storage devices
  • Rangeley  SoCs targeting network and communication infrastructure.
Silvermont
Intel Mobile Celeron N2830
General information
LaunchedFrom 2013
Common manufacturer(s)
  • Intel
Architecture and classification
Technology node22 nm
Instructionsx86-16, x86-32, x86-64
Extensions
Physical specifications
Cores
  • 2–8
Products, models, variants
Brand name(s)
History
Predecessor(s)Bonnell
Saltwell
Successor(s)Airmont (die shrink),
Goldmont (new microarchitecture)

Silvermont is the successor of the Bonnell, using a newer 22 nm process (previously introduced with Ivy Bridge) and a new microarchitecture, replacing Hyper Threading with out-of-order execution.

Silvermont was announced to news media on May 6, 2013, at Intel's headquarters at Santa Clara, California. Intel had repeatedly said the first Bay Trail devices would be available during the Holiday 2013 timeframe, while leaked slides showed that the release window for Bay Trail-T as August 28 – September 13, 2013. Both Avoton and Rangeley were announced as being available in the second half of 2013. The first Merrifield devices were announced in 1H14.

According to the Tick–tock model Airmont is the 14 nm die shrink of Silvermont, launched in early 2015 and first seen in the Atom x7-Z8700 as used in the Microsoft Surface 3. Airmont microarchitecture includes the following SoC families:

  • Braswell   consumer SoCs aimed at PCs
  • Cherry Trail   consumer SoCs aimed at tablets.

Silvermont based cores have also been used, modified, in the Knight's Landing iteration of Intel's Xeon Phi HPC chips.

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