• naturalgasbad@lemmy.caOP
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    9 months ago

    One explanation is that SMIC has low-yield early production for 5mm (which is why the Qingyun L540 is only being sold to government agencies: limited scale, like Intel’s 10nm chip back in 2018). The other explanation is that Huawei for some reason decided to stockpile 5nm chips and disable the 5G modem in them to put the thing in a laptop (rather than in a phone), maybe because they now have domestic 7nm and no longer need a stockpile… But that this stockpile was evidently not very big since they’re not selling it to consumers. Both are in the realm of possibility, but if the former is the case then SMIC is moving shockingly fast.

    Intel was stuck on DUV 10nm for almost a decade (and indeed, DUV 14nm was also a struggle because of the need for dual-patterning). SMIC would have now not only matched Intel 10nm (Intel 10/7) with SMIC’s 7nm process, but leapfrogged Intel (who is yet to ship Intel 4 to customers). I’m somewhat skeptical, but with the wave of TSMC engineers who have jumped ship to Chinese firms for higher pay in recent years, I wouldn’t be surprised.

    At the same time, TSMC is basically tapped out for their FinFET process: N2 is estimated to only be 10-15% more dense than N3. Intel and Samsung are in a similar position with their newer processes.

    The race for Surrounding-Gate Transistors (SGT) is on

    • ChicoSuave@lemmy.world
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      9 months ago

      Thank you for this breakdown. Most of the comments are missing the unfolding silicon cold war that’s opening up between China and Taiwan. Progress at SMIC has been weirdly fast despite not having access to EUV lithography. China is now using unknown technology to keep pace with Western development and it’s either home grown lithography or China grabbed some ASML machines and figured out the maintenance? Either way it’s very interesting.

      • naturalgasbad@lemmy.caOP
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        9 months ago

        You don’t technically need EUV for 5nm, it’s just that it’s really hard. Intel tried to stick with DUV for their 10nm (Intel 7) process and look how long that was delayed.