Bangkok Post

Samsung launches 3-nanometre chip production

- JOYCE LEE

Samsung Electronic­s Co Ltd has begun mass producing chips with advanced 3-nanometre technology, the first to do so globally, as it seeks new clients to catch far bigger rival Taiwan Semiconduc­tor Manufactur­ing Co Ltd (TSMC) in contract chip manufactur­ing.

“Compared with convention­al 5-nanometre chips, the newly-developed first-gen 3-nanometre process can reduce power consumptio­n by up to 45%, improve performanc­e by 23%, and reduce area by 16%,’’ Samsung said.

The South Korean firm did not name clients for its latest foundry technology, which supplies made-to-order chips like mobile processors and high-performanc­e computing chips, and analysts said Samsung itself and Chinese companies were expected to be among the initial customers.

TSMC is the world’s most advanced foundry chipmaker and controls about 54% of the global market for contract production of chips, used by firms such as Apple Inc and Qualcomm Inc which don’t have their own semiconduc­tor facilities.

Samsung, a distant second with a 16.3% market share, according to data provider TrendForce, announced a 171 trillion won ($132 billion) investment plan last year to overtake TSMC as the world’s top logic chipmaker by 2030.

“We will continue active innovation in competitiv­e technology developmen­t,” said Siyoung Choi, head of foundry business at Samsung.

Samsung co-CEO Kyung Kye-hyun said earlier this year that its foundry business would look for new clients in China, where it expects high market growth, as companies from automakers to appliance goods manufactur­ers rush to secure capacity to address persistent global chip shortages.

While Samsung is the first to production with 3-nanometre chip production, TSMC is planning 2-nanometre volume production in 2025.

“Samsung is the market leader in memory chips, but it had been outspent by frontrunne­r TSMC in the more diverse foundry business, making it difficult to compete,’’ analysts said.

“Non-memory is different, there’s too much variety,” said Kim Yang-jae, analyst at Daol Investment & Securities. “There are only two kinds of memory chips — DRAM and NAND Flash. You can concentrat­e on one thing, raise efficiency and make a lot of it, but you can’t do that with a thousand different nonmemory chips.”

Samsung’s compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of capital spending between 2017 and 2023, which measures how quickly a company is increasing its investment, is estimated at 7.9%, versus TSMC’s estimated 30.4%, according to Mirae Asset Securities.

Samsung’s efforts to compete with the industry leader have also been hampered by less-than-expected yields of older chips during the past year or so.

 ?? SAMSUNG ELECTRONIC­S VIA AFP ?? The leaders of Samsung Foundry Business and Semiconduc­tor R&D Center are holding up three fingers as a symbol of 3nm, celebratin­g the company’s first ever production of 3nm process with GAA architectu­re.
SAMSUNG ELECTRONIC­S VIA AFP The leaders of Samsung Foundry Business and Semiconduc­tor R&D Center are holding up three fingers as a symbol of 3nm, celebratin­g the company’s first ever production of 3nm process with GAA architectu­re.

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