Samsung Foundry seems to be inching closer to a major announcement. The company could reveal its plans for 1nm chips next month during its SAFE Forum event in the USA. If reports from Taiwanese media are to be believed, Samsung is also said to announce mass production plans for 2nm chips during the event.
Samsung Foundry is holding its yearly SAFE Forum in Silicon Valley, USA, and it will run from June 12 to June 13. During the event, the company is expected to announce its plans for the mass production of 1nm and 2nm chips. According to media reports, the South Korean giant has plans to fast-track the production of its 1nm chips by a year. Its 1nm chips were previously planned to hit the production stage in 2027. however, Samsung seems to have decided to start production sooner than it planned.
Samsung has been trying to take the lead in semiconductor production from its rival TSMC. However, the company’s plans haven’t worked. Due to heat and efficiency issues in Samsung’s 4nm and 5nm chips, Qualcomm has turned to TSMC for the majority of its smartphone chips.
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Samsung Wants To Fix Heat And Efficiency Issues
Speaking of the company’s 3nm process, which leverages the Gate All Around (GAA) transistor architecture, Samsung is expected to fix heat and efficiency issues. It kicked off the mass production of 3nm chips in June 2022, but it failed to get any big clients on its side due to yield-related issues. Yield refers to the percentage of usable chips that have passed quality testing compared to all the chips produced.
Samsung’s Exynos W1000 is expected to be the first mobile chip produced using Samsung’s Foundry’s 3nm process. It will likely be used in the Galaxy Watch 7 series, which will be announced in July 2024. The Exynos 2500 could be the company’s second 3nm chip, and it will likely debut in the Galaxy S25, which will see the light of day in early 2025.
TSMC is leveraging the GAA transistor architecture in its 2nm process node. TSMC CEO Wei Zhejia has claimed that the demand for 2nm chips is said to exceed that of 3nm and 5nm chips.
The company has plans to triple its 3nm production capacity, but even then, it might not be able to deliver to all its clients. Most of the company’s 2nm chip production capacity is said to be used by Apple for its next-gen A and M series chips that power iPhones, iPads, and Macs.
Also Read: Samsung Dethrones Apple In Global Smartphone Shipments
Google Joins TSMC For Tensor G5 Chips
Since Google debuted its first Tensor chip for Pixel smartphones, the processor has been manufactured by Samsung Foundry. After four generations, the company seems to be parting ways with Samsung Foundry and joining forces with TSMC to develop its next-gen Tensor chip, the Tensor G5, which will power the Pixel 10 devices.
The information spotted by Android Authority suggests that Google’s Tensor G5 chip, which will be used for the Pixel 19 series, will be developed by TSMC. According to a publicly available trade database, Google LLC has shipped a new chip from Taiwan to an Indian firm, named Tessolve Semiconductor, for testing.