The Evolution of FPGA Technology

The evolution of FPGA technology is a testament to innovation and perseverance in the semiconductor industry, according to FpgaKey, (2020). Introduced by Xilinx in 1985 with the release of the XC2064, the first FPGA product featured a 2μm process, 64 logic modules, and 85,000 transistors—an “ugly duckling” by today’s standards. Initially limited to glue logic applications, FPGAs gradually advanced to support algorithm logic, digital signal processing, high-speed serial transceivers, and embedded processors, transforming from a supporting role to the centerpiece of many system designs. Over the decades, breakthroughs in semiconductor technology— from 150nm in 2001 to 65nm in 2007—enabled FPGAs to achieve unprecedented scalability, speed, and cost-efficiency. This progress reshaped the programmable logic industry and laid the foundation for FPGAs to replace ASICs and ASSPs in high- demand, flexible, and time-sensitive applications, marking a pivotal shift in the digital logic market.

FPGA
Figure 1: FPGA

Applications and Impact of FPGAs in Modern Industries

FPGAs are revolutionizing numerous industries by leveraging their flexibility, parallel processing capabilities, and energy efficiency, as highlighted by Uppal and Uppal, (2024). In telecommunications, they enable efficient signal processing and power network infrastructure, while in the automotive sector, they support advanced driver- assistance systems and autonomous vehicles. Data centers benefit from their ability to accelerate search algorithms and machine learning tasks, and the medical field relies on FPGAs for precise imaging in MRI and CT scanners. Additionally, FPGAs play a crucial role in high-frequency trading, industrial automation, energy management in smart grids, and real-time processing in IoT edge applications, making them indispensable across diverse, data-intensive domains.

The Importance of Verification in FPGA Development

Verification is a critical aspect of FPGA development, ensuring the functionality, reliability, and efficiency of designs before deployment, as mentioned by Ahmad et al., (2021). As FPGAs grow in complexity, with millions of logic elements and advanced architectures, verifying these intricate designs becomes increasingly essential to avoid costly errors and inefficiencies. Robust verification processes, including simulation, hardware-in-the-loop testing, and formal verification techniques, are vital for detecting issues early in the development cycle. In mission-critical applications like aerospace, automotive, and medical devices, engineers prioritize the deployment of FPGAs for their reliability and performance. Developers can confidently deliver high-quality, reliable FPGA solutions tailored to their intended use by ensuring thorough verification.

Note: For those interested in the latest advancements in verification technologies, the FPGA Verification Event 2025 (Verification Futures UK) offers an excellent opportunity to gain insights into cutting-edge verification practices.

References

FpgaKey, www.fpgakey.com. (2020). FPGA development history – FPGA Technology

– FPGAkey. fpgakey.com. https://www.fpgakey.com/technology/details/fpga- development-history

Uppal, K., & Uppal, K. (2024, November 12). FPGA: Accelerating Innovation in Technology. Fidus Systems. https://fidus.com/blog/fpga-accelerating-innovation-in- technology/

Ahmad, A., Busaidi, S. S. A., Maashri, A. A., & Hussain, S. (2021). FPGAs – CHRONOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS AND CHALLENGES. ResearchGate.

https://www.researchgate.net/publication/356585114_FPGAs_-

_CHRONOLOGICAL_DEVELOPMENTS_AND_CHALLENGES

Author

  • Mike Bartley

    Mike started in software testing in 1988 after completing a PhD in Math, moving to semiconductor Design Verification (DV) in 1994, verifying designs (on Silicon and FPGA) going into commercial and safety-related sectors such as mobile phones, automotive, comms, cloud/data servers, and Artificial Intelligence. Mike built and managed state-of-the-art DV teams inside several companies, specialising in CPU verification. Mike founded and grew a DV services company to 450+ engineers globally, successfully delivering services and solutions to over 50+ clients . The company was acquired by Tessolve Semiconductors in 2020 and Mike worked at Tessolve as SVP. Mike started Alpinum in April 2025 to deliver a range of start-of-the art industry solutions:

    Alpinum AI provides tools and automations using Artificial Intelligence to help companies reduce development costs (by up to 90%!)

    Alpinum Services provides RTL to GDS VLSI services from nearshore and offshore centres in Vietnam, India, Egypt, Eastern Europe, Mexico and Costa Rica.

    Alpinum Consulting also provides strategic board level consultancy services, helping companies to grow.

    Alpinum training department provides self-paced, fully online training in System Verilog, UVM Introduction and Advanced, Formal Verification, DV methodologies for SV, UVM, VHDL and OSVVM and CPU/RISC-V.

    Alpinum Events organises a number of free-to-attend industry events

    You can contact Mike (mike@alpinumconsulting.com or +44 7796 307958) or book a meeting with Mike using Calendly (https://calendly.com/mike-alpinumconsulting).

  • Mukul Kumar

    Design Verification (DV) Engineer at Tessolve Semiconductor with 3 years of semiconductor industry experience, specializing in UVM test benches, RTL design verification. Currently working in the Tessolve Centre of Excellence (CoE) on open-source RISCV projects (such as IBEX and PICOSOC) and on using AI to generate Portable Stimulus Standard (PSS) test benches from design specifications.