Package Improvements

As we move to smaller process nodes, the thermal density of high-performance silicon becomes more of an issue, and so all the processor companies put resources into their mechanical design teams to come up with a solution for the best thermal performance but also comes in line with costs. For example, we’ve seen Intel over the years transition from a soldered down heatspreader, to liquid metal, to basic thermal paste (because saving 0.1 cents means a lot across 70m CPUs), and then all the way back again when customers started demanding it.

However, in that time, we’ve pretty much kept the same socket design for mainstream processors. There hasn’t been much emphasis on changing the design itself for thermomechanical improvements in order to retain reuse and compatibility. There have been some minor changes here and there, such as substrate thinning, but nothing that substantial. The move to a new socket for Alder Lake now gives Intel that opportunity.

For Alder Lake, Intel is using an optimized packaging process to reduce the amount of soldered thermal material used in the processors. Combining that with a thinner die, and Intel is having to increase the thickness of the heatspreader to maintain the required z-height for the platform. The idea here is that the limiting factor in the cooling solution is any time we have a thermal interface, from one material to another – in this case, die to solder, and solder to heatspreader. Solder is the weak point here, so if the heatspreader gets thicker to meet the die, then less solder is needed.

Ultimately direct-die liquid cooling would be the boon here, but Intel has to come up with a solution that fits millions of processors. We have seen Intel offer different packaging solutions based on the SKU itself, so it will be interesting if the mid-range still get the Thin Die + Thin STIM treatment, or if they’ll go back to the cheap thermal paste.

Overclocking: We Have Headroom

It wouldn’t be too much of a leap to say that for most users, the only useful overclocking they might want to look at is enabling XMP on their memory. Modern processors these days are so close to their actual voltage and thermal limits out of the box these days that even if there was 200-300 MHz to gain, especially for the top Core i9 parts, it wouldn’t be worth the +100W it produces. I’m also getting to an age now where I prefer a good stable system, rather than eking out every frame, but having lived in the competitive OC scene for a while, I understand the drive that a lot of those users have to go above and beyond. To that end, Intel is introducing a few new features, and reviving some old ones, for Alder Lake.

Alder Lake also complicates things a bit with the P-core and E-core design.

To start, all the cores on the K/KF parts can be overclocked. The P-cores can be overclocked individually, whereas the E-cores are in groups of four. All the E-cores can be disabled, but at least one P-core needs to be enabled for the system to work (this has interesting consequences for Intel’s design). All cores can have additional AVX offsets, per-core ratio and voltage controls, and the ring/uncore ratios can also be adjusted. Memory also has the bells and whistles mentioned on a previous page. Those with integrated graphics can also be adjusted.

What Alder Lake brings back to the table is BCLK overclocking. For the last decade or so, most overclocking is done with the CPU multiplier, and before that it was BCLK or FSB. Intel is now saying that BCLK overclocking has returned, and this is partly due to motherboard customizations in the clock generator. Every Alder Lake CPU has an internal BCLK/clock generator it can use, however motherboard vendors can also apply an external clock generator. Intel expects only the lowest-end motherboards will not have an external generator.

The use of two generators allows the user to overclock the PCIe bus using the external generator, while maintaining a regular BCLK on other parts of the system with the internal clock. The system can also apply voltage in an adaptive way based on the overclock, with additional PLL overrides.

On top of this, Intel is integrating more user-accessible telemetry for its cores, particularly the E-cores, and real-time frequency analysis. On top of this, users can adjust the memory frequency in the operating system, rather than having to reboot – this is an extension of the memory turbo functionality previously mentioned.

For regular users, Intel is also offering a one-click immediate overclock feature. On launch, the Core i9 will be supported and overclock the P-cores +100 MHz and the E-cores +300 MHz immediately. It sounds like Intel is confident that all CPUs will be able to do this, but they want it to be user selectable. Beyond that, I confirmed the tool does still void the warranty. Intel’s VP dismissed it as an issue, citing that the recent overclocker warranty program they canned had such a low pickup, it wasn’t worth continuing. I’d say that the two things are mutually exclusive, but that’s up to Intel.

DDR5: Detailed Support, XMP, Memory Boost Performance and Conclusions
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  • Flying Aardvark - Thursday, October 28, 2021 - link

    That's a design decision that's focused on mobile. Clearly it won't hurt gaming performance. BTW AMD is moving to hetero cores too, they're simply behind the curve right now.
  • Gigaplex - Wednesday, October 27, 2021 - link

    I care about the noise levels.
  • Spunjji - Thursday, October 28, 2021 - link

    I'll happily also save $100 on the CPU cooler, though... and that's before we get to the extra platform costs. Those are some pricey boards thanks to the early adopter tax and chonky VRMs needed, and DDR5 is paaaiiinfully expensive.
  • factual - Thursday, October 28, 2021 - link

    Whether the energy savings is $10, or less, or more, or none at all is unknown. What Anandtech should do is measure the power consumption of Alder Lake while playing various games and compare it against power consumption of Zen3 while playing the same games. That would be a realistic power consumption comparison. Most people rarely fully load their CPUs, so comparing power consumption while playing demanding games is the most useful metric IMO.
  • Spunjji - Friday, October 29, 2021 - link

    If you're a gamer, for sure. If you're not, those numbers aren't terribly useful. The problem is that it increases their workload substantially and doesn't necessarily give a clearer picture.
  • Meteor2 - Monday, November 1, 2021 - link

    Lots of people here are gamers. And rather obviously, just extend the test to compiling, rendering etc
  • Josh128 - Wednesday, October 27, 2021 - link

    Lol, you can likely upgrade to a Zen 3 + using your same mobo in a couple months, needing only a CPU. Going Intel will require $1000 for new mobo, RAM, and CPU. Think about that for a second.
  • Tilmitt - Wednesday, October 27, 2021 - link

    He probably can't upgrade because AMD are deliberately sabotaging older motherboard support for their newer CPUs.
  • Gigaplex - Thursday, October 28, 2021 - link

    No they're not.
  • kobblestown - Thursday, October 28, 2021 - link

    Well, they tried to. Sure, at the end they listened to customers rather than to MoBo makers (who are also their customers, BTW) but this cannot be taken for granted. Look what they did to the ThreadRipper platform.
    Don't get me wrong, I'm typing this on an 3600X/X470, my laptop has 5700U and my server is TR1920X. My next CPU will also be AMD by the looks of it. But let's not pretend they are "nice". They are a company and will do everything to maximize their profits. Being the underdog, they have to play it nice. But once their marketshare started growing they took some pages out of Intel's book. The only thing that can keep them in check is competition. That's why I root for Intel in this case. Of course, Intel are effectively lying about AlderLake's performance (using unpatched Windows 11 - how conveniently that crippled Zen's performance!) but the faster ADL turns out to be, the better for AMD customers.

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